Hi Jon,
Oh, but I have - time and time again. Surely it wouldn't be worth copy and pasting from one of the many threads where this argument was duplicated over and over?
All sources - with the solitary exception of the Daily News - make clear the fact that the couple in question passed along Dorset Street, and did not enter Miller's Court. Had it been otherwise, the detail of the couple entering the court would at the very least have appeared in Lewis's police statement, and yet we know it didn't. Only you insist that Lewis saw a couple enter the court. Guess why?
You must stick to arguing points that are actually debatable, rather than insisting that impossible, proven-false events actually happened.
Sarah Lewis did not see anyone enter Miller's Court - an absolute ironclad set-in-stone irrefutable FACT.
Slightly annoying that we haven't moved past this.
You can disagree with whatever articles I've "promoted" on a more suitable thread; none of them have been proven false as the Daily News extract has.
This is an outdated, black-and-white view.
The Star had their good and bad points, but it's a bit fogeyish to make them out to be the ultimate villains of the piece. It's irrelevant anyway. I've already explained that I'm not in any way influenced by their negative view of Kennedy. It just so happened that they were right to be sceptical.
It doesn't matter.
She did say that there was nobody in the court, which would be an extremely weird observation if she'd just seen a couple enter the court. But we know for certain that she didn't.
Is that really how you think it panned out?
(Parroting woman): "Hey, Mr. Reporter..."Murder!"...that's what I heard last night. Bye!"
I hardly think so.
No. Obviously these woman sat down with a reporter and delivered a narrative that included the detail that a cry of "murder" was heard. It was subsequently observed that a certain account that included a "murder" cry had been plagiarized by half a dozen woman.
And then - in a shocking coincidence - we find that one of the two known "oh murder" accounts that would ultimately appear at the inquest appeared in strikingly similar form under a different name and with the odd detail altered. Gosh, do you think this could have something to do with the discovery that an "oh murder" account was being parrotted?
We in the Land of Logical Inference reckon so...
Regards,
Ben
By all means Ben, show me, in fact show everyone this fact.
All sources - with the solitary exception of the Daily News - make clear the fact that the couple in question passed along Dorset Street, and did not enter Miller's Court. Had it been otherwise, the detail of the couple entering the court would at the very least have appeared in Lewis's police statement, and yet we know it didn't. Only you insist that Lewis saw a couple enter the court. Guess why?
You must stick to arguing points that are actually debatable, rather than insisting that impossible, proven-false events actually happened.
Sarah Lewis did not see anyone enter Miller's Court - an absolute ironclad set-in-stone irrefutable FACT.
Slightly annoying that we haven't moved past this.
You can disagree with whatever articles I've "promoted" on a more suitable thread; none of them have been proven false as the Daily News extract has.
If they just stuck to reporting the facts, and leave their ill concieved opinions out of it.... mind you, we all know why they took this approach, to earn ratings (ie; to sell copy), to be intentionally controversial, to appeal to the under informed masses.
The Star had their good and bad points, but it's a bit fogeyish to make them out to be the ultimate villains of the piece. It's irrelevant anyway. I've already explained that I'm not in any way influenced by their negative view of Kennedy. It just so happened that they were right to be sceptical.
No, because Sarah Lewis does not say, as Cox does, that she followed the couple down the passage.
She did say that there was nobody in the court, which would be an extremely weird observation if she'd just seen a couple enter the court. But we know for certain that she didn't.
Ah, the "parroting" argument again, no, it has been demonstrated irrefutably that any "parroting" was confined to the claim of hearing the cry of "murder"
(Parroting woman): "Hey, Mr. Reporter..."Murder!"...that's what I heard last night. Bye!"
I hardly think so.
No. Obviously these woman sat down with a reporter and delivered a narrative that included the detail that a cry of "murder" was heard. It was subsequently observed that a certain account that included a "murder" cry had been plagiarized by half a dozen woman.
And then - in a shocking coincidence - we find that one of the two known "oh murder" accounts that would ultimately appear at the inquest appeared in strikingly similar form under a different name and with the odd detail altered. Gosh, do you think this could have something to do with the discovery that an "oh murder" account was being parrotted?
We in the Land of Logical Inference reckon so...
Regards,
Ben
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