Originally posted by Michael W Richards
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As I have said so many times before there might not be any hard physical evidence of an interruption. I doubt very much whether Jack was going to leave a note saying I intended to mutilate the victim but I got scared off. What if he thought he heard somebody coming out of the club and that scared him? How would we have evidence for that? And I know you absolutely hate any references to modern day serial killers but what of Sutcliffe saying there were several time when he failed to follow through with a murder simply because of his own paranoia? How would there be any evidence of that? Yet, it happened.
You are always so quick to chastise other posters for how they view the case. Perhaps deviating from your own either black or white perspective and considering a little grey might be beneficial.
c.d.




}. How much was it sloped? Well, first let’s consider the positioning of Elizabeth Stride. We know that her feet were towards the gate and her head was towards the side-door. This means, with her dead body lying|laying* on a slope, her feet are effectively above her head. So, based on the properties of gravity, blood is moving in the direction from her feet towards [and out of] the cut in her neck. {I feel that it’s safe to say that: if the ground wasn’t sloped and had been completely flat, then the blood would have 1) ran in both directions along the rut, 2) pooled up nearer to her neck, 3) been less of an outflow since gravity would be pulling equilaterally}. So, how sloped was the ground? I can’t accurately calculate that factor but I know that it was enough that the stream of blood traveled the remaining distance from her body to the door and that it pooled up there. {Trying to remember if the side-door was 18 feet or yards from the gate as well as how much blood was observed} Either way, to me, it suggests more than just a mild grade slope. So when the Doctor says there was an unusual flow of blood, I believe that he is saying that she has bled out “quite a bit” of blood (or that she has bled out more than he would have estimated considering that her carotid was not entirely severed) without taking into account the manner in which her body is “resting” on the downward slope [feet & body above her neck] and the effect of gravity pulling blood towards & out of the cut in her neck.
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