Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes
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I think you hit on another important observation here. A guilty Wallace would have had every reason to keep his head down on his journey to the chess club on the Monday night, assuming he took the tram from the nearest stop to the call box. But the opposite would have applied on the Tuesday night if he needed plenty of witnesses to his fruitless search for MGE. And he did make himself 'conspicuous' to a fault, almost from the start of that journey, for someone who must have known roughly how to get to the right area, if not the actual address, knowing someone he had previously visited in the Menlove Avenue vicinity.
If he was innocent he'd have been able to leave himself more time, and only ask for directions once he got close to Menlove Avenue and was unable to find a Menlove Gardens East. I don't wish to sound sexist, but men in my experience are notorious for not asking anyone for directions [or reading instruction manuals while I'm at it!] until they have exhausted every other avenue - excuse the pun - and have to admit defeat. Yet Wallace made it his business to ask anyone and everyone at the first opportunity. But only when he was already out of the house and on his way. He had all day on the Tuesday while on his rounds to ask the people he saw if they knew the address he had been given by "Qualtrough" the previous evening. But to my knowledge nobody came forward to say they were asked during the day on the Tuesday, unlike the evening of the murder itself. The last thing he'd have wanted before the murder was to be told definitively that the address simply didn't exist. But if he was innocent that information would have saved him a wasted journey that evening.
Might we have an even simpler explanation than the West Derby Road stop though? As it would have been much more likely for Wallace to have used the much closer stops whenever he went to chess and taken that we have no reason to believe that Wallace was in any way expert in tram timetables is it not the simple and most likely answer that Wallace just assumed that the Belmont Road trams operated on the same routes on Monday nights? He made an error and got away with it because no one asked him. They just assumed that he was talking about the Breck Road stop near to the junction of Belmont Road.
Given that the 2 statements have Wallace actually walking along Belmont Road to catch his tram to the chess club. And given that the West Derby Road stop was so far away and harder to defend as a choice do we have to look to the simpler explanation?
I think that Wallace was lucky. I think that if the police had pressed him on the point he would have named a tram stop that wouldn’t have taken him to the chess club and he would have been caught in a lie. I think Wallace was guilty.
Given that the 2 statements have Wallace actually walking along Belmont Road to catch his tram to the chess club. And given that the West Derby Road stop was so far away and harder to defend as a choice do we have to look to the simpler explanation?
I think that Wallace was lucky. I think that if the police had pressed him on the point he would have named a tram stop that wouldn’t have taken him to the chess club and he would have been caught in a lie. I think Wallace was guilty.
If he'd planned this any more thoroughly, he could have worked out for himself that "Qualtrough" - if someone else - would have wanted to make sure Wallace was on his way to the club that night and would get the phoney message, so it would have been perfectly logical for the call to be made from a box near to the tram stop an innocent Wallace had actually used! The fact that it looks very much like Wallace lied about this can only work against him, since "Qualtrough" could have had no idea where Wallace was going if Wallace himself had been nowhere near that call box.
Love,
Caz
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