Hi Caz, I hope you're having a nicer day than I! (Pots of ugly job-related stress for me today.
)
Caz, when Le Grand planted the grapestalk on October 1, 1888 (for which we have enough evidence that he did), he would have NOT yet known for a fact that there were no grapes found at the murder scene. There was a rumour, started with Diemshitz et al, that grapes were found in Stride's hand, which was not corroborated as false but several days later.
Caz wrote:
Stride’s killer, who would have been in the best position to know if the grapes - and therefore Packer’s customer - were mythical and, crucially, to know that the police must have known it too.
I'm not necessarily convinced that Le Grand was Stride's killer, although at this point I'm considering him as a viable suspect. (Not “THE MAIN suspect“!
) In addition to this, Le Grand was clearly cunning, but essentially very much a dumbshit, as many of his actions illustrate.
In my opinion, “disinformation frenzy“ and “conjuring up the Packer suspect“ are a very accurate description.
Caz wrote:
What possible advantage was there for the killer to risk getting Packer to tell a story like that, if it was going to be obvious to the police that it was based on a rumour they already knew was untrue?
Among else, the ‘advantage‘ that even today we are still considering, or at least discussing the lodger suspect.
)Caz, when Le Grand planted the grapestalk on October 1, 1888 (for which we have enough evidence that he did), he would have NOT yet known for a fact that there were no grapes found at the murder scene. There was a rumour, started with Diemshitz et al, that grapes were found in Stride's hand, which was not corroborated as false but several days later.
Caz wrote:
Stride’s killer, who would have been in the best position to know if the grapes - and therefore Packer’s customer - were mythical and, crucially, to know that the police must have known it too.
I'm not necessarily convinced that Le Grand was Stride's killer, although at this point I'm considering him as a viable suspect. (Not “THE MAIN suspect“!
) In addition to this, Le Grand was clearly cunning, but essentially very much a dumbshit, as many of his actions illustrate. In my opinion, “disinformation frenzy“ and “conjuring up the Packer suspect“ are a very accurate description.
Caz wrote:
What possible advantage was there for the killer to risk getting Packer to tell a story like that, if it was going to be obvious to the police that it was based on a rumour they already knew was untrue?
Among else, the ‘advantage‘ that even today we are still considering, or at least discussing the lodger suspect.


And I even got my stupid Chicago boss on my back, who, after engaging in a dispute all night, now plays the victim. Bloody Yankees! The world would be better without them!
)
. We shared a shellfish casserole and yummy brochettes de veau, and my female guitarist friend was chasing me around rue Coquillère until I tried to climb one of the rare trees in Paris, so it was not an evening of very mature activity.
) for half an hour until she finally split and let me photograph the source, and later I found out about the existence of another 13 rolls of microfilms, in addition to the 18 rolls I've already gone through so far pertaining to another bunch of sources. Now I'm about to call it a night, while having convulsions from sheer exhaustion.
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