I've been meaning to start this thread for some time, and organizing my thoughts. There has been so much debate about exactly how many victims Jack the Ripper had, whether it was only the canonical five or whether there were others both before and after, and not everyone agrees even on whether all of the five were really Ripper victims.
There was Annie Millwood, Ada Wilson, and Martha Tabram before (Emma Smith is often mentioned but she herself stated before she died that she was attacked not by one man but by a gang). After, there was Alice McKenzie, Frances Coles, and those bizarre torso murders. And there were two of those, weren't there? And one of them had a headless and dismembered female body found at the construction site of the New Scotland Yard building in October of 1888, the one month within the span of the classic five fictims in which there weren't supposed to have been any Ripper murders.
Yes, the East End is acknowledged as having been a very violent place in which murder was common. Yes, fights and muggings and robberies and rapes that turned fatal were a regular occurrence. But what I am getting at is this- in spite of everything, serial killers are, always have been, and hopefully always will be RARE. So when it comes to all these cases of women who appear to have been killed by single individuals not in an argument, not for robbery, and not for rape, but apparently simply for the thrill of killing, and when so many of them have been not just knifed to death but victims of extreme overkill in which some have been literally cut to pieces, I really think it begs the question--
Even in the violent East End, just how many people who were even MENTALLY CAPABLE of literally cutting women to pieces for no logical reason can be expected to have been living and operating within such a relatively small area at the same time? Seriously, whenever someone like that rears his head it is an extremely rare thing and is against the odds. More than one within a couple of square miles in a time frame of a few years really seems extremely unlikely to me. Simple murder is common. Over the top serial mutilation murder is not. And yes, I understand that not all of the victims suggested were mutilated to the degree of Mary Kelly or the torso victims. But really, just how many depraved, sadistic, and unstoppably stealthy killers could have been creeping around Whitechapel and its environs in 1888-1891?
I have a strong feeling that Jack the Ripper was responsible for most if not all of the crimes that have been suggested for him, simply because aberrations like him simply don't occur very often, and we should all thank our lucky stars for that.
There was Annie Millwood, Ada Wilson, and Martha Tabram before (Emma Smith is often mentioned but she herself stated before she died that she was attacked not by one man but by a gang). After, there was Alice McKenzie, Frances Coles, and those bizarre torso murders. And there were two of those, weren't there? And one of them had a headless and dismembered female body found at the construction site of the New Scotland Yard building in October of 1888, the one month within the span of the classic five fictims in which there weren't supposed to have been any Ripper murders.
Yes, the East End is acknowledged as having been a very violent place in which murder was common. Yes, fights and muggings and robberies and rapes that turned fatal were a regular occurrence. But what I am getting at is this- in spite of everything, serial killers are, always have been, and hopefully always will be RARE. So when it comes to all these cases of women who appear to have been killed by single individuals not in an argument, not for robbery, and not for rape, but apparently simply for the thrill of killing, and when so many of them have been not just knifed to death but victims of extreme overkill in which some have been literally cut to pieces, I really think it begs the question--
Even in the violent East End, just how many people who were even MENTALLY CAPABLE of literally cutting women to pieces for no logical reason can be expected to have been living and operating within such a relatively small area at the same time? Seriously, whenever someone like that rears his head it is an extremely rare thing and is against the odds. More than one within a couple of square miles in a time frame of a few years really seems extremely unlikely to me. Simple murder is common. Over the top serial mutilation murder is not. And yes, I understand that not all of the victims suggested were mutilated to the degree of Mary Kelly or the torso victims. But really, just how many depraved, sadistic, and unstoppably stealthy killers could have been creeping around Whitechapel and its environs in 1888-1891?
I have a strong feeling that Jack the Ripper was responsible for most if not all of the crimes that have been suggested for him, simply because aberrations like him simply don't occur very often, and we should all thank our lucky stars for that.
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