Tom
I wasn’t perhaps being very clear.
The chain that makes up the evidence for an extremist suspect is constructed by fitting together pieces that don’t fit.
That is invariably how conspiracy theories work: unconnected events are connected purely because – in this case – they are all broadly ‘Irish’ related.
Invariably these unconnected events have totally unrelated and mundane roots.
Such as the entry in the Met register which I am fairly sure relates to the contempt of court accusation – which happened roughly at the right time and involved a suggestion that the Irish Home Rulers were tied up somehow with the Whitechapel murderer.
But instead, this contempt of court allegation is even incorporated into theory by murky suggestions that more lay behind it.
I am not connecting Le Grand to the Irish extremist theory.
I’ve read the transcript from the June 1889 trial and press reports and it seems to me that Lewis regarded Le Grand as a charlatan and disbelieved that Le Grand had actually been employed in matter relating to the Parnell case. This is backed up by Le Grand’s assistant Hall, who in evidence painted a picture of an enquiry agency that had not been successful in generating any enquiry business.
I wasn’t perhaps being very clear.
The chain that makes up the evidence for an extremist suspect is constructed by fitting together pieces that don’t fit.
That is invariably how conspiracy theories work: unconnected events are connected purely because – in this case – they are all broadly ‘Irish’ related.
Invariably these unconnected events have totally unrelated and mundane roots.
Such as the entry in the Met register which I am fairly sure relates to the contempt of court accusation – which happened roughly at the right time and involved a suggestion that the Irish Home Rulers were tied up somehow with the Whitechapel murderer.
But instead, this contempt of court allegation is even incorporated into theory by murky suggestions that more lay behind it.
I am not connecting Le Grand to the Irish extremist theory.
I’ve read the transcript from the June 1889 trial and press reports and it seems to me that Lewis regarded Le Grand as a charlatan and disbelieved that Le Grand had actually been employed in matter relating to the Parnell case. This is backed up by Le Grand’s assistant Hall, who in evidence painted a picture of an enquiry agency that had not been successful in generating any enquiry business.
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