If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
Hi Herlock, some good points. We have not only bad luck for Wallace if innocent but good luck for another killer if guilty... another point would be the Johnston's heard the milk boy knock at the door but no one else.
A certain poster should really stop quoting "the judge" one who thought Wallace should be acquitted, but also remarked that he was probably guilty. Which is our EXACT position. When this was pointed out, "poster x" claimed it was a poorly sourced quote, however a full quote is in Jonathan Goldman's (who argued for Wallace's innocence himself!) book.
I’d forgotten the fact about the milk boy
Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
Also what on earth is that graph supposed to demonstrate?
Absolutely nothing AS. He’s just made up a graph?! Can you get more desperate?
Not only is he reduced to re-posting his old posts but those posts themselves are just cut and paste quotes from other people
No answers to anything. Just avoidance and obfuscation and the same old boring insults combined with fairy stories about people that agree with him and his non-existent book.
One good point though, after the recent sad death of Ken Dodd the people of Liverpool can take comfort in the fact that there’s still one clown left.
Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
Absolutely nothing AS. He’s just made up a graph?! Can you get more desperate?
Not only is he reduced to re-posting his old posts but those posts themselves are just cut and paste quotes from other people
No answers to anything. Just avoidance and obfuscation and the same old boring insults combined with fairy stories about people that agree with him and his non-existent book.
One good point though, after the recent sad death of Ken Dodd the people of Liverpool can take comfort in the fact that there’s still one clown left.
Our resident jester.
Imagine using these tactics in real life.
Wife asks why you're home late with lipstick on your collar
Just quote barristers from the 1930s as a response.
When I first read Rod’s posts I used to get frustrated that he wouldn’t engage in proper debate and that he’d just obfuscate or disappear when he was shown to be talking nonsense but I don’t anymore. It’s par for the course. And when the police say that a refusal to answer might be seen to incriminate you it applies to debate as well
Avoidance speaks volumes.
As does childish drivel, pointless quotes and meaningless graphs of course.
Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
I’ve been trying to think of another valid reason why Julia might have had the mackintosh. Rod’s explaination doesn’t hold up to the slightest scrutiny of course. Another suggestion could be that Wallace was in the Parlour adjusting his tie in the mirror and Julia brought it in for him thinking that he was going to wear it.
Or maybe this was the way that Wallace got Julia into the parlour. “Julia dear could you bring me my mackintosh please?”
Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
On page 171 Hussey wrote: ‘Barrister Abrahams states: “The judge ... summed up strongly for acquittal.”’ He did indeed, and it is perhaps surprising to find the following on page 309 of Goodman:
‘A few years before his death, in an interview with a Liverpool Echo reporter, he [Mr Justice Wright, who took the title Lord Wright of Durley] said:
“Never forget that Wallace was a chessplayer. ... I should say that, broadly speaking, any man with common sense would have said that Wallace’s alibi was too good to be true, but that is not an argument you can hang a man on.”’
Checkmate, my dear polymath.
Of course the odds that this lunatic will admit he was wrong when it as plain as day that he is are about the same as the odds of the "correct solution" being correct.
On page 171 Hussey wrote: ‘Barrister Abrahams states: “The judge ... summed up strongly for acquittal.”’ He did indeed, and it is perhaps surprising to find the following on page 309 of Goodman:
‘A few years before his death, in an interview with a Liverpool Echo reporter, he [Mr Justice Wright, who took the title Lord Wright of Durley] said:
“Never forget that Wallace was a chessplayer. ... I should say that, broadly speaking, any man with common sense would have said that Wallace’s alibi was too good to be true, but that is not an argument you can hang a man on.”’
Checkmate, my dear polymath.
Of course the odds that this lunatic will admit he was wrong when it as plain as day that he is are about the same as the odds of the "correct solution" being correct.
Absolute Zero on the Kelvin Scale.
You, of course, omit the rest.
"...but that is not an argument you can hang a man on. So many strange things happen in life."
As I said. He never said what you claimed. Like all trolls, all you have is DISINFORMATION.
"But it seems to me...that there must be on the evidence some possibility that someone else knew of the prisoner’s possible movements, prospective movements, with sufficient confidence to take some action upon them."
Mr. Justice Wright, in Rex v Wallace.
So what the Judge is really saying is that Wallace unfortunately was faced with a jury of "common sense" [i.e. none-too-bright] who just couldn't deal with a complex alibi that appeared to them to be "too good to be true" whereas the Judge, a wise man, knows that, in fact, so many strange things happen in life.
The judge was obviously saying that while the case was not adequately proved beyond a reasonable doubt, he personally thought Wallace was probably guilty. That is OBVIOUS and PLAIN to see. Otherwise why would it be described as "surprising"?
I'm glad that the previous post is up here for all to see. You will not see a clearer example of someone being proven wrong and STILL arguing against cold and hard fact. Instead of having a modicum of humility and civil discourse and conceding incontrovertible proof on a minor point.
Comment