Originally posted by Ben
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Many people at that time could have done the deed. There were slaughterhouses all over the place and many inhabitants had come to London from a rural background where it was common to slaughter one's own animals for food.
Philips probably based his belief in anatomical skills on Chapman because he may have never seen a murder/mutilation of that sort before. By the Eddowes murder, when it became more apparent as to what kind of killer they were dealing with he had realized his earlier assumtion could have been incorrect, but wouldn't admit it for fear of being discretited, so he said the mutilations were different. Wouldn't be the first time someone protected their ego.
Sequeira said at the inquest that there was enough light in that part of the square to perform the eviscerations.
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