NickB,
The flower shop visit is exactly the sort of detail that is needed to make sense of how Hanratty first came into the frame. Your account may well be vindicated from the statements that Matthews was able to access. Which is why the report should be published. There’s not much need to redact names since most of those involved are now dead.
For my part I remain sceptical. If, and that is a big if, the police following a routine burglary enquiry saw a florist shop’s name on a batch of flowers they could hardly have expected it to yield much information regarding the whereabouts of James Hanratty. They themselves seem to have acknowledged this by not pursuing the weak lead until the 1st of September. That’s four days to follow up a lead. I assume, and this has never been established so far as I am aware, that the police who visited the Hanratty family on 27th August were not part of the murder enquiry. Again, Matthews may have been able to confirm this.
When the police- again I am making the assumption these were not officers connected with the A6 murder- eventually arrived at Swiss Cottage they might have had a faint chance of knowing where Hanratty was; he could have said something in casual conversation to shop assistant about his travel plans. The police, sensibly enough it seems to me, also visited other shops in the arcade in an attempt to trace Hanratty’s movements.
What stands out about this police visit, whether routine or orchestrated by Ewer is that Ewer himself is, according to fellow shopkeepers, like a cat on hot bricks about the police appearance. That takes some explaining. As does his ridiculous story about the vision of Mrs. Gregsten which was plainly false, but given ( I accept the journalist’s account) for a reason that in my view was not to obtain financial reward. That Swiss Cottage visit rattled Ewer for some reason, therefore he supplied a smokescreen after the trial.
The flower shop visit is exactly the sort of detail that is needed to make sense of how Hanratty first came into the frame. Your account may well be vindicated from the statements that Matthews was able to access. Which is why the report should be published. There’s not much need to redact names since most of those involved are now dead.
For my part I remain sceptical. If, and that is a big if, the police following a routine burglary enquiry saw a florist shop’s name on a batch of flowers they could hardly have expected it to yield much information regarding the whereabouts of James Hanratty. They themselves seem to have acknowledged this by not pursuing the weak lead until the 1st of September. That’s four days to follow up a lead. I assume, and this has never been established so far as I am aware, that the police who visited the Hanratty family on 27th August were not part of the murder enquiry. Again, Matthews may have been able to confirm this.
When the police- again I am making the assumption these were not officers connected with the A6 murder- eventually arrived at Swiss Cottage they might have had a faint chance of knowing where Hanratty was; he could have said something in casual conversation to shop assistant about his travel plans. The police, sensibly enough it seems to me, also visited other shops in the arcade in an attempt to trace Hanratty’s movements.
What stands out about this police visit, whether routine or orchestrated by Ewer is that Ewer himself is, according to fellow shopkeepers, like a cat on hot bricks about the police appearance. That takes some explaining. As does his ridiculous story about the vision of Mrs. Gregsten which was plainly false, but given ( I accept the journalist’s account) for a reason that in my view was not to obtain financial reward. That Swiss Cottage visit rattled Ewer for some reason, therefore he supplied a smokescreen after the trial.
Comment