Originally posted by Michael W Richards
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Bowyer´s inquest testimony
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Pierre, do you think that if you ask a question enough times, people will forget that it has already been answered?
Although your post is addressed to Elamarna who is perfectly capable of responding, I am going to answer those questions relating to the evidence, all of which have been answered already, avoiding those relating to what is seen in MJK1 which is a stale discussion.
6. IF the door was so easy to open (Barnett´s statement), why would the killer not have been barricading the door? - Firstly, the killer would have to have known that the door was "so easy" to open. Secondly, he would have had to have believed that other people knew it was "so easy" to open. Thirdly, we are (if JTR was one person) dealing with someone who mutilated women in the open streets, and in one case in a square, patrolled by police officers.
7. IF the door was so easy to open - why use a pickaxe? - Well, you have to know the door was so easy to open. If you don't then a pickaxe is sensible
8. Why would McCarthy not have seen the body when he first pulled the curtain aside and looked inside the room? Because seeing two lumps of flesh on a table close to a window would make most people react as he did. I'm not sure if you are confusing McCarthy with Bowyer but sometimes people need to look twice to take something in. It's no more complicated than that.
9. Why did the police border up not just Miller´s Court but also 26 Dorset Street? As you have not established that the police boarded up 26 Dorset Street - and you well know it - the very fact that you ask this question, based on a single newspaper report which is contradicted by another newspaper report, demonstrates that you are not asking the question in good faith.
10. What interest could the killer possibly have had in entering number 26 after the murder? The police was said to be worried about that. Nothing was said about the killer entering number 26 after the murder. The single newspaper report you are referring to made clear that it was prior to the murder that the police felt 26 Dorset Street should be boarded up so as not to allow the killer anywhere to hide; yet this story is contradicted by another press report.
11. Why wasn´t MJK3 made public together with MJK1? Considering that MJK1 wasn't made public in 1888 it's a pointless question.
12. Why did the coroner ask Prater if she had heard beds or tables being pulled around? Yawn. Due to the fact that the furniture was found in an unnatural position as per the evidence of the divisional surgeon.
13. Why did Abberline say almost nothing about the crime scene? Compare it to other police testimonies in the JtR-case and you will immediately see there are A LOT more information in them compared to the murder on Kelly. You don't seem to be aware that a witness only answers questions he is asked in the witness box at an inquest. Had the coroner or the jury wanted more information they could have asked. Further, as I have previously mentioned, the jury was taken to the crime scene so were able to see everything they needed to see in the room for the themselves.
Have I mentioned everything or is there more? Please no more.
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostThe validity is in the coroner asking this question.
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Pierre
challenging accepted ideas is one thing, but you challenge, and challenge yet put forward nothing in your arguments other than my view is right.
it is not possible to discus subjects sensibly when one side will not accept any evidence that does not fit their view.
to ask the same set of questions over and over again, even when you have been given clear answers does not i am afraid show an open and enquiring mind, it shows just the opposite.
The views proposed by you, are claimed to be new and challenging, they are not.
I notice no comments on the post this after noon about a completely different MJK3,
You make a great deal about Bowyer saying he had to look twice, that is a phrase commonly used in English to express surprise or shock have you considered that this was what he meant?
to say i looked twice may not mean two seperate looks, its a phrase in english you must know that.Last edited by Elamarna; 12-10-2015, 12:20 PM.
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Originally posted by Elamarna View PostPierre
challenging accepted ideas is one thing, but you challenge, and challenge yet put forward nothing in your arguments other than my view is right.
it is not possible to discus subjects sensibly when one side will not accept any evidence that does not fit their view.
to ask the same set of questions over and over again, even when you have been given clear answers does not i am afraid show an open and enquiring mind, it shows just the opposite.
The views proposed by you, are claimed to be new and challenging, hey are not.
I notice no comments on the post this after noon about a completely different MJK3,
You make a great deal about Bowyer saying he had to look twice, that is a phrase commonly used in English to express surprise or shock have you considered that this was what he meant?
to say i looked twice may not mean two seperate looks, its a phrase in english you must know that.
Bet he ignores this.G U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostWhy? She was drunk. And probably scared.
The validity is in the coroner asking this question.
Regards PierreG U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
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The validity is in the fact that the Coroner asked the question. Why would he?
He has a reason to ask it because of information he had gained from whatever source. The furniture had been moved about. The reason for asking Prater was in trying to determine the time of the murder (or at least guided by the timing of the movement of the furniture) - that is just my assumption.
If Prater answers that she heard no movement, then either it wasn't loud enough to be heard (or to wake her), or it happened at a time when she was out, or it didn't happen. The last possibility we know cannot be true in this case.
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostAnd therefore anything Pierre says here can be dismissed as impossible.
Regards Pierre
i have written an instructive piece, which does not show you are wrong, its not about that.
it says that photographs without the original source are questionable.
the same would be true of MJK1 if not backed at the inquest by 2 sworn statements
I have spoken about 2 different prints of what claims to be the same image. one of which gives no backing what so ever for the idea you have put forward, who knows which is true.
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