A Netflix Series Featuring A Native...
Film, Media & TV0 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Zen. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It's a bit more than a 'supposition', W-M.
After a banknote found on one of the victims was traced to a bank he was paid from Peter Sutcliffe was a suspect for the murders - not a particulaly strong one - but was ruled out because he didn't have a Wearside accent.
If anyone had identified Humble's voice to the Police, they (the Police) may well have found that he had an unshakeable alibi for one or more of the murders thereby clearing Humble of being the voice on the tape.
Humble would have been in his early-mid 20s at the time.
... but there is "supposition" about whether the actions of Humble delayed the apprehension of Sutcliffe, or whether he would have remained uncaught for the last 3 murders anyway.
I think that the sentence should be set on the basis of what his intentions were. I don't think that he coldly and calculatedly intended to help Sutcliffe to commit further murders. By the accounts of the news media, he seems to have been a low-intelligence habitual drunkard with low career prospects, and arguably with little understanding or foresight about the seriousness of what he actually did. I was expecting a sentence of about 3 or 4 years, but it is such an unusual and unprecedented case that it could have been anything from very light (months) to very heavy (life).
Did it not occur to the police that the tapes were a hoax. To abandon all lines of current enquiry and go for a man with an accent in a particular town was lunacy. The police are covering their follies here.
To answer the question, the man was an alcoholic and drunk when arrested. He had to be sobered up before he could be questioned. So he probably did not recognise the police when they came knocking.
We all have the benefit of 20-20 hindsight, but I remember the tapes at the time - they were broadcast on a free phone line in case anyone could idtentify the voice.
I can remember the chilling sound of that message - it sounded utterly genuine, so i can quite understand the police thinking it so.
A tragedy, but of its time.