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Witness Testimony: Albert Cadosche

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  • Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post


    You keep saying nobody saw her, because nobody came forth, but you're making an invalid assumption that just because nobody came for that means nobody saw her.



    I did not.

    I suggest you reread what I did write.

    And please do not reply that it would not be worthwhile or you have better uses for your time.

    You have just addressed to me a post which is 964 words long and you expected me to read that, including what must be about the one-hundredth example of someone on this forum claiming incorrectly that I have made an invalid assumption or misrepresented an opinion as fact or misrepresented an assumption as evidence, ad nauseam.

    And I reciprocate your compliment that your arguments don't hold any weight with me.

    The reason is that what you have written above, along with much that has been written by a number of other posters, is nothing more substantial than an exercise in hair-splitting.

    Comment


    • Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post



      I did not.

      I suggest you reread what I did write.

      And please do not reply that it would not be worthwhile or you have better uses for your time.

      You have just addressed to me a post which is 964 words long and you expected me to read that, including what must be about the one-hundredth example of someone on this forum claiming incorrectly that I have made an invalid assumption or misrepresented an opinion as fact or misrepresented an assumption as evidence, ad nauseam.

      And I reciprocate your compliment that your arguments don't hold any weight with me.

      The reason is that what you have written above, along with much that has been written by a number of other posters, is nothing more substantial than an exercise in hair-splitting.
      I did read it. You presented a series of random ideas that were presented to create the impression that the idea of Annie being alive until 5:20 was somehow unrealistic. In your presentation you presented the notion that it is somehow unacceptable to consider her being alive as it would require such a great stretch given nobody came forth reporting they saw her and/or sold her food.

      But now you say that it wasn't your intention to suggest that nobody coming forth implies she wasn't seen.

      So why did you include such things if, as you now claim, you recognize that nobody coming forth does not mean she wasn't alive?

      - Jeff

      Comment


      • Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post

        By your argument, then, we have evidence that Annie ate after she left the doss house, because there was some food found in her stomach.

        - Jeff
        This is another fallacious argument. It's a non sequitur.

        The evidence we have is this:

        1) Annie ate at a quarter to two in the morning.

        2) Mary had partially digested food in her stomach when examined.

        We do not have any evidence to tell us Annie ate later and neither do we have evidence to tell us when Mary ate, with the exception that the food was partially digested and so that gives us a clue. That's it. That's the evidence. The rest is your speculation and employment of non sequiturs and other logical fallacies.

        At its root, we're disagreeing on the fundamentals of a logical argument, including your persistent use of logical fallacies, and that which constitutes arguments of equal worth.

        You believe that speculation with no supporting evidence is an argument of equal worth when compared with an argument underpinned by evidence, i.e. the evidence of Annie eating at a quarter to two in the morning.

        As I said, in the event you claimed "we just don't know and so it is possible", then I would agree.

        But, that's not what you're doing, you're claiming: "we just don't know and that's sufficient to propose it as an argument of equal worth", which is illogical and essentially means that no matter what any poster puts forward on this board, on any aspect of this case; you cannot accept it as being probable providing you consistently employ the logic you're employing here.

        In the end, you and I could never have a reasonable discussion on any aspect of this case given that your logic is fallacious and you will fall back on "we just don't know" and claim "we just don't know" is an argument of equal worth.

        That being the case, this has all been pointless.

        I'll leave you to it.

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post

          Let me ask you this.

          Do you deny that the last time Annie Chapman was seen alive was when she left the lodging house, as stated by Timothy Donovan: " It was then about ten minutes to two a.m. She left the house,"

          Yes but still time for the couple described in the article to have been Chapman and the killer

          Then who was this woman referred to in the press article quoted by you?
          "entered the passage of the house, 29, Hanbury-street, at which the murder was committed with a prostitute, at two a.m., the 8th."
          The police had no reason to think it was Chapman, or 2:00 am would have been the last time she was seen alive, wouldn't it?

          The only reason the police did not appear to believe it was Chapman was the fact that they readily accepted without question the three witnesses whose evidence is now unsafe.

          Were you aware the Star, being an evening paper, often copied their stories from the Daily Telegraph, the morning paper?
          I have compared a number of the Star's leading stories with what we read in the Daily Telegraph, of the same date.
          It may come as no surprise the same story appears in the Daily Telegraph on the same day.

          However, if we read the Daily News, the story is a little different.

          I have no faith in the accuracy of newspaper reports but sadly in many cases we have no choice but to go with what they print and do our best to prove or disprove the various reports

          The following is the official telegram sent to each station throughout the metropolis:

          "Commercial street 8.20 p.m. Description of a man wanted who entered a passage of the house at which the murder was committed of a prostitute at 2 a.m. the 8th. Age 37; height 5ft 7in; rather dark beard and moustache. dress: Shirt, dark jacket, bark vest and trousers, black scarf and black felt hat. Spoke with a foreign accent."


          "of a prostitute" not "with a prostitute".

          There was no woman in the company of this stranger.
          Well if that is correct it just proves my point about the unreliability of newspaper reports do you have a copy of that official telegram? If it is not now in existence we can only discuss the conflicting newspaper reports



          Comment


          • Originally posted by Fleetwood Mac View Post

            This is another fallacious argument. It's a non sequitur.

            The evidence we have is this:

            1) Annie ate at a quarter to two in the morning.

            2) Mary had partially digested food in her stomach when examined.

            We do not have any evidence to tell us Annie ate later and neither do we have evidence to tell us when Mary ate, with the exception that the food was partially digested and so that gives us a clue. That's it. That's the evidence. The rest is your speculation and employment of non sequiturs and other logical fallacies.

            At its root, we're disagreeing on the fundamentals of a logical argument, including your persistent use of logical fallacies, and that which constitutes arguments of equal worth.

            You believe that speculation with no supporting evidence is an argument of equal worth when compared with an argument underpinned by evidence, i.e. the evidence of Annie eating at a quarter to two in the morning.

            As I said, in the event you claimed "we just don't know and so it is possible", then I would agree.

            But, that's not what you're doing, you're claiming: "we just don't know and that's sufficient to propose it as an argument of equal worth", which is illogical and essentially means that no matter what any poster puts forward on this board, on any aspect of this case; you cannot accept it as being probable providing you consistently employ the logic you're employing here.

            In the end, you and I could never have a reasonable discussion on any aspect of this case given that your logic is fallacious and you will fall back on "we just don't know" and claim "we just don't know" is an argument of equal worth.

            That being the case, this has all been pointless.

            I'll leave you to it.
            This is rather pointless, on that we agree.

            The problem with your position is that it is logically irrational. You keep making the error that Annie's meal of potatoes is evidence as to whether or not she ate after leaving the doss house. That is irrational - her eating at that time does not constitute evidence she did not eat later, but you continue to present it as if I have no evidence for her eating (which is true of course - I've always said we have no evidence of her activities) while you have evidence that she did not - which is false, because you do not have evidence of what she did after she left the doss house.

            You are failing to recognize that we have a period of time for which we have no information about Annie's activities, therefore you cannot conclude she did not eat. Nor can I conclude she did eat, but if you read my posts, you will notice that at no time have I said she definitely did eat, I have only said we have to consider the possibility that she ate, and the possibility that she did not. I have never said we should ignore the idea of her not eating. You, on the other hand, are pushing for the conclusion that she did not eat simply because we know she at at the doss house. That is logically irrational, your conclusion does not follow from the evidence. And yes, because there is no evidence for either, then neither can be considered more likely and we have to consider both possibilities equally.

            It is never stated what the food was that was found in Annie's stomach. I believe Kelly's food was identified as fish and potatoes - but there is no evidence ever given of her being seen eating fish and potatoes - are your going to argue that because we have nobody testifying that Kelly ate fish and potatoes then we have to conclude she didn't eat them? That is basically what you're doing for Annie - there is "some food" in her stomach, not "potatoes" just "some food", so how do you know that "some food" isn't something other than potatoes? You don't, because it is information we do not have. I have maintained that we therefore must consider the possibility that it was potatoes, and that it was not potatoes. It may be that Dr. Phillips did not say what the food was because it was in an unidentifiable state, but since he does not say that, it also may be that Dr. Phillips simply did not state what the food was even though he could identify it. We also do not know how much food was present. Does "some food" mean a residual amount, like say a teaspoons worth, or is "some food" a fairly substantial meal still present? If the former, that would be more consistent with it being a residual amount of potatoes perhaps, but if the latter, it clearly is evidence that she ate something else, wouldn't you agree to that? But since we don't know how much food is being quantified by the word "some", there's no way for us to draw any conclusion. The term is too vague for that.

            And having considered the actual data on gastric emptying, which I posted some time ago and have suggested you look for, it shows that even easily digestible food is often found many hours later, with increasing passing of time converting it to more unidentifiable states but not always. As such, even if the "some food" found was some of the potatoes from her doss house meal that does not mean she could not have been killed at 5:20. Any other of the possible combinations (i.e. if she did eat after she left - if she ate something else with her potatoes that wasn't noticed by Donnovan, etc) are obviously also capable if she was killed at 5:20.

            And yes, all of those are also possible if she was killed before 4:30 too, I've never said it wasn't.

            What I have maintained throughout, though perhaps have not always been as clear as I could be, is that Dr. Phillips statement of "some food" being found in her stomach in no way allows us to favour one or the other ToD. It is consistent with both.

            You seem to find it hard to accept that when you do not know something you have to consider all the options. We have no evidence of her activities and no evidence of her activities means we have to consider both the implications of her eating and of her not eating. And when we recognize all the bits we do not know (whether or not she ate after leaving the doss house; whether or not she ate something with her potatoes that Donnovan didn't see; whether or not the food found in her stomach was even potatoes; whether or not the identity of the food found in her stomach was omitted by Dr. Phillips because it was in an unidentifiable state or because he simply did not choose to state it at the inquest; whether or not "some food" refers to a teaspoon amount or does it refer to something more substantial? all of these things are unknown to us, so any of them are possible - that is the nature of not knowing things after all). And as I've argued, no matter how those unknowns are looked at, there is no combination that allows us to favour either ToD. The food in her stomach is simply non-informative on that point.

            And to reiterate, no, you do not have evidence indicating she did not eat. You, like all of us, have a period of multiple hours in which Annie's activities are not known.

            - Jeff



            Comment


            • Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post



              I made a serious point about how Chapman had been able to pay for the food and drink, but you have her foraging.

              And then you say that what I write is not worthy of an answer.

              You do not have a satisfactory response.
              Ok.

              I can’t see any relevance in the fact that at some points in her life Annie Chapman had some money. This hardly makes her affluent. I think that when you consider her you are applying modern day criteria which is distorting your viewpoint. As if she was just occasionally ‘a bit short of cash.’ We have to consider the realities of Annie’s life (and all of the victims) A woman who never knew where her next meal was coming from would have been unlikely in the extreme to have turned down an opportunity of acquiring ‘things’ (food included) Those ‘things’ could be used (eaten) sold or traded for something else. A woman who couldn’t be sure that she would eat the next day wouldn’t have turned her nose up at a spare crust of bread or half a potato or a sausage that we’d think twice about throwing to a dog. They also had to carry everything on there person because they had nowhere to leave them and because they could trust other desperately poor people not to steal anything that wasn’t bolted to the ground.

              It’s only one suggestion but it wouldn’t have been at all unusual for her to have had some item of food on her person. Catherine Eddowes had tea and sugar in her property list after all. So maybe a crust of bread. Maybe she had two potatoes but only at one in the lodging house? None of this is remotely unlikely but we just can’t state it as a fact of course.

              Absolutely when she left the lodging house her first aim was to get money for her bed but how long would she have continued looking with no success? How long before she gave up and found somewhere to sleep; perhaps having something to eat before sleep? She would have known other women in the same position so how can we know that she didn’t sleep next to a friend and how can we know that friend didn’t offer to share a bit of food. Would a woman who couldn’t know if she was going to eat tomorrow have turned it down?

              So to sum up PI. We have a situation where Annie might or might not have eaten again…we can’t possibly know either way. It’s entirely 50-50. And we have to remember that we don’t know what those stomach contents were so we can’t assume potatoes. And even if she didn’t eat again, as Jeff has shown from the medical evidence that he posted, food can remain in a stomach for that period. And finally we have to remember that certain illnesses can retard digestion and one of those types are lung diseases and Annie had an advanced disease of the lungs.

              The contents of Annie’s stomach are of no help in estimating her ToD and should be used as such.
              Regards

              Sir Herlock Sholmes.

              “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

              Comment


              • Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post



                For all we know, Chapman may have obtained food for free, may have wandered about for three and a half hours without anyone noticing her and reporting having seen her, may have taken a potato with her when she left the house (and some beer too) and eaten and drunk them before meeting her murderer, or it may be that she found a customer and instead of then going to bed, went in search of more potatoes, and only then found the murderer, but still no-one could remember selling her food or seeing her, and she may have gone to number 29 at 5.30 a.m., even though she must have known something of the habits of its residents and when they were likely to be about, and her murderer may have decided not to use the tap water to wash his hands, and it may be that although Mrs Long could see him and Chapman in the street, no-one saw them enter number 29 and no-one saw him leave number 29, and naturally no-one went to the lavatory in the yard even though some people were up, and it may be that the clocks were wrong in just such a way that Cadoche could have heard the foreign-looking man who had no foreign accent with Chapman, or it may be that Chapman mistook the quarter past chime for the half past chime, but did not realise she had arrived at the market early, and it may be that Cadoche thought it was earlier than it was and no-one at his work place noticed the lateness of his arrival, and it may be that they were all using clocks that were all wrong in the same way so that everyone was in a state of delusion.

                Or, for all we know, those are a long series of fanciful suggestions.

                But I would not dream of calling them assumptions.
                PI, I could write a list similar to this from the other viewpoint and it would be 5 times longer than yours. It gets us nowhere. The leaps of faith are coming from your side I’m afraid and it’s not even a close run thing.

                Regards

                Sir Herlock Sholmes.

                “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

                Comment


                • Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post



                  I did not.

                  I suggest you reread what I did write.

                  And please do not reply that it would not be worthwhile or you have better uses for your time.

                  You have just addressed to me a post which is 964 words long and you expected me to read that, including what must be about the one-hundredth example of someone on this forum claiming incorrectly that I have made an invalid assumption or misrepresented an opinion as fact or misrepresented an assumption as evidence, ad nauseam.

                  And I reciprocate your compliment that your arguments don't hold any weight with me.

                  The reason is that what you have written above, along with much that has been written by a number of other posters, is nothing more substantial than an exercise in hair-splitting.
                  Do you know what irony is PI. Your power to amaze never fails.
                  Regards

                  Sir Herlock Sholmes.

                  “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Fleetwood Mac View Post

                    This is another fallacious argument. It's a non sequitur.

                    The evidence we have is this:

                    1) Annie ate at a quarter to two in the morning.

                    2) Mary had partially digested food in her stomach when examined.

                    We do not have any evidence to tell us Annie ate later and neither do we have evidence to tell us when Mary ate, with the exception that the food was partially digested and so that gives us a clue. That's it. That's the evidence. The rest is your speculation and employment of non sequiturs and other logical fallacies.

                    At its root, we're disagreeing on the fundamentals of a logical argument, including your persistent use of logical fallacies, and that which constitutes arguments of equal worth.

                    You believe that speculation with no supporting evidence is an argument of equal worth when compared with an argument underpinned by evidence, i.e. the evidence of Annie eating at a quarter to two in the morning.

                    As I said, in the event you claimed "we just don't know and so it is possible", then I would agree.

                    But, that's not what you're doing, you're claiming: "we just don't know and that's sufficient to propose it as an argument of equal worth", which is illogical and essentially means that no matter what any poster puts forward on this board, on any aspect of this case; you cannot accept it as being probable providing you consistently employ the logic you're employing here.

                    In the end, you and I could never have a reasonable discussion on any aspect of this case given that your logic is fallacious and you will fall back on "we just don't know" and claim "we just don't know" is an argument of equal worth.

                    That being the case, this has all been pointless.

                    I'll leave you to it.
                    Is there a logical fallacy that explains people who mistakenly accuse people of using them? And if not, I suggest they call it the Fleetwood Mac Fallacy.

                    In a period of time that is a complete blank the suggestions that Annie might or might not have eaten are of equal value. You say it they aren’t. Fine. Everyone on here but PI knows that you’re hopelessly wrong. Something that you gave a definite talent for.
                    Regards

                    Sir Herlock Sholmes.

                    “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post


                      Mentioning the clocks is an interesting sideline too, as is your incorrect assumption that the clocks were all reading the same time ... You are assuming that JtR would have washed his hands rather than simply wipe them on her clothes​



                      Again, when I present an argument, you try to discredit it by claiming that it is an incorrect assumption.

                      I have never assumed that the clocks were all reading the same time.

                      As for your further claim that I am assuming that JtR would have washed his hands rather than simply wipe them on her clothes​, I suggest you take up your objections to supposed assumptions with Wolf Vanderlinden.


                      There is one more interesting observation. If you believe that the killer murdered Annie Chapman at 5:30 that morning, you have to wonder at his bloodstained appearance as he walked the bustling streets on a market morning. I don't mean that he would be covered in blood but certainly his hands would have been bloody and merely wiping them would not make them clean. He took a huge and seemingly unnecessary risk since there was a water tap just feet away from him in the backyard at Hanbury Street. A tap which he didn't use. Perhaps he was afraid that the sound of flowing water might draw attention. There was, however, a convenient pan of water lying just underneath the tap and all he had to do was to dip his hands into the pan. He didn't do this either. Why? Perhaps it was because he didn't see the tap or the pan in the complete darkness that enveloped the yard at about, oh, let us say 3:30 to 4:30 a.m.? A time consistent with Dr. Phillips' opinion on the time of death.





                      That is just one of many arguments in favour of an earlier time of death.

                      They are not, as you make them out to be, mere assumptions.

                      Comment


                      • I think I have found a great example of where people (especially before wrist watches were commonly available) had different perceptions of time. I was reading an entry on another thread, (When and how was it made public that Eddowes gave the fake name Mary Ann Kelly?)

                        When I saw the press article from

                        Casebook: Jack the Ripper - Pall Mall Gazette - 11 October 1888​

                        Police constable Roberts deposed that on Sunday night, at ten minutes to nine, before the murder, the deceased was lying on the footway in High-street, Aldgate, drunk, and surrounded by a crowd of people. He set her up against the shutters and she fell down again. He obtained assistance and conveyed her to he Bishopsgate police-station, when she was asked what her name was. She replied, "Nothing!" She was then wearing an apron which he identified as the one produced, a portion of which was found on the body and another portion in Goulston-street after the murder.

                        P.C. Bifield said he remembered the deceased being brought into the station on the Saturday night at about quarter to nine o'clock, drunk. She remained at the station until one o'clock in the morning and gave her name as being Mary Ann Kelly, of Fashion-street. Deceased told him she had been hopping in Kent.


                        These are the reports from two Police Officers. The arresting Officer PC Roberts states that Eddowes was drunk on the pavement at ten minutes to nine and PC Bifield at the station states that he remembers Eddowes being brought into the station at about quarter to nine!

                        Now bearing in mind Eddowes has to be conveyed to the police station drunk clearly the times are well out. Possible by 15-20 minutes. The actual day is described as either Saturday or Sunday

                        There is only one arrest of the drunken Eddowes. There is a large discrepancy of times. These mistakes may have been made by the officers or the press. However what this tells us is that there are mistakes in the reported times, by witnesses, officers, the press etc.

                        It still happened. We must try to be less worrying about trying to get times spot on. We will never achieve this.

                        Yes times are important but more important when investigating a period where there are question marks over exact timings is what people actually witnessed. If we were to start looking at the precise time when Eddowes was actually arrested and taken to the police station then we would start to pull that apart to no real end.

                        Lets look at what we have with Chapman disregarding exact timing, see if we have leads as a result of this and see where we go

                        Lets also look at other possibilities with different suggested times and lets see where the various routes take us

                        NW

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Fleetwood Mac View Post

                          At its root, we're disagreeing on the fundamentals of a logical argument, including your persistent use of logical fallacies, and that which constitutes arguments of equal worth.

                          You believe that speculation with no supporting evidence is an argument of equal worth when compared with an argument underpinned by evidence, i.e. the evidence of Annie eating at a quarter to two in the morning.

                          As I said, in the event you claimed "we just don't know and so it is possible", then I would agree.

                          But, that's not what you're doing, you're claiming: "we just don't know and that's sufficient to propose it as an argument of equal worth", which is illogical and essentially means that no matter what any poster puts forward on this board, on any aspect of this case; you cannot accept it as being probable providing you consistently employ the logic you're employing here.


                          I agree entirely, but I do not mean that there is anything unusual about it.

                          The approach you describe has been employed against the arguments I put forward ever since I started posting here just over a year ago.

                          Fanciful ideas were regularly presented as if they were more sensible than those I had presented, which at the same time were torn to shreds.

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

                            Is there a logical fallacy that explains people who mistakenly accuse people of using them? And if not, I suggest they call it the Fleetwood Mac Fallacy.

                            In a period of time that is a complete blank the suggestions that Annie might or might not have eaten are of equal value. You say it they aren’t. Fine. Everyone on here but PI knows that you’re hopelessly wrong. Something that you gave a definite talent for.
                            exactly herlock. or the Appeal to Big Latin Words fallacy. lol. you and Jeff are absolutely one hundred percent correct. and actually more correct. the problem of their position is they are trying to use an unknown (we dont have any idea what chapman was doing in the hours preceeding her death) to bolster their argument for a later time of death by saying she didnt eat anything during that time. your/ our position does not try to use that unknown to bolster a position, only to try and explain thats its a wash and their mistake in thinking. their position is de facto(see i can use latin too!) absurd.
                            "Is all that we see or seem
                            but a dream within a dream?"

                            -Edgar Allan Poe


                            "...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
                            quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."

                            -Frederick G. Abberline

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

                              it wouldn’t have been at all unusual for her to have had some item of food on her person.

                              No food was found on her person.



                              Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

                              how can we know that she didn’t sleep next to a friend and how can we know that friend didn’t offer to share a bit of food.

                              Why did the friend not come forward?

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post

                                exactly herlock. or the Appeal to Big Latin Words fallacy ...

                                their position is de facto(see i can use latin too!) absurd.

                                But it is not absurd to write:


                                Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post

                                you know you did that intentionally
                                ?


                                ​How can you know that I know why I did something?

                                Is that your idea of logic?

                                Comment

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