Marko,
I apologize for boring you, but if you've posted in depth about your reasoning elsewhere on the boards, perhaps you wouldn't mind providing me a link or copy and pasting those posts here so you don't have to retype them? I am interested to know why you're convinced of Wallace's innocence in relation to the time element. There is, after all, quite a big difference between being not convinced of his guilt and believing him innocent of the crime. I find that building a case based on time element alone is dangerous, since there's too many variables. Some of the witnesses (such as Close) changed their mind regarding the time, other witnesses weren't sure, others were sure but the timepieces they worked from could have been wrong, etc. In short, what I'm saying is that Wallace certainly had plenty of time in which to commit the murder, steady himself, and go about his way.
Babybird,
Jonathan Goodman argued feverishly in defense of Wallace, but I believe he was relatively fair in presenting enough evidence that a reader could make up his own mind. It's really nothing more than a domestic homicide case, with the intrigue of the 'mysterious phone call' thrown in the mix.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
I apologize for boring you, but if you've posted in depth about your reasoning elsewhere on the boards, perhaps you wouldn't mind providing me a link or copy and pasting those posts here so you don't have to retype them? I am interested to know why you're convinced of Wallace's innocence in relation to the time element. There is, after all, quite a big difference between being not convinced of his guilt and believing him innocent of the crime. I find that building a case based on time element alone is dangerous, since there's too many variables. Some of the witnesses (such as Close) changed their mind regarding the time, other witnesses weren't sure, others were sure but the timepieces they worked from could have been wrong, etc. In short, what I'm saying is that Wallace certainly had plenty of time in which to commit the murder, steady himself, and go about his way.
Babybird,
Jonathan Goodman argued feverishly in defense of Wallace, but I believe he was relatively fair in presenting enough evidence that a reader could make up his own mind. It's really nothing more than a domestic homicide case, with the intrigue of the 'mysterious phone call' thrown in the mix.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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