Otterman62,
The point you raised about motive has always been a problem, although to be even-handed about it, the prosecution is under no more obligation to provide a motive that Hanratty was to provide an alibi.
Like you, I have always been more concerned with the events leading up to the attack. On this forum a great deal of argument surrounds the Liverpool/Rhyl alibi, which is understandable given that a definitive verdict would probably clear the case up once and for all. However I sometimes wonder if the alibi is a distraction, since the case against Hanratty would have been just as flimsy if he had been in the London area at the time flitting between lodging houses and the dry cleaners.
Motive aside, one gaping hole in the prosecution case is how Hanratty managed to arrive at the cornfield in the first place. He was carrying a gun and a fair amount of ammunition, so it is highly unlikely he travelled by public transport. If he had stolen a car to get there, as was Hanratty’s want, then one would have expected that fact to surface quite quickly in the investigation. That leaves the possibility (or probability in my view) that the murderer, be it Hanratty or someone else, was driven to the area by an accomplice.
And what was going to be his method of leaving the area after the planned ‘stick up,’ presumably bearing a few more kilos in cash or loot? Maybe Hanratty often stole cars after robberies, I don’t know; but he was carrying a gun on this occasion, it is alleged, so you would imagine his means of hot footing it out of the area had been considered beforehand. But no detail of this has emerged.
The cornfield story itself is totally reliant on the testimony of Valerie Storie. There is, I think, corroboration of the car being in the cornfield in the late evening, but none understandably about who or how many people were in the car. Ms Storie herself said, to the first person she spoke to after her ordeal, that she and Mr Gregsten had picked up ‘a hitch hiker.’ Given her condition, that may just have been an understandable slip of the tongue, and of no significance. Or it may be that their encounter with the murderer was slightly different than the account given in court.
The point you raised about motive has always been a problem, although to be even-handed about it, the prosecution is under no more obligation to provide a motive that Hanratty was to provide an alibi.
Like you, I have always been more concerned with the events leading up to the attack. On this forum a great deal of argument surrounds the Liverpool/Rhyl alibi, which is understandable given that a definitive verdict would probably clear the case up once and for all. However I sometimes wonder if the alibi is a distraction, since the case against Hanratty would have been just as flimsy if he had been in the London area at the time flitting between lodging houses and the dry cleaners.
Motive aside, one gaping hole in the prosecution case is how Hanratty managed to arrive at the cornfield in the first place. He was carrying a gun and a fair amount of ammunition, so it is highly unlikely he travelled by public transport. If he had stolen a car to get there, as was Hanratty’s want, then one would have expected that fact to surface quite quickly in the investigation. That leaves the possibility (or probability in my view) that the murderer, be it Hanratty or someone else, was driven to the area by an accomplice.
And what was going to be his method of leaving the area after the planned ‘stick up,’ presumably bearing a few more kilos in cash or loot? Maybe Hanratty often stole cars after robberies, I don’t know; but he was carrying a gun on this occasion, it is alleged, so you would imagine his means of hot footing it out of the area had been considered beforehand. But no detail of this has emerged.
The cornfield story itself is totally reliant on the testimony of Valerie Storie. There is, I think, corroboration of the car being in the cornfield in the late evening, but none understandably about who or how many people were in the car. Ms Storie herself said, to the first person she spoke to after her ordeal, that she and Mr Gregsten had picked up ‘a hitch hiker.’ Given her condition, that may just have been an understandable slip of the tongue, and of no significance. Or it may be that their encounter with the murderer was slightly different than the account given in court.
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