Originally posted by David Orsam
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So you realised very well that I was right and you were wrong - otherwise why would you be waiting for me to "come forward blowing my own trumpet"?
I was waiting for you to come forward because I knew that the arrogance, and self belief that you seem to have would not allow you to just let it go. You want to have the last word and you want to try to impress the masses with your research and for them to believe you are right, well in this case you got it wrong
The only person I was wondering if there would be a comment from was you - because you absolutely refused to believe that I had a complete answer to your Oscar Wilde point - and your silence in the past week has been deafening.
The Oscar Wilde case is the icing on the cake and its something you cannot refute because again the facts of that case speak for themselves and prove that it was not automatic for a person to get bail before committal for gross indecency offences, even with sureties. In fact compared to Tumblety Wilde was a suitable case for bail. He had a fixed residence, he had money, and he had friends who had money.
Another reason Wilde didnt get bail was he was considered to be a flight risk !
But Trevor, if gross indecency was a misdemeanour - and we know it was because it was marked as such in the Central Criminal Court calendar - and it did not fall under the list of exclusions for which bail was compulsory under section 23 of the 1848 Act, then bail must have been automatic after committal for the offence of gross indecency. That is what the 1848 said.
This is not the issue with Tumblety is it because we know he was granted bail at the committal stage. The question is was he granted bail to be able to be free the night MJK was murdered?
How do you know this? We know that he was charged with offences of gross indecency AND indecent assault. But if you are saying that he was only charged with gross indecency offences at the remand hearing with indecent assault offences tagged on at the committal hearing then that would explain why his bail was increased at the committal hearing (if, indeed, it was increased) which would explain why he was back in prison on 14 November (if he had been released on 8 Nov).
I am not saying that at all I am making it known that this procedure was in place for the final charges to be laid at the committal stage. That is probably how Wilde was arrested for Gross Indecency and finished up also with Buggery charges.
Have you seen a copy of the warrant saying this? And if so, how does this have any bearing on your big point which was that Wilde was refused bail at his committal hearing?
Wilde was refused bail even with sureties before commital because he was a flight risk and the court had a discretion on bail because bail was not automatic in these cases.
I fail to see the relevance of this. Bail could be granted by a magistrate regardless of whether sureties were or were not in place.
But with the more serious cases and cases where there was a flight risk the courts would exercise their discretion, based also on what representation the police made with regards to bail. This is not modern day thinking this is common sens approach to prevent a suspect evading justice
I have told you many, many, times that issues such as flight risk or being likely to interfere with witnesses were NOT relevant to the magistrate's decision as to whether to grant bail for a misdemeanour offence in 1888. You are imposing modern thinking onto a nineteenth century process. The risk of flight was countered by setting a high level of bail. If a prisoner was really likely to interfere with witnesses this could be dealt with by the police. And, in any event, I have no idea why you think the magistrate would have regarded Tumblety as likely to interfere with witnesses more than any other prisoner.
The charges named the witnesses. Tumblety knew the witnesses, what was to stop him getting bail and going and either making threats to them or paying them off. He couldn't do either from a prison cell could he?
I fully understand why you say this and note with great amusement that you haven't even mentioned the evidence I produced in my article in response to your great Oscar Wilde point. Evidence which you refused to even believe I had found, despite me telling you categorically that I had.
I was waiting for you to come forward because I knew that the arrogance, and self belief that you seem to have would not allow you to just let it go. You want to have the last word and you want to try to impress the masses with your research and for them to believe you are right, well in this case you got it wrong
The only person I was wondering if there would be a comment from was you - because you absolutely refused to believe that I had a complete answer to your Oscar Wilde point - and your silence in the past week has been deafening.
The Oscar Wilde case is the icing on the cake and its something you cannot refute because again the facts of that case speak for themselves and prove that it was not automatic for a person to get bail before committal for gross indecency offences, even with sureties. In fact compared to Tumblety Wilde was a suitable case for bail. He had a fixed residence, he had money, and he had friends who had money.
Another reason Wilde didnt get bail was he was considered to be a flight risk !
But Trevor, if gross indecency was a misdemeanour - and we know it was because it was marked as such in the Central Criminal Court calendar - and it did not fall under the list of exclusions for which bail was compulsory under section 23 of the 1848 Act, then bail must have been automatic after committal for the offence of gross indecency. That is what the 1848 said.
This is not the issue with Tumblety is it because we know he was granted bail at the committal stage. The question is was he granted bail to be able to be free the night MJK was murdered?
How do you know this? We know that he was charged with offences of gross indecency AND indecent assault. But if you are saying that he was only charged with gross indecency offences at the remand hearing with indecent assault offences tagged on at the committal hearing then that would explain why his bail was increased at the committal hearing (if, indeed, it was increased) which would explain why he was back in prison on 14 November (if he had been released on 8 Nov).
I am not saying that at all I am making it known that this procedure was in place for the final charges to be laid at the committal stage. That is probably how Wilde was arrested for Gross Indecency and finished up also with Buggery charges.
Have you seen a copy of the warrant saying this? And if so, how does this have any bearing on your big point which was that Wilde was refused bail at his committal hearing?
Wilde was refused bail even with sureties before commital because he was a flight risk and the court had a discretion on bail because bail was not automatic in these cases.
I fail to see the relevance of this. Bail could be granted by a magistrate regardless of whether sureties were or were not in place.
But with the more serious cases and cases where there was a flight risk the courts would exercise their discretion, based also on what representation the police made with regards to bail. This is not modern day thinking this is common sens approach to prevent a suspect evading justice
I have told you many, many, times that issues such as flight risk or being likely to interfere with witnesses were NOT relevant to the magistrate's decision as to whether to grant bail for a misdemeanour offence in 1888. You are imposing modern thinking onto a nineteenth century process. The risk of flight was countered by setting a high level of bail. If a prisoner was really likely to interfere with witnesses this could be dealt with by the police. And, in any event, I have no idea why you think the magistrate would have regarded Tumblety as likely to interfere with witnesses more than any other prisoner.
The charges named the witnesses. Tumblety knew the witnesses, what was to stop him getting bail and going and either making threats to them or paying them off. He couldn't do either from a prison cell could he?
I fully understand why you say this and note with great amusement that you haven't even mentioned the evidence I produced in my article in response to your great Oscar Wilde point. Evidence which you refused to even believe I had found, despite me telling you categorically that I had.
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