Originally posted by Chris
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I donīt think he would wish to say "Immediately that other guy turned into Buckīs Row behind me, I could hear him walking all the time", since that may have had the police and jury wanting to ask Paul whether HE had heard Lechmere all the time.
And no, I donīt everyone back then would have seen this. If the jury had been a bit more alert, they would have picked up on the discrepancy between Lechmereīs assertions that he would definitely have heard anything stirring down at Browns Stable yard the moment he turned the Brady Street corner, and his failure to hear Paul until he was quite close.
These two statements gainsay each other, but nobody picked up on it and asked about it.
Itīs all good and well to tell me that I should be more modest and sonīt claim to have noticed something that wasnīt noticed back then, but when we have it on record that there IS a discrepancy, Iīm afraid I am going to throw my bashfulness overboard and speak up anyway.
I have hear this argument so many times before: Who does he think he is, coming here and trying to make out that he can do what nobody else have been able to. This is just one example, but there are others, like the disagreement between Mizen and Lechmere for example; sadly left out of just about all major books on the case.
It is what it is. These things should have been picked up on before, and the police back in 1888 should have been the first ones to do so. They had an obligation to investigate all avenues of research. Nothing, however, goes to show that this happened.
To try and establish that the police were infallable and would have made all the necessary investigations is not helpful or realistic, given that we know that mistakes WERE made.
The best,
Fisherman
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