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Elizabeth Stride ..who killed her ?

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  • #16
    [QUOTE=Celesta;88037]Thanks, Maurice. I followed the route on Google street view and the congestion is impressive! /QUOTE]

    Not the actual route of course!
    "What our ancestors would really be thinking, if they were alive today, is: "Why is it so dark in here?"" From Pyramids by Sir Terry Pratchett, a British National Treasure.

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    • #17
      I think this question is far more difficult that it would seem.

      If Schwartz told the truth, she was probably killed by Broadshouldered Man. His entrance suggests an unlikely "Ripper" figure, openly accosting a target within view of 2 witnesses just before committing the act. But his aggression just before a murder could not be ignored.

      If Brown was right and Schwartz was incorrect or lied, then it could have been the man seen with her by the school...who could be Kidney among others, or Jack, or someone from inside the yard including Jack or a club member may have snatched her when she gets near the gates.

      If the club members told the truth and the yard was empty at 12:40, 2 witnesses say it was, then its unlikely the killer gets into the yard from the street before Liz is near the gates, without her seeing him and therefore perhaps her being wary as she approached.

      What didnt happen in my opinion is that Jack the Ripper was interrupted and therefore unable to complete his "mission". It is not what the medical testimony suggests,.... there is no indication that her killer had further plans that were halted, she is said to have been as she fell without disturbance, she is on her side, and her skirt is down.

      She is cut unlike other Ripper victims, perhaps while falling. It appears that she was simply murdered as the sole objective of the killer.

      I dont personally believe Jack just "killed" anyone. Jack is the fiend who is most visible immediately after he murders, by the signature abdominal cutting.

      So I see not very likely Jack anyway you slice the witnesses, and a more likely personal vendetta or escalated altercation with a street person...or club member.

      Best regards all.

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      • #18
        Hi Mike,

        For a long time, I just saw BS as wandering off after the altercation, then someone else, the real JTR coming along. Yet, if we go by Israel's statement, assume he's telling the truth, or some of it, then why is it necessary to have a third guy come in and kill Liz? BS man is there and committing violence on the woman. It doesn't mean he wasn't JTR necessarily, or that he was. Oh, for another witness.

        I've even pondered (ala your other thread) that Schwartz made the story up, or maybe part of it, but that leaves us with too little.

        Best to you, Michael.
        "What our ancestors would really be thinking, if they were alive today, is: "Why is it so dark in here?"" From Pyramids by Sir Terry Pratchett, a British National Treasure.

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        • #19
          Originally posted by Celesta View Post
          Hi Mike,

          For a long time, I just saw BS as wandering off after the altercation, then someone else, the real JTR coming along. Yet, if we go by Israel's statement, assume he's telling the truth, or some of it, then why is it necessary to have a third guy come in and kill Liz? BS man is there and committing violence on the woman. It doesn't mean he wasn't JTR necessarily, or that he was. Oh, for another witness.

          I've even pondered (ala your other thread) that Schwartz made the story up, or maybe part of it, but that leaves us with too little.

          Best to you, Michael.
          Hi Celesta,

          I agree with you and did in my post, Broadshouldered Man is the most probable killer of Liz IF Schwartz was telling the truth.

          I dont see this though, BS as a realistic Jack.....and if he did kill Liz, neither does what he does to her seem very Jack-like. He enters the scene walking and weaving in the middle of the street rather than on the sidewalk, he knows he is seen by at least Liz and Pipeman as he approaches, and he then discovers that he is also seen by Schwartz as he passes, and so he yells at him in order to shoo him away.

          Does that seem like Jacky Boy? Does the single cut? By the evidence alone it would seem that murder was his only goal....is that anything remotely like what we see with Annies killer?

          Im not saying Jack could not have killed Liz absolutely, Im just saying Broadshouldered Man is most likely... using Schwartz's account and the single wound, and he is not likely Jack.

          Now if Schwartz wasnt correct or shouldnt be believed, then probably Brown was and should...since its he not Schwartz who marks the time of 12:45am in the records created at the Inquest...then you have room for a Jack, perhaps an empty yard for a Jack, but we dont likely have any interruption here....so if Jack, its just a kill. Not a kill so he can cut. The opportunity can be given depending on whose evidence is trusted for Jack to be there or enter.....but we will still have the results...which are hardly Jack like.

          All the best Celesta

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          • #20
            Hi,

            If the Ripper did not kill Stride and Somebody else did then what was the motive? Was Shwartz telling the truth? Why would anyone feel the need to kill Stride after being seen by a witness?

            Assuming that Stride was killed by someone other then the Ripper and Shwartz was telling the truth it would be crazy to kill her after being seen.
            What would have been the motive to kill. He did not want to pay? He did not have too. He wanted to rob her. He could have. There was no reason to kill. No motive for a man she just met to kill.

            Domestic violence tends to be committed in the heat of the moment. Kidney would of had a motive or at least thought he had a motive to kill Stride.

            Jack would of had a motive. She may have been able to identify him.

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            • #21
              Tom Wescott writes:

              "Eddowes and Stride were killed within a 10 minute walk of each other and within 45 minutes of each other. Modern revisionism has them as unrelated. It's hip to think that, but not entirely logical, in my opinion."

              These parametres inevitably surface whenever the Stride killing is discussed, and at first sight, they may seem quite compelling. Some afterthought, though, quickly changes that picture:

              As the crow flies, the distance inbetween the murder sites of Liz Stride and Kate Eddowes is somewhere in the vicinity of 800 metres. Now, if we were to fix a pole on Berner Street, outside Dutfields yard, and tie a rope with a length of 800 metres to that pole, thereafter producing a circle with a radius of 800 metres, we would seal off a very substantial area. Of course, we would reach mitre Square in the west, but in the north we would stretch beyond Cheshire Street, in the east we would pass Jubilee Street, and we would come quite close to the Thames in the south. In the crowded East end of 1888, such a circle would have held six-digit numbers of people! Moreover, it would have represented an area in which crime was abundant, and where knives were thirteen a dozen.

              To say that it is illogical not to put all knife killings in such an area, with such a population, down to the same perpetrator is not very useful. We are not dealing with a handful of people, locked inside a room here. And the proven presence of a serial killer on the streets does not automatically provide an alibi for all the rest of the citizens - some of them drunken, some of them violent, and many, many of them with a criminal record - in the area we are talking about.

              The best,
              Fisherman

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              • #22
                While I find most of the "Jack didn't do this" arguments compelling...I still think our boy Jack killed Elizabeth Stride.
                "It's either the river or the Ripper for me."~~anonymous 'unfortunate', London 1888

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                • #23
                  Mrs Fiddymont writes:

                  "I still think our boy Jack killed Elizabeth Stride"

                  As long as we keep in mind that:

                  - Stride was left unmutilated
                  - She was found lying on her left side, suggesting no intended mutilation
                  - She had been seen in a disagreement with a man quite close to the time she was found dead (and with another man that seemingly tallied very well with the man she quarreled with slightly earlier that evening)
                  - She had sustained a markedly more shallow cut than the canonicals
                  - If it was Jack, we must accept that he doubled back the way he had originally come
                  - If it was Jack, we must accept that he was scared off inbetween the time he cut her neck (or even at that EXACT time, since the cut differs) or that he never intended to mutilate Stride
                  - If it was Jack, and if his motive to kill Eddowes was that he had been scared away from Dutfields Yard before he had the chance to mutilate, we must accept that he stayed on the prowl for three quarters of an hour, although, reasonably, he could have found a victim both quicker and nearer to the Stride killing. Some will say that he needed to get some distance away from Berner Street to feel safe, but those who say so often find it hard to explain why he went back into the heart of Whitechapel after strike number two if he was such a cautious bloke.

                  ... it is a functioning stance. It COULD have been Jack - but if it was, he behaved very oddly time and time again.

                  The best,
                  Fisherman

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                  • #24
                    Originally posted by celee View Post
                    Assuming that Stride was killed by someone other then the Ripper and Shwartz was telling the truth it would be crazy to kill her after being seen.
                    Perhaps, Schwartz actually witnessed and interupted the murder taking place. This would explain her death despite being seen?

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                    • #25
                      Fair point, Jon!

                      ...and I think we have to take into account that not all murders take place in secluded spaces, nor do the killers always take measures to avoid being seen. Some killers could not care less, some are to drunk to take any care at all and some actually want to show the world what they do.
                      If we want to rule out BS man as a killer just because he went public with his deed, we may be opting for the wrong course altogether.

                      The best,
                      Fisherman

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                      • #26
                        Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                        Some killers could not care less, some are to drunk to take any care at all and some actually want to show the world what they do.
                        Hi Fisherman, I agree, however, in this instance BS Man does not appear to be aware that Schwartz was behind him, and if the incident was taking place just inside the gates and Schwartz saw her fall where she was to be found (see the following reports referring to the footway inside the gates) :

                        Both reports taken from the East End Observer :

                        Both gates were open - wide open. It was rather dark there. I drove it in as usual, but as I came into the gate my pony shied to the left, and that made me look at the ground to see what the cause of it was. I could see that there was something unusual on the pavement, but I could not see what it was.

                        [I]On entering the gateway a brick wall runs for some distance on the right-hand side, and it was on the footpath here[/I], and by the side of the brick wall, that the first victim was found.
                        Last edited by Jon Guy; 06-02-2009, 02:35 PM.

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                        • #27
                          I am aware of your work on the setting in Dutfields yard, Jon, and much interested by it.
                          My contribution to this thread, however, was mainly aimed at those who tend to attribute Jacks thinking to the man who killed Stride. Firstly, we cannot know - only guess - how Jack functioned, and secondly, there is every reason to believe that Strides killer and Jack were not one and the same, and that brings us out of the "We-would-be-dealing-with-a-very cautious-killer-territory".

                          The best, Jon!
                          Fisherman

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                          • #28
                            Hey Brad,

                            It's tempting for me to say it was Kidney because of the way it went down, according to Schwartz. First of all the perpetrator was pretty drunk, and that's when a lot of domestic violence occurs. Who knows, he could've been looking for her for hours, drinking at every watering hole. Second, the way the perpetrator approached her makes it seem as though he expected to find her there. There's not much preamble. He speaks to her then tries to hauls her out of the gateway right away. When he pushed her to pavement, why didn't she just yell her head off, instead of screaming "but not very loudly?" It's like she knew the guy. She knew Kidney was capable of doing violence to her but maybe not killing her. If Kidney killed her, maybe his drunken state made him careless of the witnesses.

                            I'm not saying he's the Ripper or even that he did kill her but that it's just a possibility.
                            Last edited by Celesta; 06-02-2009, 05:18 PM.
                            "What our ancestors would really be thinking, if they were alive today, is: "Why is it so dark in here?"" From Pyramids by Sir Terry Pratchett, a British National Treasure.

                            __________________________________

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                            • #29
                              The police believed that Stride and Eddowes were killed by the same man. They had the opportunity to cross-question the witnesses, to ask Schwartz and Lawende about details, to look for clues as to whether approximately 12:45 meant nearly one, or well before one. I'm inclined to think they knew what they were talking about.

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                              • #30
                                Yet as early as October 2, 1888, The Times wrote:

                                "...for the belief is now generally entertained in official quarters that no one person alone is attributable the series of crimes which in the last few weeks have horrified and alarmed the public." see the JTR Companion on p. 216.

                                Also, the Philadelphia Times of Dec. 3, 1888: "Two Murderers" "The city detectives then early in the first week of October came to a definite conclusion, namely, that the two women met their death at the hands of different men. It was but taking a single step to further conclude that these two men were acting in collusion." (also taken from the JTR Companion on p. 466.)

                                These were some of the things being said at the time.
                                "What our ancestors would really be thinking, if they were alive today, is: "Why is it so dark in here?"" From Pyramids by Sir Terry Pratchett, a British National Treasure.

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