Bible John: A New Suspect by Jill Bavin-Mizzi

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  • New Waterloo
    Detective
    • Jun 2022
    • 289

    #301
    Herlocks suggestion is very good because it follows pieces of evidence that are very strong. Dishevelled man on bus, used to stay with relatives close to bus stop. McInnes confident and forward in his communication. Able to convince people of his alibi.

    I like it because it gives a narrative linking facts and not as in my case suggesting something without being able to substantiate it.

    Herlocks suggestion (at the moment) is as good as we are going to get proving its McInnes. To me Jeannie the star witness muddies the water. I find her evidence a bit ambiguous and confused if they are the right words to use. It could be as Herlock suggested the alcohol clouding her memory which is a shame really if that was the case (although not criticising her for having a drink).

    NW

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    • Herlock Sholmes
      Commissioner
      • May 2017
      • 22744

      #302
      Originally posted by New Waterloo View Post
      Herlocks suggestion is very good because it follows pieces of evidence that are very strong. Dishevelled man on bus, used to stay with relatives close to bus stop. McInnes confident and forward in his communication. Able to convince people of his alibi.

      I like it because it gives a narrative linking facts and not as in my case suggesting something without being able to substantiate it.

      Herlocks suggestion (at the moment) is as good as we are going to get proving its McInnes. To me Jeannie the star witness muddies the water. I find her evidence a bit ambiguous and confused if they are the right words to use. It could be as Herlock suggested the alcohol clouding her memory which is a shame really if that was the case (although not criticising her for having a drink).

      NW
      Hi NW,

      I certainly have no qualms about corruption or cover ups but I just can’t see Beattie covering for a man that he knew (or suspected) had killed three women. Maybe he did…I’m certainly not saying that I’m right…it’s just that I can’t help having doubts. This case appeared to obsess Beattie to some extent. Did he agree to covering up the identity of a man that he genuinely believed innocent at the time but he later came to realise that he’d been conned and that he’d been guilty all along? And a guy that he considered his close friend had basically stitched him up. Such a realisation would have had a real effect on a man who prided himself on his ability to judge people and to spot a ‘wrong ‘un’ a mile off.
      Herlock Sholmes

      ”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”

      Comment

      • cobalt
        Inspector
        • Jan 2015
        • 1170

        #303
        Congratulations to Herlock on his very coherent account of what probably happened regarding the 'Hamilton incident.' His description of the dishevelled John McInnes being able to count on family loyalty, a loyalty offered in good faith, is very persuasive. As is his portrayal of Joe Beattie, a proud and highly effective detective for most of his career, realising late in the day that he had been deceived in his most famous case of all.

        If Herlock is correct Beattie had reasonable grounds for eliminating John McInnes but an experienced detective should have tested (or 'proved' in its original sense) the alibi. He must have known the limitations of alibi provided by family members. He must also have known the vagaries of identification evidence, which Herlock lays out very well in respect of Jeannie. (I have often wondered if Jeannie inadvertently merged the two dancing 'Johns' into a single composite.)

        Beattie had the materials at hand to prove the alibi. He had three reliable witnesses in the persons of the bouncers and manager at the Barrowland Ballroom. He had a useful witness in the person of the taxi driver, Hannah. He used none of them. He could have eliminated McInnes on the basis of the bite mark but there is no evidence this was done. He could possibly have eliminated McInnes on the basis of his blood group but there is no evidence this was done. (Why do we not seem to know the blood group from the semen sample left on Helen Puttock?) Beattie was often quoted as bemoaning the fact that 'we missed him right at the start.' I think this is most likely what happened in respect of John Mcinnes.

        Comment

        • Herlock Sholmes
          Commissioner
          • May 2017
          • 22744

          #304
          Originally posted by cobalt View Post
          Congratulations to Herlock on his very coherent account of what probably happened regarding the 'Hamilton incident.' His description of the dishevelled John McInnes being able to count on family loyalty, a loyalty offered in good faith, is very persuasive. As is his portrayal of Joe Beattie, a proud and highly effective detective for most of his career, realising late in the day that he had been deceived in his most famous case of all.

          If Herlock is correct Beattie had reasonable grounds for eliminating John McInnes but an experienced detective should have tested (or 'proved' in its original sense) the alibi. He must have known the limitations of alibi provided by family members. He must also have known the vagaries of identification evidence, which Herlock lays out very well in respect of Jeannie. (I have often wondered if Jeannie inadvertently merged the two dancing 'Johns' into a single composite.)

          Beattie had the materials at hand to prove the alibi. He had three reliable witnesses in the persons of the bouncers and manager at the Barrowland Ballroom. He had a useful witness in the person of the taxi driver, Hannah. He used none of them. He could have eliminated McInnes on the basis of the bite mark but there is no evidence this was done. He could possibly have eliminated McInnes on the basis of his blood group but there is no evidence this was done. (Why do we not seem to know the blood group from the semen sample left on Helen Puttock?) Beattie was often quoted as bemoaning the fact that 'we missed him right at the start.' I think this is most likely what happened in respect of John Mcinnes.

          Cheers Cobalt. As I said though, I’m in no way claiming that this is what happened. It’s just that while we certainly see evidence of things being covered up it’s difficult to imagine someone like Beattie letting Bible John off the hook for any reason; even a close friendship.

          As you rightly say though, even if my scenario is anything like what happened we still have questions. It’s still difficult to accept how apparently easily Beattie was persuaded to accept McInnes’s innocence especially given the obvious reservations about alibi’s proffered by close family. Why wasn’t Hannah shown McInnes? Why wasn’t the Barrowland bouncer or the manager? Why wasn't the bite mark checked against McInnes teeth? Hardly a difficult process. And why was Jimmy McInnes involved in an investigation into his own cousin in the first place?

          Your point about the potential for Jeannie merging the two John’s in her memory is an interesting one. In the podcast Jeannie said: “The one in the papers just there, the McInnes guy, was more like Castlemilk John.” So there must have been some physical similarities between the two men. Could this have created some doubt at the Partick ID parade?

          Another question worth asking imo is - as there was the photo fit/ portrait up in the Barrowland after the MacDonald murder why would Bible John have risked being there if it looked like him? With suspicions rife and women wary of strangers?
          Herlock Sholmes

          ”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”

          Comment

          • cobalt
            Inspector
            • Jan 2015
            • 1170

            #305
            It’s still difficult to accept how apparently easily Beattie was persuaded to accept McInnes’s innocence especially given the obvious reservations about alibi’s proffered by close family. Why wasn’t Hannah shown McInnes? Why wasn’t the Barrowland bouncer or the manager? Why wasn't the bite mark checked against McInnes teeth? Hardly a difficult process.
            This is, not just in hindsight I should emphasise, the crux of the matter. The McInnes alibi was never properly proved. Fact. There must have been police involved at the time who were aware of this but they were presumably silenced. Yet Beattie invited to Glasgow the medium Croisset, a charlatan from the Netherlands who had never solved a single unsolved murder, to draw psychic visions? The more I read about Beattie the less impressed I become. A fool or a knave? I am not sure.

            Comment

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