Hawser is certainly excellent at confirming his view that Mrs. Lanz is not a reliable witness.
1. He mentions three statements made by Mrs. Lanz to the police. He provides dates for statement 1 and statement 3: 24th August 1961 and 27th March 1962. The other one? He does not seem to think the date matters much for some reason although we can assume it was soon after Hanratty’s verdict.
2. He quotes from statement 1 to give us the full impact of her words. In statement 1 there is little to place Alphon at the Station Inn save her description of ‘strangers.’ Rather than give us this description verbatim, Hawser has decided to pass his own judgment on the matter. As to why Mrs. Lanz was not given the opportunity to identify Alphon officially, Hawser decides it best not to comment.
3. Statement 3 is also quoted verbatim in places and is interesting in that it does confirm Mrs. Lanz’s earlier comment about Alphon being an occasional patron of the Station Inn. Except that after confirming this, she then slightly retracts her conviction it was him. At no point does Hawser pause to consider the internal contradiction of this statement.
4. As for Alphon’s propensity for popping up in Taplow this is reduced to the enigmatic comment: The statement refers to other visits to her public house and does not carry the matter any further. Other visits made by Alphon presumably, but Hawser does not want to mention him by name at this point. But this surely contradicts her earlier ambiguity about Alphon. Once again without offering any evidence to support his judgement Hawser merely closes the topic down.
5. These alarm bells ringing within statement 3 are of no concern to Hawser. In fact for him statement 3 is proof positive that Mrs. Lanz cannot place Alphon in the Station In around the time of the crime.It is clear that in March 1962 Mrs. Lanz had no idea when Mr. Alphon had previously been there. A slight slip by Hawser that he probably regretted . He apparently concedes in this final flourish that Alphon had, on some previous occasions, been in the Station Inn.
4. There remains the problem of the earlier, undated statement 2 in which Mrs. Lanz can place Alphon as a customer very close to the time of the murder. Hawser does not see fit to produce one single verbatim extract from this statement and actually links her statement as appearing in a newspaper. Small tricks that lawyers learn to weaken information that is unhelpful to their case. Rather like Nudds, Mrs Lang is credible in statements 1 and 3 but unreliable in statement 2.
At least Nudds gave a reason for his contradictory statements. Hawser seems uninterested in exploring the reasons for this regarding Mrs. Lanz. There are several possibilities. Mrs. Lanz may have been unduly influenced by Fox; she may have had strong feelings against the death penalty; perhaps she felt contesting the verdict would have been hurtful to Valerie Storie; or perhaps her third statement was coerced by a police force keen to draw a line under the A6 Case for it was made on 27th March 1962- one week before the execution of James Hanratty. After the execution Mrs. Lanz seems to have gone back to her statement 2. Did Mr. Hawser, in his excellent report, ever speak to Mrs. Lanz to clear the matter up?
1. He mentions three statements made by Mrs. Lanz to the police. He provides dates for statement 1 and statement 3: 24th August 1961 and 27th March 1962. The other one? He does not seem to think the date matters much for some reason although we can assume it was soon after Hanratty’s verdict.
2. He quotes from statement 1 to give us the full impact of her words. In statement 1 there is little to place Alphon at the Station Inn save her description of ‘strangers.’ Rather than give us this description verbatim, Hawser has decided to pass his own judgment on the matter. As to why Mrs. Lanz was not given the opportunity to identify Alphon officially, Hawser decides it best not to comment.
3. Statement 3 is also quoted verbatim in places and is interesting in that it does confirm Mrs. Lanz’s earlier comment about Alphon being an occasional patron of the Station Inn. Except that after confirming this, she then slightly retracts her conviction it was him. At no point does Hawser pause to consider the internal contradiction of this statement.
4. As for Alphon’s propensity for popping up in Taplow this is reduced to the enigmatic comment: The statement refers to other visits to her public house and does not carry the matter any further. Other visits made by Alphon presumably, but Hawser does not want to mention him by name at this point. But this surely contradicts her earlier ambiguity about Alphon. Once again without offering any evidence to support his judgement Hawser merely closes the topic down.
5. These alarm bells ringing within statement 3 are of no concern to Hawser. In fact for him statement 3 is proof positive that Mrs. Lanz cannot place Alphon in the Station In around the time of the crime.It is clear that in March 1962 Mrs. Lanz had no idea when Mr. Alphon had previously been there. A slight slip by Hawser that he probably regretted . He apparently concedes in this final flourish that Alphon had, on some previous occasions, been in the Station Inn.
4. There remains the problem of the earlier, undated statement 2 in which Mrs. Lanz can place Alphon as a customer very close to the time of the murder. Hawser does not see fit to produce one single verbatim extract from this statement and actually links her statement as appearing in a newspaper. Small tricks that lawyers learn to weaken information that is unhelpful to their case. Rather like Nudds, Mrs Lang is credible in statements 1 and 3 but unreliable in statement 2.
At least Nudds gave a reason for his contradictory statements. Hawser seems uninterested in exploring the reasons for this regarding Mrs. Lanz. There are several possibilities. Mrs. Lanz may have been unduly influenced by Fox; she may have had strong feelings against the death penalty; perhaps she felt contesting the verdict would have been hurtful to Valerie Storie; or perhaps her third statement was coerced by a police force keen to draw a line under the A6 Case for it was made on 27th March 1962- one week before the execution of James Hanratty. After the execution Mrs. Lanz seems to have gone back to her statement 2. Did Mr. Hawser, in his excellent report, ever speak to Mrs. Lanz to clear the matter up?
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