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  • Originally posted by John G View Post
    Some excellent points, David.
    Thanks John.

    Originally posted by John G View Post
    And I still have no idea why Fisherman seems to prefer the sensationalist Star's version of what may have been said about blood flow to what was actually said under oath at the inquest.
    It is bizarre isn't it?

    But I think I know why.

    To frame Lechmere for the murder.

    Comment


    • Obviously great points by David and el!! No question.

      But for the life of me, I just can't see a small, frail, drunk, Nichols, slashed down the middle and apparently without a lot of blood loss to begin with, possible strangled to death- still oozing, bleeding, flowing running blood, whatever for very long. On a chilly night. Seemed she had foot in the grave to begin with and when finally snuffed out would have ceased any kind of activity pretty quickly.
      And wouldn't coagulation set in at some point? Soon???


      But what the hell do I know.

      I would love to see the entire set of circumstances put before an expert and see the response.
      "Is all that we see or seem
      but a dream within a dream?"

      -Edgar Allan Poe


      "...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
      quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."

      -Frederick G. Abberline

      Comment


      • Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
        But for the life of me, I just can't see a small, frail, drunk, Nichols, slashed down the middle and apparently without a lot of blood loss to begin with, possible strangled to death- still oozing, bleeding, flowing running blood, whatever for very long. On a chilly night. Seemed she had foot in the grave to begin with and when finally snuffed out would have ceased any kind of activity pretty quickly.
        And wouldn't coagulation set in at some point? Soon???


        But what the hell do I know.

        I would love to see the entire set of circumstances put before an expert and see the response.
        We do have the opinion of Dr Biggs from 2014 about this very point (as posted on the forum at the time by Trevor Marriott) when he said:

        "I think that, though it might seem unlikely for a significant quantity of blood to be flowing out of a body several minutes after death, it would certainly be possible for blood still to be dripping / oozing out of a body 20 mins later. This is likely to be minimal (almost negligible) in nature, as the majority of the blood that was able to come out would have done so much sooner. If a witness discovered a body that was still bleeding relatively profusely then the injuries are likely to have been inflicted more recently than 20 mins previously… but if the 20 min period is critical in ruling out / in certain suspects then I wouldn’t dismiss the possibility of some continued blood loss at this time, as I think it would be possible. (I base this on my own observations of seeing blood leak out of bodies when I have been present at murder scenes some hours after death. This is why I am open to many things being ‘possible’, even though I can’t state categorically what ‘would’ or ‘would not’ have happened in an individual case.)."

        Regarding the specific evidence about the murder of Nichols he made some lengthy comments:

        "As for the extract from the inquest testimony:

        There is actually very little detail of use in this text. Rather than actually naming the anatomical structures injured, there are repeated mentions of ‘tissues’ being severed. This is vague, and does not allow inferences to be drawn with confidence. There is a description of the ‘large vessels’ on both sides of the neck being cut. If this is true then there is certainly scope for profuse haemorrhage from the neck, as well as ongoing leakage of blood from the neck after death. However, I have dealt with cases where ‘vessels in the neck’ have been ‘cut’… where actually only minor vessels and other structures have been cut and, on closer inspection, the truly ‘large’ vessels have been spared.

        Much of the description is vague and potentially ambiguous. … Death might have been caused by blood loss from the wounds… but could also have arisen from a different mechanism (such as a cardiac air embolus or a tension pneumothorax). Some (or all) of the injuries could have been inflicted after death.
        ....

        I’m not trying to be negative or contrary, I’m just trying to be realistic about what I can honestly say based upon what I can trust as genuine. As that remains scanty, there is very little I can say with confidence about these cases. However, as just about anything that can be imagined is probably possible, most things can probably be argued one way or the other!"


        You will of course note the statement of Dr Biggs that "If a witness discovered a body that was still bleeding relatively profusely then the injuries are likely to have been inflicted more recently than 20 mins previously" which might explain why Fisherman has been so keen to insert the newspaper word "profusely" into the evidence.

        Other relevant information provided by Dr Biggs in answer to questions from Trevor were as follows:

        "The short answer [to a question about the gravity being a factor in regard to blood loss] is that ‘a lot’ of blood would be lost from neck wounds such as this… but the exact volume could vary greatly depending on individual circumstances.

        In terms of time, there would be an initial rush of blood, but the victim’s blood pressure would rapidly subside (in a matter of seconds if the blood loss is particularly profuse) so that the rate of flow would become considerably less relatively soon after injury. After the circulation has stopped, it will be down to gravity to continue the blood loss, and clearly this will depend on position / angle and so on. Sometimes a wound will be ‘propped open’ by the position of the body, whereas in other cases the wound may be ‘squeezed shut’ by the weight of the body. Things like vessel spasm and rapid clotting can be surprisingly good at staunching the flow of blood from even very catastrophic injuries. Even if a person is lying such that their injury is gaping open and is ‘down’ in terms of gravitational direction, this does not necessarily mean that blood will continue to flow out until the body is ‘empty’. Things like collapsing vessels and valve effects can prevent this passive flow, and there are lots of ‘corners’ for the blood to go around (it is spread around lots of long thin tubes, not sitting in a large container) before it finds its way out of the injury… so it might end up ‘trapped’ within the body. I have certainly seen cases with multiple large knife wounds and copious blood at the scene, where a significant proportion of the victim’s blood has remained within the vessels to allow me to obtain good samples for toxicological analysis later in the mortuary.

        Getting back to the specific case in question, if the body were lying motionless on the ground with significant open neck wounds then I would imagine that at least a few hundred millilitres (and probably considerably more) could flow out passively, and that this would happen within the initial couple of minutes. If this doesn’t sound like a lot, remember that a little bit of blood can look like an awful lot when it is spilled onto the pavement. For the reasons mentioned above, it would be possible that a lot less blood would be apparent at the scene. It is also possible that a continued slow trickle could go on for many minutes after death if the wound / gravity conditions were right, ending up with even a few litres of blood being present in extreme circumstances.

        In simple terms, nasty neck wounds can bleed a lot (but don’t always). Blood can leak out after death (and for quite some time). You can’t tell anything about time of injury / death by assessing the blood loss at the scene."


        He also said:

        "The position of the neck could potentially influence the rate of flow of blood in that it could either ‘hold open’ or ‘squeeze shut’ various vascular injuries. In practice, if the neck was injured almost to the point of decapitation, then there might be little in the way of a ‘clamping’ effect possible no matter how the neck is angled.

        I think it is certainly possible that ‘bleeding’ could go on for a period of twenty minutes, although I would make a distinction between ‘post mortem leakage of blood from the body’ and actual ‘bleeding’ that occurred during life. The flow of blood is likely to have slowed to a trickle by this time as pressure inside the vessels would have dissipated and the volume of blood remaining available to leak out would have become very little.

        Severe abdominal wounds would ‘contribute’ to the rapidity of bleeding to death, but this effect could range from almost negligible (if the neck wounds were so bad that death would have been very quick, and the abdominal wounds didn’t hit anything major) to very great (if the neck wounds miraculously missed all the major vessels and the abdominal wounds pranged something big).

        As always, I am unable to say very much of definite value as things are so variable that drawing firm conclusions in individual cases based on scanty witness accounts is fraught with unreliability."


        He made one more comment in response to further questions by Trevor Marriott shortly before Christmas 2014:

        "I did an autopsy last week, were the body had been transported a great distance to the mortuary and death had occurred almost 24 hours prior to my examination… and yet the injuries continued to ‘bleed’ relatively profusely for quite some time. So much so that we struggled to get a ‘clean’ photograph as the blood flooded back as quickly as we could wipe it away! This is why I have been so cautious about commenting on ‘maximum’ timings and quantities of blood loss."

        Comment


        • Re Whether Llewellyn was present when the body was removed, I'd say is a 50/50 call.

          The body couldn't be removed without his permission. It is entirely possible, given the ambulance would have taken at least 20 minutes to arrive, that he gave his permission and left before it's arrival.

          On the other hand, his assistant, Dr Secombe's comment can be read as he, at least, might have seen under the body.

          "... her throat was cut, the dreadful abdominal injuries then inflicted, and that the body was then carried, enveloped in her large, heavy cloak, and thrown outside the gateway at Essex Wharf. Mr. Seccombe, Dr. Llewellyn's assistant, is of the same opinions, especially, he says, as there was comparatively little blood where the deceased lay."
          dustymiller
          aka drstrange

          Comment


          • Originally posted by drstrange169 View Post
            Re Whether Llewellyn was present when the body was removed, I'd say is a 50/50 call.

            The body couldn't be removed without his permission. It is entirely possible, given the ambulance would have taken at least 20 minutes to arrive, that he gave his permission and left before it's arrival.

            On the other hand, his assistant, Dr Secombe's comment can be read as he, at least, might have seen under the body.

            "... her throat was cut, the dreadful abdominal injuries then inflicted, and that the body was then carried, enveloped in her large, heavy cloak, and thrown outside the gateway at Essex Wharf. Mr. Seccombe, Dr. Llewellyn's assistant, is of the same opinions, especially, he says, as there was comparatively little blood where the deceased lay."
            ... which is in keeping with what the Morning Advertiser said:
            "Dr. Llewellyn, who was formerly a house surgeon of the London Hospital, has given his opinion as to the manner in which the murder was committed. He said that the woman was killed by the cuts on the throat - there are two, and the throat is divided back to the vertebrae. He had called the attention of the police to the smallness of the quantity of blood on the spot where he saw the body..."

            So on the spot where he saw the body, there was very little blood. And to check that, the body needed to be removed first. It was not until the body was removed that the spot where the body had lain could be checked.

            Apart from this, I would think it very strange if a medico commented on the amounts of blood on a murder site without having checked first.

            Comment


            • Originally posted by Harry D View Post
              Please tell me the irony wasn't lost on anyone else here?

              There's no evidence that Lechmere murdered Nichols, and certainly nothing to tie him to the other murders, so it must have been a phantom!
              A. There is evidence pointing to Lechmere killing Nichols, but there is no proof.
              B. I have never said that there IS proof for it.
              C. The conclusion that it must have been a phantom predisposes that we can say for certain that Lechmere was not the killer.

              So where´s the "irony"?

              Comment


              • Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
                Are you for real? Do I have to explain it all again?

                What I said was that "oozing" is unambiguous and clearly defined, with a single meaning, whereas "running" is ambiguous and vague, with several meanings, because it could mean moving slow, moving fast or something in between or even not moving at all, just as Dr Llewellyn referred to a bruise running along Polly's face.

                That's why I wanted you to answer the question using the non-ambiguous word; a word that PC Neil definitely and without doubt used to describe the blood coming from the neck wound in his witness testimony. It's also the word that Dr Biggs used when he said that oozing can easily go on for 20 minutes after death. So by using the word "oozing" we can get some clarity which we can't do with the word "running".

                But you are clearly determined not to answer the question and I will be drawing my own conclusions from that.
                So you draw you OWN conclusions, David?

                Tell me, how does that tell you apart from the rest of us?

                My conclusion is that the question you asked has been answered to the full, and I therefore conclude that your only aim is and was to try and misinform about me.

                How´s that?

                Comment


                • David Orsam: If you have to resort to gibberish of this nature then the argument is already lost. In fact, you lost it quite some time ago.

                  So you won? Again? Don´t you ever tire of all these triumphs?

                  You keep posting as if there is little doubt in the matter that Neil used the word profusely. You could hardly be more wrong. There is no good reason to think that he ever did use the word "profusely" and he certainly did not use it when he was standing in the witness box under oath.

                  You keep reading my posts as if you have problems understanding the simplest of things.
                  A. I have never expressed - and nor do I think - that there is little dount that Neil used the word profusely.
                  B. You have no idea if I would have been wrong if I had been of the meaning that Neil must have used profusely.
                  C. We all know that he did not use the word profusely at the inquest, so the point is a total waste of time.

                  Can I please ask you not to present your take on what I think and what I don´t think as some sort of truth in the future? Otherwise, I shall have to start spreading misinformation about you too, and that is not what the boards are meant for.

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
                    That's a ridiculous sentence. Utterly absurd in fact. She had obviously been recently killed when Lechmere pointed her out to Paul (i.e. PC Neil would have seen her on his previous beat if she had been there much longer than 30 minutes) but nothing in the "blood evidence" adds to that fact or makes it more or less likely that Lechmere was the killer. It certainly does not point out Lechmere as the killer. If Nichols was killed at 3.25 there was ample opportunity for an unknown assailant to have murdered her

                    And, once more, a more realistic way of writing the first part of your sentence is that it MAY WELL be that Lechmere was not the killer. The second part needs to be deleted entirely.
                    I know who needs to be deleted...

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by John G View Post
                      I would say it's virtually inevitable. Any other approach doesn't make sense.
                      Dear me. Dear, dear me. That speaks for itself.

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by John G View Post
                        Is this the same Dr Llewellyn who failed to notice the victim had been mutilated? Maybe he had a major visual impairment!
                        You have not learnt a iot of all the information passed on out here, have you?

                        Llewellyn was called out, not to perform a full autopsy on the sidewalk, but to determine if the woman was dead. He then directed the body to be taken to the mortuary FOR FURTHER EXAMINATION! What do you think that further examination was about?
                        Perhaps it was about getting a full picture? Eh?

                        There were numerous people by the body in Bucks Row, some of whom handled the body and lifted it onto the ambulance. None of them noticed the wounds to the abdomen.

                        What a pack of incompetent idiots, eh? Or is it just Llewellyn who needs to be painted out as such?

                        Do you have any idea why the coroner did not severely reprimand Llewellyn for his lack of professionalism? Why did the coroner not demand that he could see through cloth when required? Any ideas?

                        There is one imcompetence only, and it rests firmly with you. For opening your mouth when you could have kept it shut. It is really a very sad business, and it carries with itself the risk that somebody may read you and take what you say as useful and correct information, when it is instead the exact opposite - disinformation.

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by drstrange169 View Post
                          Re Whether Llewellyn was present when the body was removed, I'd say is a 50/50 call.

                          The body couldn't be removed without his permission. It is entirely possible, given the ambulance would have taken at least 20 minutes to arrive, that he gave his permission and left before it's arrival.

                          On the other hand, his assistant, Dr Secombe's comment can be read as he, at least, might have seen under the body.

                          "... her throat was cut, the dreadful abdominal injuries then inflicted, and that the body was then carried, enveloped in her large, heavy cloak, and thrown outside the gateway at Essex Wharf. Mr. Seccombe, Dr. Llewellyn's assistant, is of the same opinions, especially, he says, as there was comparatively little blood where the deceased lay."

                          Hi I have no problem with that reading of the events at all. My point was that fisherman said probably for which I see no support.
                          Do we have anything to suggest that Seccombe was actually onsite at all , rather than just relaying information he had from others?



                          Steve

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                            ... which is in keeping with what the Morning Advertiser said:
                            "Dr. Llewellyn, who was formerly a house surgeon of the London Hospital, has given his opinion as to the manner in which the murder was committed. He said that the woman was killed by the cuts on the throat - there are two, and the throat is divided back to the vertebrae. He had called the attention of the police to the smallness of the quantity of blood on the spot where he saw the body..."

                            So on the spot where he saw the body, there was very little blood. And to check that, the body needed to be removed first. It was not until the body was removed that the spot where the body had lain could be checked.

                            Apart from this, I would think it very strange if a medico commented on the amounts of blood on a murder site without having checked first.
                            Which of course is just your view that it is strange.

                            Steve

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
                              ...and commits an even more daring and 'orrible murder whilst the Nichols inquest was still ongoing.

                              Yes, Gareth, we all know how Gary Ridgway stopped killing the second he was approached by the police. And Sutcliffe, who was approached multiple times, of course also stopped killing on account of that. No serialist would be brazen enough to kill when under possible suspicion! Not Hansen, not Gacy, not a single one of them.

                              Why is it that comments like this one are even uttered by people like you, who should be decently well read up on the history of serial killing?

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
                                "I should think by someone who knew something of [anatomy], for whoever did it has attacked all the vital parts" - Lloyd's Weekly 2nd Sept; thereafter summarised in the Daily News and Woodford Times. Judging by the content, all three papers might well have used the same (press agency?) release as the basis for their articles.

                                The idea that "all" the vital parts were attacked is, of course, demonstrably untrue, otherwise we might have expected stabs to the heart and lungs, if not a puncture wound through the ear into the brain. This might be a case of journalistic licence, or simple hyperbole on Llewellyn's (vital) part. Whatever it is, it can't be seen as evidence that Nichols' innards were slashed to pieces.
                                Nah, it would have been a mere scratch.

                                Comment

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