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  • That is my take on it as well, Herlock. I have never understood the Schwartz fixation especially when he never stated he saw Stride being killed. So we have a witness relatively new to the area, who was out at night, who only witnessed an encounter for a few seconds, who didn't understand English and who gave his evidence through an interpreter. Yet, for some posters, an inability to cross every t and dot every i is cause for suspicion. Can any witness in this case hold up to such intense scrutiny?

    Cue the naysayers.

    c.d.

    Comment


    • Originally posted by c.d. View Post
      That is my take on it as well, Herlock. I have never understood the Schwartz fixation especially when he never stated he saw Stride being killed. So we have a witness relatively new to the area, who was out at night, who only witnessed an encounter for a few seconds, who didn't understand English and who gave his evidence through an interpreter. Yet, for some posters, an inability to cross every t and dot every i is cause for suspicion. Can any witness in this case hold up to such intense scrutiny?

      Cue the naysayers.

      c.d.
      And just to add, we haven’t a clue how he came to give his time as 12.45 or how that time was synchronised to other times.
      Regards

      Sir Herlock Sholmes.

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

      Comment


      • Originally posted by c.d. View Post
        That is my take on it as well, Herlock. I have never understood the Schwartz fixation especially when he never stated he saw Stride being killed. So we have a witness relatively new to the area, who was out at night, who only witnessed an encounter for a few seconds, who didn't understand English and who gave his evidence through an interpreter. Yet, for some posters, an inability to cross every t and dot every i is cause for suspicion. Can any witness in this case hold up to such intense scrutiny?

        Cue the naysayers.

        c.d.
        Totally agree cd and herlock

        Plus youve got a club where people are singing, and a rainy night...so easily drowning any out noise from the bsman/stride encounter.
        "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


        • Based on the timeline/chronological sequence, only a loooonnnnnng handful of people could have been the killer.

          Bs man
          Pipe man
          Eagle
          Lave
          Parcel man
          Overcoat man
          Diemschitz
          Spooner
          Goldstein
          PC Smith
          Schwarz
          The couple "on the corner."


          How we try and fit Lechmere, Maybrick, Druitt or Kosminski into all this, I have no idea.
          "Great minds, don't think alike"

          Comment


          • IIRC PC Smith didn't have a watch. His sighting of Stride with the man was probably closer to 12:38.

            Yours truly,

            Tom Wescott

            Comment


            • Originally posted by c.d. View Post
              That is my take on it as well, Herlock. I have never understood the Schwartz fixation especially when he never stated he saw Stride being killed. So we have a witness relatively new to the area, who was out at night, who only witnessed an encounter for a few seconds, who didn't understand English and who gave his evidence through an interpreter. Yet, for some posters, an inability to cross every t and dot every i is cause for suspicion. Can any witness in this case hold up to such intense scrutiny?

              Cue the naysayers.

              c.d.
              Over the years I've considered that Schwartz may have been lying. The reasons for this are that the Star report (a police plant, yes, but perhaps not entirely without some factual accuracy) has Schwartz living on Berner Street until that week. Schwartz goes to the police with his own interpreter, as did Goldstein (i.e. William Wess) and William Wess appears to have known about the Schwartz story as a muddled version of it appears in the press. This potential connection between Schwartz and the IWEC club opened the possibility of the anarchists doing some damage control by presenting the police with two obviously gentile suspects, replete with Semitic slur. There's also the fact that Schwartz disappears from not only the records, but the memories of police at about November 1st, 1888. I find that odd.

              Having said all that, when I really dug deep into the evidence, it stood out to me that if Schwartz was lying, he was extraordinary lucky, because his lie depends on Berner Street being absolutely empty at around 12:45 for his story to not be immediately disproved. Low and behold, it turns out this was true. And Brown puts a man wearing a dark overcoat in the street at this time. Another remarkable coincidence if Schwartz's story had been bunk. What I ended up concluding is that while it's possible Schwartz's story is a hoax, the likelihood is something like what Swanson describes in his October 19th report did, in fact, take place. His description of the men is probably not spot on and more than the word 'Lipski' was likely spoken, but he couldn't understand it. But unless he was a remarkably fortunate liar, we have to take his story on board.

              In any event, what he witnessed was not Stride's murder but some sort of prelude.

              Yours truly,

              Tom Wescott

              Comment


              • Hi Tom,

                Nice analysis. So if it was a "prelude" do you think the B.S. man went on to kill her? If so, was he the Ripper? If not, do you think her killer came on the scene after Schwartz left? If so, was he the Ripper?

                c.d.

                Comment


                • Originally posted by c.d. View Post
                  Hi Tom,

                  Nice analysis. So if it was a "prelude" do you think the B.S. man went on to kill her? If so, was he the Ripper? If not, do you think her killer came on the scene after Schwartz left? If so, was he the Ripper?

                  c.d.
                  Thanks, CD. I do believe Stride was a Ripper victim. I also believe that Stride was killed very close to 1am and not at the time Schwartz was on the street. I suspect Brown's man was her killer. Was Brown's man BS Man, as Bern suggests, or Pipeman, or someone altogether different? That's the question. But odds are he was one of those two men. And he wore a dark overcoat.

                  Yours truly,

                  Tom Wescott

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

                    You must do this deliberately Andrew because there can be no alternative explanation. Time and time again you do it. We keep talking about clocks being poorly synchronised so that we cannot assume all times are accurate but whenever it’s convenient to do so you impose this ‘all times are set-in-stone’ ruling. This kind of thing is what makes discussion with you so irritating and it’s why I say that you are always looking at situations with an attitude of “there must be something dodgy going on here…I just have to find it.”
                    Time and again I point out your illogic. You have never come to terms with the implications of Smith's beat, and his indication that his final beat before reaching the yard was within regulation.

                    My timeline has an estimated time of his passing at 12.36. He said that his beat took twenty five to thirty minutes..I’ve gone for thirty. This has him back at the corner of Commercial Road and Berner Street at approximately 1.06 but he said that it was 1.00. Answer..the clock that he used for his time was around 6 minutes or so slow.
                    What you don't accept, or perhaps understand, is that if his clock is slow by 6 minutes, it is slow at both ends. If you're going add 6 minutes to 1:00, you also have to add 6 minutes to the starting point. You want to make his starting point 12:36, so let's see if your sums add up.

                    If Smith was last in Berner St between 12:30 and 12:35 by his clock, we could say that he witnesses Stride in between those times. As she was closer to Commercial Rd than the yard at that point, Smith has a bit further to go when he returns to Berner St, so I'll say that his yard-to-yard round trip starts at 12:33. By regulation, Smith should reach the yard from 25 to 30 minutes later. That would mean 12:58 to 1:03, again by his clock. He tells us he is at the top Berner St at 1:00. At beat pace - remember he continues down Berner St at regulation pace - he is going to be entering the yard at very close to 1:02. That is a 29-minute beat - within regulation.

                    Now consider your adjustment to his time. Placing him at the top of the street 6 minutes later than his clock indicated, means he gets to the yard at 1:08. To remain consistent with the timespan of his final beat - not just his regulation timespan but also that which he stated under oath - he would have to last be in Berner St between 12:36 and 12:41. He would therefore have witnessed Stride at approximately 12:39. (In your timeline of #517, you have Fanny going to her door at 12.37.30.)

                    The problem now is that you have a beat lasting from 12:36 to 1:08. That's 32 minutes - outside of regulation and not compatible with Smith's testimony, even if his 6-minute early clock is accepted as reasonable. Granted, you're only about 3 minutes longer than Smith indicated, and only 2 minutes above regulation, so putting your timeline in order may not be too difficult if you can shave 2 or 3 minutes of activity.
                    Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing

                    Comment

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