"She'd seen my face" or "She saw my face"?

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the batman learner

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Police: Why did you kill her?

1.Killer: Because she'd seen my face and I didn't want to leave any witnesses.

2.Killer: Because she saw my face and I didn't want to leave any witnesses.

In this situation what's more appropriate to use?
 

Tarheel

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Use whichever feels right to you.
 

the batman learner

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I'd gotten over this all past perfect and past simple thing but yesterday I was watching a movie where something like this happened and I wondered what is more correct way to say this. Do they both deliver the same meaning in this context?
 

Tarheel

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They mean the same thing. The bad guy thought she would be able to recognize him. So he killed her to eliminate a potential witness.
 

5jj

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Police: Why did you kill her?

1.Killer: Because she'd seen my face and I didn't want to leave any witnesses.
That's a textbook case for the past perfect - one past-time situation occurring before a later one. However, when the order of the events is clear, many native speakers use the past simple.
 

5jj

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There's no need to submit a separate 'thank you' post. Just click on the Like or Thanks button - as you did.
 

Tdol

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That's a textbook case for the past perfect - one past-time situation occurring before a later one. However, when the order of the events is clear, many native speakers use the past simple.
It seems more emphatic with the past perfect- a greater justification for the act.
 
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