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Witness Testimony: Albert Cadosche

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  • Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post



    It is Wolf Vanderlinden's interpretation.

    I quote from his dissertation 'Considerable Doubt' and the Death of Annie Chapman:


    The police were obviously depending upon Dr. Phillips' opinions and his standing as a reliable medical expert when directing the course of their investigations. To the detectives working on the Chapman murder, Dr. Phillips' estimated time of death made Long and Cadosch irrelevant.

    This sentiment is also expressed in Swanson's report.

    hence the evidence of Mrs. Long which appeared to be so important to the Coroner, must be looked upon with some amount of doubt, which is to be regretted.

    This "doubt" apparently soon became the conviction that Mrs. Long's testimony was worthless.

    It is now time to look at Dr. Phillips' opinions about the time of death of Annie Chapman, opinions that were supported by Scotland Yard.
    Swanson wrote that if Long was right, Phillips was wrong, and that if Phillips was correct, Long was incorrect. He was demonstrating to The Home Office that witness evidence was contradictory, and therefore there had to be some doubt. I am aware of no evidence that the "doubt" ever became a "conviction" or that Scotland Yard ever rejected Richardson and Long and fully accepted Phillips.

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Doctored Whatsit View Post

      There is absolutely no connection whatever between your quote above "up to the present the combined result of those enquiries did not supply the slightest clue to the murderer", and Long's statement or Swanson's opinion as to its reliability. Your interpretation by linking them together is therefore totally irrelevant and without foundation.

      The quote refers to and follows an account of certain listed police enquiries since the murder, for example at 29 Hanbury St, other lodging houses, pawnbrokers, the "insane students", and "other women of the same class" etc. Swanson wrote that those specific enquiries produced no evidence of value. The comment has nothing to do with Long's account, so you cannot claim that it "obviously" establishes anything about Swanson's opinion of Long.


      As I explained, I was citing Wolf Vanderlinden's opinion.

      In the same report, Swanson wrote:

      the evidence of Mrs. Long which appeared to be so important to the Coroner, must be looked upon with some amount of doubt

      That obviously DOES establish something about Swanson's opinion of Long's testimony.

      ​​Furthermore, if Swanson had found Long's evidence to be credible, why after making all those enquiries did he write that he had no clue?

      Didn't he have a description of a 40-plus dark foreigner?

      Comment


      • Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post



        As I explained, I was citing Wolf Vanderlinden's opinion.

        In the same report, Swanson wrote:

        the evidence of Mrs. Long which appeared to be so important to the Coroner, must be looked upon with some amount of doubt

        That obviously DOES establish something about Swanson's opinion of Long's testimony.

        ​​Furthermore, if Swanson had found Long's evidence to be credible, why after making all those enquiries did he write that he had no clue?

        Didn't he have a description of a 40-plus dark foreigner?
        Obviously if two key witnesses disagree, then there must be "some doubt" - that is unavoidable.

        As I previously wrote, Swanson was stating that certain listed enquiries - which had nothing to do with Long - "didn't supply the slightest clue".

        Long only claimed to have seen the back of the man, so her description was never going to be truly helpful. She was never going to be able to pick him out at an identity parade, for example.

        Incidentally, while we are talking about Swanson's report, if anyone is still considering the evidence of the alleged dark bearded man in the passage of 29 Hanbury Street, Swanson doesn't mention him, nor does Abberline, so it must surely be assumed that there is some confusion of stories. Swanson does specify that the enquiries of other residents etc didn't produce the slightest clue.
        Last edited by Doctored Whatsit; 11-08-2023, 03:32 PM.

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Doctored Whatsit View Post

          Obviously if two key witnesses disagree, then there must be "some doubt" - that is unavoidable.


          Swanson wrote:

          the evidence of Mrs. Long which appeared to be so important to the Coroner, must be looked upon with some amount of doubt

          Where did he make a similar statement about Phillips' evidence?

          Comment



          • The problem here is that nothing registers. Medical evidence or explanations are provided but a very few post later they are ignored and we go back over the same ground.

            A poster corrects a misapprehension about what has been said and yet a few posts later it’s back to stating the original error.

            Over and again it goes.


            Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post


            The same thing happened to Eddowes, with the intestines thrown over the shoulder on the same side and in similar weather conditions.

            Posters are arguing that Chapman, who was almost completely cold, had been dead for only about one hour.

            Eddowes was examined about 42 minutes after death, yet was still warm.

            And it has been explained a gazillion times that we cannot compare the two. Bodies react differently. Why do you ignore this? This is what experts tell us.


            If Long was earlier than she thought, then why would she have mistaken the quarter hour chime for the half hour chime, even though they were different, and she went to the market regularly?

            And why would she state that she arrived at the market a few minutes after half past if it was actually only a few minutes after a quarter past?

            And it has been explained a gazillion times that that’s not the suggestion being made here. Yes, it’s been made previously but not now. I’ll repeat…..not now. The suggestion is one of clock inaccuracy and poor synchronisation. Why do you have to invent arguments against a suggestion which isn’t being made? The ‘mishearing the bells’ theory is not one that has been promoted with any vehemence recently. I believe it’s been mentioned in passing but that’s all.

            And why would no-one at the market note that she was early, or do you think everyone else there was living in a parallel universe where everything happened a quarter of an hour earlier?

            Because no one would have noticed her being 5 minutes or so early. Oh I forgot, your still talking about the point that no one on here is talking about. Right.

            And if, alternatively, Cadoche mistakenly thought it was earlier than it was, why did his colleagues or superiors at work not notice that he arrived late, or were they too living in a parallel universe in which everything happened a quarter of an hour later?
            Mmmm, yes you’re still working from a suggestion that no one is making. If he’d got to work earlier it would have been 5 minutes or so and no one would have taken a blind bit of notice.

            Are there any other points not relevant to what is being suggested on here that you want to dismiss while you’re at it? I’m trying to get the hang of these rules.

            Last edited by Herlock Sholmes; 11-08-2023, 04:28 PM.
            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



              Swanson wrote:

              the evidence of Mrs. Long which appeared to be so important to the Coroner, must be looked upon with some amount of doubt

              Where did he make a similar statement about Phillips' evidence?
              What would have qualified Swanson to second guess Phillips estimation? Don’t you think that the police at the time assumed that their experts were correct. Unless you expect Swanson to have quoted from 21st century text books then it’s hardly surprising that he placed great store in Phillips estimate.

              Fortunately, we now know better because we have an army of modern day experts who tell us so. Remember them……the ones that you and FM believe that you know bettter than.
              Regards

              Sir Herlock Sholmes.

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

              Comment


              • Originally posted by GBinOz View Post

                Hi Jeff,

                An alternative idea that would account for her not being seen by anyone would be that she was lying dead in the backyard of #29. The area she emerged into from the doss house was the geographic profiling hot spot, so it was not altogether unlikely that Jack may have picked her up there immediately after she left the doss house. All the victims lived in this vicinity, so she/they may have known him as a fellow drinker at a local pub such as The Ten Bells or Ringers. This would fit with the Scotland yard memo to the police stations. I am wary of building scenarios based on a preconceived conclusion in the way that Sugden built his argument by commencing with the presumption of a 5:30 murder.

                Best regards, George
                Hi George

                Prostitutes don't ply their trade at 5am

                Chapman would not have been looking for punters till that time of the morning

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post

                  Prostitutes don't ply their trade at 5am

                  Chapman would not have been looking for punters till that time of the morning


                  Sexual serial murderers don't look for streetwalker victims at 5.30 a.m.

                  As I pointed out, Chapman was confident that she would have found a customer long before that time.

                  Nichols, Stride and Eddowes evidently did not need to wait that long, either.

                  As ever, those who argue in favour of a late TOD have to fall back on the argument that this time the improbable happened.

                  It takes Chapman hours longer than she expected to find a customer, the murderer is out looking for victims hours later than usual, the murderer is prepared to commit murder in a confined space even though it is getting light, Chapman is willing to go with him into number 29 even though she must be familiar with its occupants' habits, the murderer chooses not to use the tap water to clean his hands, no-one reports having seen Chapman or the murderer enter, inside, or leave the house, no-one reports having seen Chapman for three and a half hours, Chapman's body cools unusually quickly, rigor mortis of her limbs sets in unusually quickly, and the clocks have to be wrong to such a degree that Cadoche has to be able to hear the woman seen by Long.

                  And anyone who questions this long list of improbabilities having actually happened is treated as though he has a defective logical faculty and as if anyone ought to be able to appreciate that such coincidences happen in such abundance all the time.
                  Last edited by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1; 11-08-2023, 06:43 PM.

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post

                    Echoic memory is even further removed from anything we need consider than recognition memory studies.

                    Witness testimony is more based upon retrieval of information from one of the components of reference memory (older term was "long term memory")
                    This is demonstrably incorrect according to the research.

                    The research posted previously, informed us that one cause of the 'misinformation effect' is the event not being fully encoded into the memory, and during the process of event to recollection; the gaps are filled as a result of internal bias and external influences.

                    The most recent article I posted, told us that echoic memory lasts for seconds, and whether or not that sound moves from echoic memory into short or long term memory depends to a large degree on whether or not the person paid much attention to the event.

                    So, it is reasonably plausible that Albert's innocuous event, when in his own words he had other things on his mind, might not have been fully encoded, might not have made it into short term memory; and Albert filled the gaps.

                    Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post

                    Can happen, of course, but then that witness will generally stand out as their description of the events will just not "work" with others.
                    Nobody verified Albert's event. We are left with Albert's statement, his recollection of that event, and nobody else claimed to have heard a noise against a fence.

                    There are no "others to work with".
                    Last edited by Fleetwood Mac; 11-08-2023, 06:52 PM.

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post

                      Sexual serial murderers don't look for streetwalker victims at 5.30 a.m.
                      We can be absolutely certain that serial killers do not usually kill in broad daylight, outdoors, and in a place where the community is active close by.

                      And that is statistically demonstrable.

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post

                        Hi George

                        Prostitutes don't ply their trade at 5am

                        Chapman would not have been looking for punters till that time of the morning

                        www.trevormarriott.co.uk
                        Proof of this? A don’t say x years of experience on the Force.
                        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



                          Sexual serial murderers don't look for streetwalker victims at 5.30 a.m.

                          Invention. Provide categorical proof of this.

                          As I pointed out, Chapman was confident that she would have found a customer long before that time.

                          She was under the influence of alcohol. I was confident that England would reach the quarter finals of the cricket World Cup but they didn’t.

                          Nichols, Stride and Eddowes evidently did not need to wait that long, either.

                          Utterly irrelevant. I was in London in the pouring rain the other day less than a mile from where my friend was staying. It took me 40 minutes to get a cab….he found one in around a minute. What does that prove.

                          As ever, those who argue in favour of a late TOD have to fall back on the argument that this time the improbable happened.

                          And those that favour an earlier ToD have to invent things, manipulate the evidence, mangle the English language, nitpick, lie and make very silly suggestions.

                          It takes Chapman hours longer than she expected to find a customer,

                          Things sometimes take longer than expected. It’s called life. If you rely on points like this then you simply can’t get more desperate.

                          the murderer is out looking for victims hours later than usual,

                          Later that the one previous murder you mean. And the possibly 3 after it. Perhaps he’d left his copy of his Serial Killer Timetable at home that day?

                          the murderer is prepared to commit murder in a confined space even though it is getting light,

                          As opposed to risk-free serial killing.

                          Chapman is willing to go with him into number 29 even though she must be familiar with its occupants' habits,

                          Invention - it has been suggested by a woman who looked at the victims face briefly that Chapman might have sold items there before. The suggestion that Chapman, simp,y because of this, would have been aware of the inhabitants habits is simply infantile logic.

                          the murderer chooses not to use the tap water to clean his hands,

                          He probably heard Cadosch in the next yard. Why would he then stand in the middle of the yard washing his hands, away from the fence as cover? What if he thought wiping his hands on some cloth and simply walking with them in his pockets was a safer way of getting away quicker.

                          no-one reports having seen Chapman or the murderer enter, inside, or leave the house,

                          Silly point. She was found there so she must have entered. Duh.

                          no-one reports having seen Chapman for three and a half hours,

                          Yes, I’d have thought someone would have mentioned her on Facebook. A nondescript, drab, poverty stricken woman in a city teeming with nondescript, drab, poverty stricken women in the early hours. Either no one noticed her or whoever did didn’t want to get involved with the police. Another none point.

                          Chapman's body cools unusually quickly,

                          Invention.

                          rigor mortis of her limbs sets in unusually quickly,

                          Invention.

                          and the clocks have to be wrong to such a degree that Cadoche has to be able to hear the woman seen by Long.

                          And clicks can’t be 5 minutes wrong can they? More infantile logic.

                          And anyone who questions this long list of improbabilities having actually happened is treated as though he has a defective logical faculty and as if anyone ought to be able to appreciate that such coincidences happen in such abundance all the time.
                          You want a list of defective logic…..apart from the above…..ok……give me a while because I’m a little busy.

                          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

                            We can be absolutely certain that serial killers do not usually kill in broad daylight, outdoors, and in a place where the community is active close by.

                            And that is statistically demonstrable.
                            Desperate.
                            Regards

                            Sir Herlock Sholmes.

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

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

                              Desperate.
                              That's an unusual term for the statistically proven.

                              And, it's a message board discussing a case from 150 years ago. It's not that important in the grand scheme of life and so tackling it like your life depends on it, seems disproportionate (and unhealthy).

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post



                                They are not assumptions.

                                The consensus is one hour.



                                What’s more, there are also starchy root vegetables, such as potatoes, which take up to 60 minutes to digest.

                                https://www.donat.com/how-long-does-...%20to%20digest.



                                Starchy vegetables such as potatoes digest in 60 minutes.

                                Water, juices or other drinks are the simplest and take less time to digest. On the other hand, complex food takes longer time to digest.




                                Starches like potatoes spend about an hour in the stomach before moving on to the intestines





                                potatoes: 60 minutes

                                When you know how much time it takes for a food to digest in your stomach it is much easier to plan or make adjustments to your diet. The gastric-discharge depends on the quantity of the food, its characteristics, its chemical composition, the pH of the stomach, the peristalsis intensity. For example, the liquid goes almost immediately into the small intestine, carbohydrate-rich foods quickly, rich in protein and fat-rich foods are the slowest.

                                Those are not scientific studies. They might be correct, but right now they're just random internet sites.

                                "The full picture always needs to be given. When this does not happen, we are left to make decisions on insufficient information." - Christer Holmgren

                                "Unfortunately, when one becomes obsessed by a theory, truth and logic rarely matter." - Steven Blomer

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