[QUOTE=Derrick;314330]Hi Ed
Mrs Anderson was indeed under severe pressure. That pressure came from her being liable to indictment for fencing, and the police knew it.
In my view there is no other explanation for her sudden change of opinion towards Hanratty.
Hi Del and Dave
Thank you for the warm welcome.
Del, I agree that heavy police pressure led to LA's change of attitude towards Hanratty. But I think there may have been another factor, namely Dixie France , a close contact (he introduced Hanratty to her after all) privately suggesting that Hanratty was the monster responsible for this heinous crime based upon the back of the bus tale and perhaps the gun in the cupboard.
It would seem that she was neurotic and easily led. I have noticed in my limited dealings with the criminal law how close promixity of witnesses leads to changes in evidence , sometimes subtlely, in the often lengthy gap between statements and the trial .
Depending on your viewpoint, France genuinely believed Hanratty to be the murderer or ,if implicated more closely himself,wanted to use a weak and suggestible woman to help put Hanratty further in the frame and to distance his own involvement.
So was the Hanratty having a gun in the cupboard story true? I personally don't think so because Anderson would have revealed this at early stage, this was hardly a hiding place when Hanratty had the option of left luggage lockers, Hanratty would have known that Dixie would have been very angry about bringing a weapon into the family home,the butcher's bag is more closely linked to the France family and Charlotte's brother and the detailed description pink blankets and in named butcher's bag doesn't smack of a Hanratty tale.
So what was the source of the story and why?
Although the wretched Langdale is discredited by all sides including Swanwick, I am interested in what in his evidence seemed to convince the Home Office that Hanratty had confessed to him and furnished details he would not have otherwise known.
regards
Ed
Mrs Anderson was indeed under severe pressure. That pressure came from her being liable to indictment for fencing, and the police knew it.
In my view there is no other explanation for her sudden change of opinion towards Hanratty.
Hi Del and Dave
Thank you for the warm welcome.
Del, I agree that heavy police pressure led to LA's change of attitude towards Hanratty. But I think there may have been another factor, namely Dixie France , a close contact (he introduced Hanratty to her after all) privately suggesting that Hanratty was the monster responsible for this heinous crime based upon the back of the bus tale and perhaps the gun in the cupboard.
It would seem that she was neurotic and easily led. I have noticed in my limited dealings with the criminal law how close promixity of witnesses leads to changes in evidence , sometimes subtlely, in the often lengthy gap between statements and the trial .
Depending on your viewpoint, France genuinely believed Hanratty to be the murderer or ,if implicated more closely himself,wanted to use a weak and suggestible woman to help put Hanratty further in the frame and to distance his own involvement.
So was the Hanratty having a gun in the cupboard story true? I personally don't think so because Anderson would have revealed this at early stage, this was hardly a hiding place when Hanratty had the option of left luggage lockers, Hanratty would have known that Dixie would have been very angry about bringing a weapon into the family home,the butcher's bag is more closely linked to the France family and Charlotte's brother and the detailed description pink blankets and in named butcher's bag doesn't smack of a Hanratty tale.
So what was the source of the story and why?
Although the wretched Langdale is discredited by all sides including Swanwick, I am interested in what in his evidence seemed to convince the Home Office that Hanratty had confessed to him and furnished details he would not have otherwise known.
regards
Ed
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