Regarding the time that Paul saw Cross in Buck's Row, the answer can be found in Inspector Abberline's report of 19 Sept 1888. Obviously Abberline had full access to all the evidence and would have been aware of the locality. He wrote in his report (which I take from the The Ultimate Jack the Ripper Sourcebook by Evans & Skinner):
"I beg to report that about 3.40am 31st Ult. as Charles Cross, "carman" of 22 Doveton Street, Cambridge Road, Bethnal Green was passing through Bucks Row, Whitechapel (on his way to work) he noticed a woman lying on her back in the footway...he stopped to look at the woman when another carman (also on his way to work) named Robert Paul of 30 Foster St., Bethnal Green came up...".
So from this we see:
1. The ambiguity from the newspaper reports about which time Cross left his home is cleared up. The two reporters who heard "3.20" were definitely wrong. Abberline would have known it would not have taken Cross 20 minutes to reach Bucks Row from his home in Doveton Street. The five reporters who heard "3.30" were certainly correct.
2. The notion that Paul appeared in Bucks Row at 4.45 is comprehensively demolished. Abberline would not have placed the time at which Cross found the body at about 4.40 if there was any evidence that Paul strolled round the corner a full five minutes later.
Abberline might not have solved the murder but he was no fool and would have been perfectly capable of establishing a simple matter of timing. The fact that he plumps for 4.40 confirms what I have previously argued that it was the meeting with Mizen that took place at about 4.45am.
From Abberline's report, it can be seen that the idea that, on the evidence, there was a "major" nine minute gap is dead in the water. For such a gap to have existed, then despite the previous reliance on Cross's testimony as to the time he left his home, it would have had to have been at least six minutes earlier than he testified to. If he left at the time he said he did, and we accept the timing of 7 minutes for him to walk to Bucks Row, then he had no more than 3 minutes to murder Nichols before Paul's arrival. While this might have been physically possible, it does mean that the "9 minute gap" is a gap of fiction and, in my submission, in the light of Abberline's clear timing of events, should not be repeated.
"I beg to report that about 3.40am 31st Ult. as Charles Cross, "carman" of 22 Doveton Street, Cambridge Road, Bethnal Green was passing through Bucks Row, Whitechapel (on his way to work) he noticed a woman lying on her back in the footway...he stopped to look at the woman when another carman (also on his way to work) named Robert Paul of 30 Foster St., Bethnal Green came up...".
So from this we see:
1. The ambiguity from the newspaper reports about which time Cross left his home is cleared up. The two reporters who heard "3.20" were definitely wrong. Abberline would have known it would not have taken Cross 20 minutes to reach Bucks Row from his home in Doveton Street. The five reporters who heard "3.30" were certainly correct.
2. The notion that Paul appeared in Bucks Row at 4.45 is comprehensively demolished. Abberline would not have placed the time at which Cross found the body at about 4.40 if there was any evidence that Paul strolled round the corner a full five minutes later.
Abberline might not have solved the murder but he was no fool and would have been perfectly capable of establishing a simple matter of timing. The fact that he plumps for 4.40 confirms what I have previously argued that it was the meeting with Mizen that took place at about 4.45am.
From Abberline's report, it can be seen that the idea that, on the evidence, there was a "major" nine minute gap is dead in the water. For such a gap to have existed, then despite the previous reliance on Cross's testimony as to the time he left his home, it would have had to have been at least six minutes earlier than he testified to. If he left at the time he said he did, and we accept the timing of 7 minutes for him to walk to Bucks Row, then he had no more than 3 minutes to murder Nichols before Paul's arrival. While this might have been physically possible, it does mean that the "9 minute gap" is a gap of fiction and, in my submission, in the light of Abberline's clear timing of events, should not be repeated.
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