Or am I just pissing in the wind on this one to
The murder who inadvertently helped Lizzie
Moderator: Adminlizzieborden
- snokkums
- Posts: 2543
- Joined: Sat Jan 08, 2005 10:09 am
- Gender: Female
- Real Name: Robin
- Location: fayetteville nc,but from milwaukee
- Contact:
The murder who inadvertently helped Lizzie
Or am I just pissing in the wind on this one to
- Wordweaver
- Posts: 262
- Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2004 3:28 am
- Real Name:
- Location: Silicon Valley
- Contact:
Well, it certainly helped the jury find a reasonable doubt.
There is science, logic, reason; there is thought verified by experience. And then there is California. --Edward Abbey
http://unnaturalhistory.blogspot.com
http://unnaturalhistory.blogspot.com
- Susan
- Posts: 2361
- Joined: Thu Apr 22, 2004 11:26 pm
- Real Name:
- Location: California
Yes, I've read it before. Sorry, Snokkums......
What the Borden jury did not know was that José Correira could not possibly have been the murderer of Abby and Andrew Borden because he was not in the United States when they were committed. He was in his native land, the Azores, the Portuguese-held islands that are almost midway between Europe and North America. Correira arrived in the US in April of 1893, a full eight months after the Borden slayings.
But, had he been in America at the time.......
What the Borden jury did not know was that José Correira could not possibly have been the murderer of Abby and Andrew Borden because he was not in the United States when they were committed. He was in his native land, the Azores, the Portuguese-held islands that are almost midway between Europe and North America. Correira arrived in the US in April of 1893, a full eight months after the Borden slayings.
But, had he been in America at the time.......
“Sometimes when we are generous in small, barely detectable ways it can change someone else's life forever.”-Margaret Cho comedienne
-
diana
- Posts: 878
- Joined: Thu Apr 22, 2004 2:21 pm
- Real Name:
Actually the jury did know Correira was not in the country when the Bordens were murdered. The information appeared in the local paper four days before the jury was sequestered. So it seems unlikely the Manchester murder influenced the jury's deliberations.
Correira "came to America from the Western Islands about two months ago..." (New Bedford Evening Standard, June 1, 1893)
Correira "came to America from the Western Islands about two months ago..." (New Bedford Evening Standard, June 1, 1893)
- snokkums
- Posts: 2543
- Joined: Sat Jan 08, 2005 10:09 am
- Gender: Female
- Real Name: Robin
- Location: fayetteville nc,but from milwaukee
- Contact:
- snokkums
- Posts: 2543
- Joined: Sat Jan 08, 2005 10:09 am
- Gender: Female
- Real Name: Robin
- Location: fayetteville nc,but from milwaukee
- Contact:
-
wintressanna
- Posts: 70
- Joined: Sat Jan 29, 2005 12:25 am
- Real Name:
- Location: USA
- Kat
- Posts: 14770
- Joined: Sun Dec 28, 2003 11:59 pm
- Real Name:
- Location: Central Florida
By June 5th, when the trial started by picking jurors, the person responsible for the Manchester killing was in jail, Correiro. It was headlines in the Boston Globe. After the jury was selected in the Borden trial, they were given time to gather their things to be sequestered and I suppose set their families in order. I don't know if this was much more than a half hour or an hour, but the Borden jury had several chances to find out the solution to the Manchester case before sequestering.snokkums @ Sun Apr 03, 2005 9:21 am wrote:I think it might have influencedthem. Also they might have thought that a young lady wouldn't be able to do this kind of crime.