Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing
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Originally posted by GBinOz View Post
I wouldn't conclude in that direction. Spooner is testifying under oath that he left after both having assisted Lamb to close the gates and being examined by Phillips. This is inconsistent with the evidence and would have to be considered as, at least, being careless with the truth.
Spooner: When Police-constable Lamb came I helped him to close the gates of the yard, and I left through the club.
That's it? No, but look who steps in now ...
Inspector Reid: I believe that was after you had given your name and address to the police? - Yes. And had been searched? - Yes. And examined by Dr. Phillips? - Yes.
On the Friday, Reid said: A thorough search was made by the police of the yard and the houses in it, but no trace could be found of any person who might have committed the murder. As soon as the search was over the whole of the persons who had come into the yard and the members of the club were interrogated, their names and addresses taken, their pockets searched by the police, and their clothes and hands examined by the doctors. The people were twenty-eight in number. Each was dealt with separately, and they properly accounted for themselves.
Were the 28 people allowed to go one-by-one, or all at once? If the later, Spooner left hours after he had closed the gates. Otherwise, he might have been one of the first to be interrogated and allowed to leave.Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing
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Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post
I understand that point of view, but how does it seem when we look at the Daily Telegraph?
Spooner: When Police-constable Lamb came I helped him to close the gates of the yard, and I left through the club.
That's it? No, but look who steps in now ...
Inspector Reid: I believe that was after you had given your name and address to the police? - Yes. And had been searched? - Yes. And examined by Dr. Phillips? - Yes.
On the Friday, Reid said: A thorough search was made by the police of the yard and the houses in it, but no trace could be found of any person who might have committed the murder. As soon as the search was over the whole of the persons who had come into the yard and the members of the club were interrogated, their names and addresses taken, their pockets searched by the police, and their clothes and hands examined by the doctors. The people were twenty-eight in number. Each was dealt with separately, and they properly accounted for themselves.
Were the 28 people allowed to go one-by-one, or all at once? If the later, Spooner left hours after he had closed the gates. Otherwise, he might have been one of the first to be interrogated and allowed to leave.
The CORONER. - Could you see there was a woman there when you went in?
Witness. - Yes. The doors were closed when I arrived.
I struggle to see your point here. Spooner says he left after helping Lamb close the gates, but not before Phillips had examined him. The gates were closed when Blackwell arrived and Phillips arrived after Blackwell. How could he have been examined by Phillips 20-30 minutes before Phillips arrival? The charitable view is that Spooner was confused. The realistic view is that he was lying. The wonderous view is that why was this was not observed at the time.Last edited by GBinOz; Today, 11:52 AM.
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Are we at the stage where we have to consider the possibility of Spooner as a suspect?
A claimed girlfriend that no one claims to having seen. A person that enters upon a crime scene and immediately presumes to handle the body. A man who claims to have left the crime scene after having assisted the police to close the gates, claiming this was after being examined by a doctor who is 20-30 minutes away from being present at the time.
For consideration.
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Originally posted by GBinOz View Post
I struggle to see your point here. Spooner says he left after helping Lamb close the gates, but not before Phillips had examined him. The gates were closed when Blackwell arrived and Phillips arrived after Blackwell. How could he have been examined by Phillips 20-30 minutes before Phillips arrival? The charitable view is that Spooner was confused. The realistic view is that he was lying. The wonderous view is that why was this was not observed at the time.
I lean toward him lying about his purpose for being on the street. He wanted to hide his association with the vigilance committee, for security or other reasons.
Originally posted by Monty View Post
The hours of work varied. At their height, the Mile End Vigilance Committee had 50 men on their books 12 of these men an intimate knowledge of the area and were chosen to lead these patrols. Patrols were noted, routes planned and anything suspicious pencilled in a notebook. Beats were undertaken as soon as the men finished their working day. These beats were finnished around 4 or 5am, in some cases when day broke. Now some of these men had a days work, these chaps tended to finish earlier, however those who could commit to a daybreak finished did so. These men equipped themselves with lanterns, sticks and something the Police never had, rubber soled boots.
What did Spooner see on entering the yard, supposedly without a lantern?
Spooner: I stopped them and asked what was the matter. They replied, "A woman has been murdered." I then went round with them to Berner-street, and into Dutfield's yard, adjoining No. 40, Berner-street. I saw a woman lying just inside the gate.
Perhaps Spooner saw what he was expecting to see, but he couldn't have known where to expect to see her.Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing
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If I may be permitted to present a scenario based on nothing more than speculation and conjecture:
Eagle leaves the club between 12:30 and 12:45 to accompany his lady to her home. Eagle married Kate Kopelansky on 23 Dec 1888, who lived at her parent's home at 183 Whitechapel Road. Presuming this is the lady in question, the return trip to this address is approximately 30 minutes. Eagle states that "I saw my sweetheart to the door of the house where she was living, and then walked back to the club". This provides Eagle with a little time to indulge in some libations on the way back and appear a little tipsy as he proceeds down Berner St on his return to the club.
He encounters Stride standing in the gateway awaiting the return of Parcelman from an urgent visit to the Loo in the yard. Presuming her to be there for immoral purposes he tries to encourage her to leave, but she breaks free of his grasp and falls on the ground. Schwartz, who is walking behind Eagle, observes a presumed domestic, crosses the road and walks towards the intersection with Fairclough St. By this time Stride is objecting to Eagle's interference, knowing that Parcelman will return at any moment, and informs Eagle in no uncertain terms. Eagle sees that two men are observing the proceeding and shouts at them, after which Pipeman approaches Schwartz, who is then spooked and leaves "incontinently".
Pipeman then approaches Eagle who desists in his objection to Stride's continued presence and enters the club by the side door. So is Spooner actually Pipeman, and offers to accompany Stride to the safety of the club and kills her in transit. Or is Spooner actually Parcelman, and Stride is the mentioned girl friend, and he returns from the Loo and kills Stride. Spooner is interrupted and retreats down Fairclough, but when he hears Diemshitz + one running down Fairclough he confronts Diemshitz and accompanies him back to the yard.
Arriving at the yard he goes straight to Stride's body to make sure that there is no evidence that could incriminate him, such as the grapes, which he removes if he is Parcelman.
I find myself at a loss as to why he would say that he left after helping close the gates but then add that he had been examined by Phillips who wasn't yet there.
An unlikely story, perhaps, but there it is.Last edited by GBinOz; Today, 01:21 PM.
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Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post
You can suppose he had both feet on the curb; there is still no public house a few doors off.
There was a beer house called The Nelson which was a few yards away. You are nitpicking over a beer house being called a public house.
If instead you prefer to have the man appearing when Schwartz begins crossing, then not only are you are changing the evidence to suit an argument, but you're creating at least one new problem. As you support the press account and suppose Schwartz crosses prior to reaching the gateway, if Pipe/Knifeman has spotted him at this point, and rushes at Schwartz or even just begins moving toward him, Schwartz would have scampered straight back up Berner St, away from Ellen St and the railway arches to the South.
You are using over-complication as a means of obfuscation. Swanson: “On crossing to the opposite side of the street, he saw a second man standing lighting his pipe.” The Star: “..he crossed to the other side of the street. Before he had gone many yards, however, he heard the sound of a quarrel, and turned back to learn what was the matter, but just as he stepped from the kerb a second man came out of the doorway of the public house a few doors..”
Regarding the confusion in the press account, I think Schwartz was talking about a doorway or something like a doorway, and the reporter thinks he means the Nelson. There is no mention of the Nelson by the police. Swanson's report has Pipeman somewhere on the street, but he is totally unspecific about the location, other than to say that he followed Schwartz after Schwartz crossed the street, implying that he came from a relative North location. That would exclude the Nelson.
So Swanson says that Schwartz saw the man after he’d crossed the street but The Star adds a minor detail in that Schwartz had stepped off the kerb as he was returning to the club side before he saw the man.
As Schwartz arrived near the gateway (at the commencement of the incident) he would have been a few yards, or a few doors away from The Nelson. Why you see this as a mystery would be baffling if we didn’t all understand your overwhelming need to create a mystery where none exists. As per usual.
A and B are extremely unlikely, not only for the coincidence of his leaving the pub in the short period in which Schwartz is on the street,
Can you really try and pass this off as logic. Just because two things occurred at the same time they are unlikely to have been true!
but because he would have been easy enough to identify, and there is no sign that he was. C is just a rephrasing of "just as he stepped from the kerb" - already discussed.
An entirely sensible and reasonable suggestion. I think that we can all see why it doesn’t appeal to you.
I don't suppose Pipeman had been on the street when Schwartz walked down it. I think he originated from a location that made him invisible to Schwartz at that point. Possibly Hampshire Court. Walking through that court would take one to the Red Lion on Batty St.
Why the complication? Isn’t the likeliest suggestion that he’d walked around the corner from Fairclough Street. Too obvious?
Sure, it's simple, but that doesn't make it right. My model is based on everything we have from the police. Yours is based on the press account.
Yours is based on a desire to shape the evidence to create a mystery.
Same again - I'm with the police on this matter; you're with the press.Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
There was a beer house called The Nelson which was a few yards away. You are nitpicking over a beer house being called a public house.
I’m following the evidence but I’m doing it with a dose of reason and common sense and without an agenda of trying to create the plot of a novel.
Yours is based on a desire to shape the evidence to create a mystery.Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing
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Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post
At the moment Schwartz steps from the kerb, there is no beer house a few doors off.
THE NELSON!!!!
So, why did you change "a few doors off" to "a few yards away"? If your argument is so rational and mine so based on ulterior motive, why are you changing the evidence from an already questionable press report, while I'm offering a model based on all the reports and comments we have from the police?
“Before he had gone many yards, however, he heard the sound of a quarrel, and turned back to learn what was the matter, but just as he stepped from the kerb a second man came out of the doorway of the public house a few doors off..”
I didn’t substitute, I simply pointed out that it was just a few yards away. Again…nitpicking.
The Nelson was a few doors off from the scene of the quarrel.
On the contrary, my model of the incident explains existing mysteries - it does not create any new ones. As yet, I haven't seen evidence that you fully understand what I'm putting forward, even after multiple simplifying explanations. That would explain your preference for playing the man and not the ball.
We know what happened. Petty pointless, nitpickings over wording gets us nowhere.
Schwartz walked directly behind BS man on the same side of the road - FACT
He saw the incident begin - FACT
He crossed to the opposite side to the club - FACT
He walked on for a short but unrecorded distance - FACT
At some point he saw Pipeman - FACT
He couldn’t be certain where he came from but assumed/speculated that it was The Nelson - FACT
BS man yelled “Lipski” - FACT
Schwartz crossed back over the road and headed home - FACT
He looked behind him and saw Pipeman who was heading in the same direction - FACT
End of story, game over, everything sorted….now we can move on.Last edited by Herlock Sholmes; Today, 04:44 PM.Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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