Originally posted by NickB
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Originally posted by Graham View Post
Bobble-hats were very popular all-round in those days. I got caught by a prefect for wearing one instead of my school cap on the bus on the way to school, and got detention. Regarding the green bobble-hat in the boot of the Morris, has anyone seen the photo that I believe was taken of the contents of the boot? And if so, was there a bobble-hat visible?
Graham
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Originally posted by Graham View PostRegarding the green bobble-hat in the boot of the Morris, has anyone seen the photo that I believe was taken of the contents of the boot? And if so, was there a bobble-hat visible?
"At 6.30am on Wednesday 23 August, William Lee saw a grey Morris Minor being driven by a man wearing a woollen pom-pom hat on the A6 near Matlock in Derbyshire. He wrote the registration number down as 847 BHN which was the registration of Michael Gregsten's car in the boot of which there was such a hat (although there is no evidence that the murderer otherwise was seen wearing it)."
I've no idea where the Court learned of this. The list of items taken from the MM to the Met's lab doesn't include a reference to a hat, pom-pom or otherwise.
Last edited by Alfie; 03-15-2019, 05:28 PM.
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Originally posted by Alfie View Post
As far as I'm aware the only reference tying a bobble hat to the MM was that made by the Court of Appeal at 151 (i) ...
"At 6.30am on Wednesday 23 August, William Lee saw a grey Morris Minor being driven by a man wearing a woollen pom-pom hat on the A6 near Matlock in Derbyshire. He wrote the registration number down as 847 BHN which was the registration of Michael Gregsten's car in the boot of which there was such a hat (although there is no evidence that the murderer otherwise was seen wearing it)."
I've no idea where the Court learned of this. The list of items taken from the MM to the Met's lab doesn't include a reference to a hat, pom-pom or otherwise.
Graham
We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze
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Originally posted by Alfie View Post
As far as I'm aware the only reference tying a bobble hat to the MM was that made by the Court of Appeal at 151 (i) ...
"At 6.30am on Wednesday 23 August, William Lee saw a grey Morris Minor being driven by a man wearing a woollen pom-pom hat on the A6 near Matlock in Derbyshire. He wrote the registration number down as 847 BHN which was the registration of Michael Gregsten's car in the boot of which there was such a hat (although there is no evidence that the murderer otherwise was seen wearing it)."
I've no idea where the Court learned of this. The list of items taken from the MM to the Met's lab doesn't include a reference to a hat, pom-pom or otherwise.
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William Lee says he say the car in or near Matlock at 6.30am. Odd, that neither Foot nor Woffinden mention Mr Lee. However, Woffinden does mention a Mr Charles Drayton, a milkman, who claimed he saw the car at 5.25am in Bedford. Drayton said he had to brake sharply to avoid a collision. Drayton also came out with some nonsensical-sounding mnemonic which, he claimed, helped him to remember the number of the car (Woffinden Pg 444). Thing is, according to my copy of RAC Route Planner, from Bedford central to Matlock central is some 113 miles, or at least two hours in a car capable of not much more than 60 mph. Therefore if Mr Drayton's sighting was genuine, no way could Mr Lee have seen the car at 6.30am. Conversely, if Mr Lee is right, no way could Mr Drayton have seen the car at 5.25am. Unless, of course, Gregsten's Morris had something like a supercharged V8 Buick under its bonnet.
GrahamWe are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze
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Originally posted by Graham View Post
Quite so, Alfie. However, at least one poster here is totally and absolutely convinced that Mr Lee's sighting was factual.
Graham
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From memory, on this site it was established that Mr. Lee of Matlock had his incident with the car around either 6.30am or 8.30am- there was some problem with a mistake in the appeal papers?
He did not report his encounter until later in the evening, and had mislaid the piece of paper upon which he had written the registration. By this time the car registration had been broadcast on national media. However he was presumably honest, if perhaps not accurate: he did not attempt after all to scribble down the car registration and claim it was from the morning.
He was still alive at the time of the appeal and I think contacted as a witness, when he held to his version of events 40 years earlier.
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Originally posted by moste View Post
The milage from Bedford to Matlock round trip, is around 165 miles I think someone said that's too far for the mileometer discrepancy. However no one can be certain of the facts here since 'a' we don't have definate logging times of Gregsten, and 'b' Acott was involved.
GrahamWe are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze
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Originally posted by Graham View Post
Wrong. The mileage Bedford central to Matlock central is as I quoted: 113 miles or 226 round trip, give or take a few depending upon where Drayton and Lee claimed they saw the car. If you don't believe me, get yourself onto RAC Route Planner. Either Lee or Drayton is right, or as I would very strongly suggest, neither of them are.
GrahamLast edited by moste; 03-16-2019, 12:07 AM.
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Talking Forensics part 2: The Gun and the Handkerchief
In 1962 there appears to have been no attempt to make any forensic link between the items retrieved on the bus and James Hanratty. The issue of whether the handkerchief actually belonged to Hanratty does not seem to have been important enough to have been clearly established at trial. Presumably a blood group test could have been carried out at the time, but there is no record of this.
The reason for the prosecution to establish a link to the gun being found on the bus was presumably to claim there was a chain of evidence. After all, the cartridge cases found in the Vienna Hotel must have been deposited before the murder so it was necessary to establish a link between Hanratty and the murder weapon after the murder. The evidence produced was not very strong. What the prosecution would have wanted was a passenger seeing Hanratty acting suspiciously in the back seat, or a sharp eyed conductress who remembered him on the bus at a relevant time. Even an alleged confession by Hanratty to a fellow criminal, to the effect that he had stashed the murder weapon on a bus, would have been better than what they were left with. The prosecution had to rely on hearsay evidence from Dixie France to the effect that Hanratty liked to dispose of things under the back seats of buses.
The handkerchief only became significant when it was re-discovered in 1997. This was very fortuitous since the Matthews inquiry the previous year had, although unpublished, reportedly been favourable towards the idea that Hanratty was innocent. Two previous investigations- the Nimmo inquiry of 1967 and the Hawser Report of 1975- had effectively upheld the original verdict. Both were discussed in parliament, with the latter being published. The Matthews inquiry has never seen the light of day nor been discussed in parliament.
There are three reasons to question the validity of the handkerchief evidence.
Firstly, it would be naïve not to question the provenance of the handkerchief given the time which had elapsed and the fact that the A6 Case was going to be referred to the CCRC.
Secondly, reservations about the quality of LC DNA have been well made by others on this site.
Thirdly, leaving these arguments aside for the moment, even if the handkerchief did belong to Hanratty and it did contain his DNA it no more incriminates Hanratty than did France’s statement all these years ago. At best, the most we could conclude is that Hanratty was acquainted with a person who deposited the gun on the bus. It is no more indicative of Hanratty’s guilt, as a piece of free-standing evidence, than Desdemona’s handkerchief was proof of her infidelity to Othello.
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Originally posted by cobalt View PostThe prosecution had to rely on hearsay evidence from Dixie France to the effect that Hanratty liked to dispose of things under the back seats of buses.
So, revolver found in Hanratty's favourite hiding place + cartridge cases fired by revolver found at the foot of his bed at the Vienna = strong circumstantial evidence that the murder weapon was in Hanratty's possession at the time of the murder, with or without proof that the handkerchief was his.
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Originally posted by Alfie View Post
Not quite. Hanratty admitted to having this conversation.
So, revolver found in Hanratty's favourite hiding place + cartridge cases fired by revolver found at the foot of his bed at the Vienna = strong circumstantial evidence that the murder weapon was in Hanratty's possession at the time of the murder, with or without proof that the handkerchief was his.
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Originally posted by Graham View Post
Wrong. The mileage Bedford central to Matlock central is as I quoted: 113 miles or 226 round trip, give or take a few depending upon where Drayton and Lee claimed they saw the car. If you don't believe me, get yourself onto RAC Route Planner. Either Lee or Drayton is right, or as I would very strongly suggest, neither of them are.
Graham
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