There must have been better ways to ascertain Hanratty’s whereabouts than visiting a flower shop. What possible information of any value did the police expect to find there, given that they already knew where the flowers had been sent from.
As it turns out they did pick up a useful piece of information: that Hanratty used the alias Ryan. So maybe not a wasted journey after all. Yet when the name Ryan turned up in the Vienna Hotel register following the discovery of cartridge shells no connection seems to have been made initially with Hanratty. Why were the police exclusively pursuing Alphon when they should have been extending at least as much energy in pursuing Mr. Ryan who had occuppied the basement room?
As for the ESP powers of Mrs. Gregsten, I doubt that anyone bar Dorothy Stokes believed in them after reading the news story. There are various opinions offered as to why this story appeared in two tabloid newspapers just after the trial.
One is that William Ewer saw the opportunity to make a few quid by selling his outlandish tale.
Another is that the journalists took a few liberties with his story to make it more sensational.
The one I favour is that Ewer was in something of a pickle, for he was indeed the man who had tipped off the police to visit Swiss Cottage. The smokescreen of the ‘vision’ was on the surface a piece of harmless nonsense but served to deflect the source of Ewer’s prior knowledge onto Mrs. Gregsten. This meant that Ewer need never be called to account for his decision to call the police himself.
As it turns out they did pick up a useful piece of information: that Hanratty used the alias Ryan. So maybe not a wasted journey after all. Yet when the name Ryan turned up in the Vienna Hotel register following the discovery of cartridge shells no connection seems to have been made initially with Hanratty. Why were the police exclusively pursuing Alphon when they should have been extending at least as much energy in pursuing Mr. Ryan who had occuppied the basement room?
As for the ESP powers of Mrs. Gregsten, I doubt that anyone bar Dorothy Stokes believed in them after reading the news story. There are various opinions offered as to why this story appeared in two tabloid newspapers just after the trial.
One is that William Ewer saw the opportunity to make a few quid by selling his outlandish tale.
Another is that the journalists took a few liberties with his story to make it more sensational.
The one I favour is that Ewer was in something of a pickle, for he was indeed the man who had tipped off the police to visit Swiss Cottage. The smokescreen of the ‘vision’ was on the surface a piece of harmless nonsense but served to deflect the source of Ewer’s prior knowledge onto Mrs. Gregsten. This meant that Ewer need never be called to account for his decision to call the police himself.
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