The police use a system called ADVOKATE to assess witnesses (thanks to Trevor for posting the information) so I thought I’d apply it to two witnesses. The rarely doubted Joseph Lawende and the regularly doubted Elizabeth Long:
Amount of time under observation: How long did the witness have the person/incident in view?
Lawende 1 - Long 1 (both were in passing.)
Distance: What was the distance between the witness and the person/incident?
Lawende 1 - Long 2 (Lawende was across a street, Long was alongside the woman)
Visibility: What was the visibility at the time? Factors include the time of day/night, street lighting, etc.
Lawende 1 - Long 3 (Lawende was at night, Long was in daylight)
Obstruction: Were there any obstructions to the view of the witness?
Lawende 2 - Long 4 (neither were obstructed)
Known or seen before: Did the witness know, or had the witness ever seen, the person before? If so where and when?
Lawende 2 - Long 4 (neither knew the person they were seeing)
Any reason to remember: Did the witness have any special reason for remembering the person/incident? Was there something specific that made the person/incident memorable?
Lawende 2 - Long 4 (neither had any reason for paying attention specifically)
Time-lapse: How long has elapsed since the witness saw the person/incident?
Lawende 3 - Long 4 (I’m unsure when Lawende was interviewed by Long was after 3 days)
Error discrepancy: Are there any errors or material discrepancies between descriptions in the first and subsequent accounts of the witness?
Lawende 3 - Long 4
……
Then we add the very obvious fact that Lawende wasn’t even identifying Eddowes.
Lawende:
“The woman was standing with her face towards the man, and I only saw her back. She had one hand on his breast. He was the taller. She had on a black jacket and bonnet. I have seen the articles at the police-station, and believe them to be those the deceased was wearing…”
Long:
“I saw the woman's face. Have seen the deceased in the mortuary, and I am sure the woman that I saw in Hanbury-street was the deceased.”
Lawende identifies her by her jacket and hat. Long identifies the woman because she saw her face close up then saw the body in the mortuary. And yet we still hear Lawende being considered a more reliable witness? He simply saw a woman talking to a man close to where Catherine was murdered at around the right time.
So based on my own use of ADVOKATE (and others may disagree) this means that Long scores slightly higher than Lawende….a man whose reliability is rarely (if ever) questioned. So why is it the case that, in general, Lawende is treated as one of the strongest suspects in the case and yet Long is often treated as one of the most unreliable? I’d say that it’s because we can fairly accurately pin down Eddowes ToD (and therefore we know that she was in that general area at around that time) as opposed to Long in the Chapman case because Chapman’s ToD is disputed by Dr. Phillips estimation. But how heavily should this fact influence our assessment? Aren’t we guilty of simple thinking “surely it must have been her?” Must it have been her though?
Could Lawende have seen someone else? How unlikely would it have been? An actual circumstance that would account for Lawende seeing something else is far from as unlikely as we presume in my opinion. Similar circumstances repeat themselves millions of times a day across the world. I’d ask what would be inherently unbelievable in a scenario such as this:
‘A single woman walks along a street. A hundred yards or so ahead three men walk in the same direction. Across the street a man is talking to a women near the head of a passage. The three men pass by them. A very few seconds later the couple move off. The single woman gets to where they were, crosses the street and walks down the passage.’
This is hardly the stuff of Tolkien in terms of believability is it? I’m not stating this as a theory or as something that I particularly believe happened by the way. I’m not even suggesting that the couple weren’t likeliest to have been Eddowes and her killer. I’m just suggesting two things. That an alternative scenario shouldn’t be particularly difficult to believe and that we should judge all witnesses in the same way.
So my main point again…..why is Joseph Lawende considered a reliable, rarely challenged witness whilst Elizabeth Long is often dismissed as ‘probably mistaken?’
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