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  • Originally posted by OneRound View Post
    For me, the following factors particularly apply:

    1. You overstate the case about Hanratty being a 'doppelganger'. I think it's fair to say that Mrs Dinwoodie's evidence was more along the lines that Hanratty looked like the man in the shop rather than he was identical to the man, let alone confirming that they were one and the same. As previously discussed here, the ways in which she was separately asked by the police and Sherrard if Hanratty was the man concerned were far from satisfactory and convincing. Also, I don't know where you get your 'sound-alike' comment from. Mrs Dinwoodie said she struggled to understand the man in the sweetshop due to whatever accent he had whilst Hanratty seemed to do just fine in making himself understood at trial.
    O.R. or OneRound if you prefer, I most certainly do not overstate the "doppelganger" angle. Initially Mrs Dinwoodie was shown just the one photograph of Hanratty by Det-Constable Pugh of the Liverpool police force who were inquiring into aspects of Hanratty's alibi on behalf of the A6 murder investigating team. As has been often repeated on this forum the showing of one photo for identification purposes was contrary to good practice. Nevertheless Mrs Dinwoodie made a positive identification of Hanratty as being the man who called into the sweetshop. She confirmed her positive identification of Hanratty when picking him out from a series of photographs shown to her a little later on. Mrs Dinwoodie told Pugh..."The photograph you have shown me is one of the man who came in on Monday, 21 August, asking for Tarleton Road." [Woffinden p125].

    The "sound-alike " comment is a reference to the fact that the 'doppelganger's accent was difficult for Mrs Dinwoodie to understand. He was a stranger to the shop, an out-of-towner and to Mrs Dinwoodie's ear he sounded Scottish or Welsh. It was an accent she was unfamiliar with which is probably why she was able to recall the incident of 8 weeks earlier. He definitely didn't have a 'Scouse' accent, that much is for sure.

    Originally posted by OneRound View Post
    2. You do want to pick and choose here as to where to place emphasis. You write, 'It is .. obvious to anyone with half a brain or any common sense that the sweetshop incident could only have happened on [the] Tuesday'. Meanwhile, Mrs Dinwoodie, who was in and running the sweet shop at the time of the incident and upon whom you want to rely when it suits you, asserted at trial that it was the Monday. Rather than being someone 'with half a brain' or devoid of 'any common sense', you state she is 'simply mistaken'.
    Now this is pretty rich coming as it does from an obvious "Hanratty did it" poster. You need to put your own house in order, methinks. Everyone on this forum including most definitely yourself chooses what aspects of another person's post to respond to, what to highlight and where to place emphasis. There is one "Hanratty did it" poster on here [not a Lancaster incidentally] who screams occasionally in unnecessarily large size text to try and get his point across, lol.
    Last edited by Sherlock Houses; 11-07-2016, 04:07 AM. Reason: missed a word out
    *************************************
    "A body of men, HOLDING THEMSELVES ACCOUNTABLE TO NOBODY, ought not to be trusted by anybody." --Thomas Paine ["Rights of Man"]

    "Justice is an ideal which transcends the expedience of the State, or the sensitivities of Government officials, or private individuals. IT HAS TO BE PURSUED WHATEVER THE COST IN PEACE OF MIND TO THOSE CONCERNED." --'Justice of the Peace' [July 12th 1975]

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Sherlock Houses View Post
      O.R. or OneRound if you prefer, I most certainly do not overstate the "doppelganger" angle. Initially Mrs Dinwoodie was shown just the one photograph of Hanratty by Det-Constable Pugh of the Liverpool police force who were inquiring into aspects of Hanratty's alibi on behalf of the A6 murder investigating team. As has been often repeated on this forum the showing of one photo for identification purposes was contrary to good practice. Nevertheless Mrs Dinwoodie made a positive identification of Hanratty as being the man who called into the sweetshop. She confirmed her positive identification of Hanratty when picking him out from a series of photographs shown to her a little later on. Mrs Dinwoodie told Pugh..."The photograph you have shown me is one of the man who came in on Monday, 21 August, asking for Tarleton Road." [Woffinden p125].

      The "sound-alike " comment is a reference to the fact that the 'doppelganger's accent was difficult for Mrs Dinwoodie to understand. He was a stranger to the shop, an out-of-towner and to Mrs Dinwoodie's ear he sounded Scottish or Welsh. It was an accent she was unfamiliar with which is probably why she was able to recall the incident of 8 weeks earlier. He definitely didn't have a 'Scouse' accent, that much is for sure.



      Now this is pretty rich coming as it does from an obvious "Hanratty did it" poster. You need to put your own house in order, methinks. Everyone on this forum including most definitely yourself chooses what aspects of another person's post to respond to, what to highlight and where to place emphasis. There is one "Hanratty did it" poster on here [not a Lancaster incidentally] who screams occasionally in unnecessarily large size text to try and get his point across, lol.
      Hi again Sherlock - well, I'll try and cover all your points in the post above.

      O.R. or OneRound or even Mester Round are all just fine.

      Picking someone out from a series of photos when you've a little earlier been shown him in a photo on its own (and confirmed him at that time as the man concerned) is a long way from being convincing. That said, I fully accept this was down to the fault of the police and Pugh especially (Graham has often forcefully made similar comments). It's partly due to the police being at fault here that I'm willing to take the sweet shop alibi into the mix a lot more than the Court of Appeal were in 2002 even though I still have large doubts about it.

      You do seem to have now sizably watered down your 'sound-alike' comment. All you are saying now is that it was an accent Mrs Dinwoodie didn't recognise and it definitely wasn't 'Scouse'. Fair enough but that hardly proves it was Hanratty's voice she heard.

      With regard to your final para, it's fully down to you as to how you choose to judge me a poster. I would though comment that I would be more than a little concerned if I was accused of a crime where you were on the jury. You appear to judge my post on what I am - or, rather, what you think I am - rather than what I have said.

      Whilst I am of the view that 'Hanratty did it' as you state, I am also on record as saying that Hanratty got an unfair deal at his trial and in the appeal upon his behalf forty years later. I tried to make that clear and bring out concerns (as far as the sweet shop incident goes - there are certainly other factors) as to upholding his guilt in the closing paras of my last post. I didn't do that to tickle your tum but because I thought those comments were worthy of debate and valid. Equally, I thought my four points doubting the veracity of Hanratty's involvement in the incident were legitimate and worthy of exploration and answers.

      We do not have to agree but it's a shame if that means those with different viewpoints cannot debate.

      Now that's me done. Any views on my queries about Harding and the (limited) time Hanratty had available to him in Liverpool before going to Rhyl?

      Regards,

      OneRound

      Comment


      • Harding was not a clock watcher

        "3. I no longer have the main books but I believe Mrs Dinwoodie was supported by Albert Harding, a lorry driver and customer of the shop, as to the incident occurring on the Monday. I would be grateful if you or any other poster could remind me about Harding's evidence - it tends to get overlooked."

        Hi OR.

        Hardings evidence appears in pages 271/8 of Woffindon. He toild the court that it couldn't have happened on the Tuesday as on that day he hadn't reached the sweet shop until about 7.00pm. The prosecution appended Harding's time sheets as documentary support for this statement. Woffindon states "The time sheets didn't support the statement at all. Harding maintained that he always called at the sweet shop directly after clocking off; Sherrard pointed out that he had clocked off at 6.00 on the Monday, and 5.45 on the Tuesday, but reached the sweetshop at 5.30-5.40 on the former day, and 7.00 on the latter. When this was put to him, Harding became vague: I am not a clockwatcher".
        Ansonman

        Comment


        • Originally posted by ansonman View Post
          "3. I no longer have the main books but I believe Mrs Dinwoodie was supported by Albert Harding, a lorry driver and customer of the shop, as to the incident occurring on the Monday. I would be grateful if you or any other poster could remind me about Harding's evidence - it tends to get overlooked."

          Hi OR.

          Hardings evidence appears in pages 271/8 of Woffindon. He toild the court that it couldn't have happened on the Tuesday as on that day he hadn't reached the sweet shop until about 7.00pm. The prosecution appended Harding's time sheets as documentary support for this statement. Woffindon states "The time sheets didn't support the statement at all. Harding maintained that he always called at the sweet shop directly after clocking off; Sherrard pointed out that he had clocked off at 6.00 on the Monday, and 5.45 on the Tuesday, but reached the sweetshop at 5.30-5.40 on the former day, and 7.00 on the latter. When this was put to him, Harding became vague: I am not a clockwatcher".
          Ansonman
          Thanks, Anson.

          On that basis then, Harding appears an unreliable witness and doesn't discredit Hanratty's claim that it was him on the Tuesday.

          Best regards,

          OneRound

          Comment


          • Originally posted by OneRound View Post
            ...I'm willing to take the sweet shop alibi into the mix a lot more than the Court of Appeal were in 2002 even though I still have large doubts about it...
            The Court of Appeal didn't spend any time over the sweetshop alibi as it wasn't a ground of appeal because it wasn't new evidence. It was fully discussed at trial in 1962.

            Comment


            • Rhyl alibi.

              Just seen the comment reproduced below in a daily newspaper. Obviously I can't vouch for the veracity of the claim, but has anyone heard of 'Snowy'?


              James hanratty knocked on the door of my mothers house in Rhyl asking if my brother snowy could take him to see terry star real name terry evens.He was dressed in a suit very smart with fairish hair and not that tall.He was wearing a suit in the early afternoon that was something you didn't see in Rhyl.I said if he came back later around tea time snowy might be home.he said he wasnt going to be in Rhyl long.I am ninety nine percent sure it was James I can't understand how the Dna proved otherwise to think he was in rhyl

              Comment


              • Originally posted by ansonman View Post
                "3. I no longer have the main books but I believe Mrs Dinwoodie was supported by Albert Harding, a lorry driver and customer of the shop, as to the incident occurring on the Monday. I would be grateful if you or any other poster could remind me about Harding's evidence - it tends to get overlooked."

                Hi OR.

                Hardings evidence appears in pages 271/8 of Woffindon. He toild the court that it couldn't have happened on the Tuesday as on that day he hadn't reached the sweet shop until about 7.00pm. The prosecution appended Harding's time sheets as documentary support for this statement. Woffindon states "The time sheets didn't support the statement at all. Harding maintained that he always called at the sweet shop directly after clocking off; Sherrard pointed out that he had clocked off at 6.00 on the Monday, and 5.45 on the Tuesday, but reached the sweetshop at 5.30-5.40 on the former day, and 7.00 on the latter. When this was put to him, Harding became vague: I am not a clockwatcher".
                Ansonman

                Hi again Anson and all,

                Credit to Sherrard and the defence team for analysing Harding's time sheets and spotting the discrepancies.

                Different point now but stemming indirectly from the above.

                I'll start by flagging that several alleged sightings of the so called murder car were not disclosed to the defence as they probably should have been. Nor was the log in which Gregsten made recordings of the car's mileage. The Court of Appeal took the view - charitably of Acott in my opinion - that Acott probably considered that the sightings were flawed as they were not consistent with Gregsten's records. Thus, Acott felt neither needed to be disclosed.

                I feel it was wrong that the defence were denied these details and particularly the opportunity to have a good stab at checking the thoroughness of Gregsten's earlier recordings. Admittedly, this may not have advanced matters for the defence at all. However, if it could have been shown that Gregsten had previously been inaccurate, it would have created doubt as to the reliability of Gregsten's final recording and given more credibility to some of the alleged sightings, probably most of all to that of William Lee in Matlock. This in turn would have lessened the impact of the two men who swore they saw Hanratty driving the car near to where it was abandoned (an impossibility at the time if the car had been driven to Matlock following the murder).

                Yet again, none of this would have proved Hanratty's innocence. However, it just might have provided further doubt as to his guilt. As I say, I feel it was wrong that non-disclosure prevented the opportunity.

                Best regards,

                OneRound

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Derrick View Post
                  The Court of Appeal didn't spend any time over the sweetshop alibi as it wasn't a ground of appeal because it wasn't new evidence. It was fully discussed at trial in 1962.
                  Hi Del,

                  Yes, I certainly accept that. I was probably more just getting at some personal unease with the appeal process. Purely speculative and my own opinion but I reckon Hanratty came within a whisker or two of getting a 'not guilty' verdict at trial. Whilst his harshest critics praise the jury now for seeing through him, even they appear to accept that the verdict could have gone either way at the time.

                  Given that together with the Court of Appeal in 2002 stressing the importance of 'justice' itself and the need to see things 'in the round', it seems tough to leave plus points for Hanratty from his original trial on one side and not be able to add them to new evidence which helps his cause.

                  Had Hanratty not been executed and had not the passage of time probably made it unfeasible, I would have quashed his conviction but ordered a retrial. My hope being to get all matters fairly in the mix for the first time - in my land of make believe, anyway.

                  Best regards,

                  OneRound

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by j.kettle1 View Post
                    Just seen the comment reproduced below in a daily newspaper. Obviously I can't vouch for the veracity of the claim, but has anyone heard of 'Snowy'?


                    James hanratty knocked on the door of my mothers house in Rhyl asking if my brother snowy could take him to see terry star real name terry evens.He was dressed in a suit very smart with fairish hair and not that tall.He was wearing a suit in the early afternoon that was something you didn't see in Rhyl.I said if he came back later around tea time snowy might be home.he said he wasnt going to be in Rhyl long.I am ninety nine percent sure it was James I can't understand how the Dna proved otherwise to think he was in rhyl
                    Hi j.kettle - sorry, unable to answer your question about 'Snowy'. However, as regards veracity, would Hanratty have known the person he was looking for by any name other than 'John' at this time? Others should be able to confirm that at least.

                    Best regards,

                    OneRound

                    Comment


                    • [QUOTE=OneRound;399335]Hi again Anson and all,

                      Credit to Sherrard and the defence team for analysing Harding's time sheets and spotting the discrepancies.

                      Hi OneRound,

                      Yes indeed, and discredit to the prosecution for failing to do same. As you haven't got the books to hand it's worth quoting a bit more from Woffinden as regards Harding:

                      "On Tuesday, 6 February, at virtually the close of its case, the Crown passed to the defence yet another notice of additional evidence. This concerned the testimony of Albert Harding. Ideally, Swanwick would have wished to call Harding after the defence had called Mrs. Dinwoodie. He applied to the judge in these terms, asking, in effect, that if Mrs. Dinwoodie were to say such and such, would he then be allowed to bring forward this evidence to counter it?
                      The judge felt his patience was being tried a little too far. He informed Swanwick that "I am not prepared to say now how I might be prepared to exercise my discretion on some future occasion". Accordingly, the prosecution had no option but to call Harding straightaway".
                      "The sense of the absurd- with Harding being called to rebut evidence which hadn't been heard - was heightened by the fact that Sherrard was able to ensure that all reference to the vital conversation in the sweetshop was excluded; it was, quite blatantly, hearsay evidence. Swanwick was in the position of trying to combat evidence which the jury had not yet heard and regarding which he was unable to enlighten them.

                      Regards,
                      Ansonman

                      Comment


                      • Hi, and thanks for your reply.
                        I wonder whether he was known as 'Snowy' to his brother, but JH knew him by another name?
                        It also doesn't state when the encounter took place.

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by j.kettle1 View Post
                          Just seen the comment reproduced below in a daily newspaper. Obviously I can't vouch for the veracity of the claim, but has anyone heard of 'Snowy'?


                          James hanratty knocked on the door of my mothers house in Rhyl asking if my brother snowy could take him to see terry star real name terry evens.He was dressed in a suit very smart with fairish hair and not that tall.He was wearing a suit in the early afternoon that was something you didn't see in Rhyl.I said if he came back later around tea time snowy might be home.he said he wasnt going to be in Rhyl long.I am ninety nine percent sure it was James I can't understand how the Dna proved otherwise to think he was in rhyl
                          Hi John.something about the name Snowy sounds vaguely familiar.
                          Its not covered in any of the books I have though, what newspaper did you see the article in?.

                          Comment


                          • Hi moste,
                            It was the Daily Express, and was from about seven months ago.

                            Comment


                            • 1953 Sunbeam Alpine

                              The same model cream coloured sports coupe that Hanratty purchased with 113 pounds down- payment, (total cost 375 pounds,) with Louise Anderson standing as guarantor. This was on the 20th Sep. a little less than a month since the A6 attack. Jim was elated with his new car, 'showing it off to everyone', driving Louise to and from work, and his girlfriends here there and everywhere. Despite knowing he needed to keep out of the way of the police, because of his burglaries, it sounds like he was on a major high at this time in his life, as Bob Woffinden put it "Those were heady days for him". And yet he is supposed to have recently committed one of the most brutal and vicious attacks imaginable, on a couple of unsuspecting lovers?
                              Attached Files

                              Comment


                              • 1956, model, Jaguar mk. seven . This is the same model car Hanratty had a spare key for ,stolen in London then used to head north to Manchester. Manual gearbox floor mounted stick shift with overdrive. Just reading Woffindens explanation of this series of events, it seems the fuel gauge was broken (quite unusual defect) ( interesting, big, coincidence coming up in next post!)
                                Hanrartty spent over 4 pound on 16 gallons of petrol, just to be on the safe side.
                                Attached Files

                                Comment

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