Originally posted by Michael W Richards
View Post
I see I did not make myself clear. By "a similar act of violence" I was still referring to Stride's murder, by a single fatal cut to the throat. I was comparing your one-off killer doing this from momentary rage, with the one who had already cut at least two throats (in Buck's Row and Hanbury) doing the same thing. I wasn't talking about Eddowes here, but asking what evidence you had for the killer of Nichols and Chapman being less capable of momentary anger and a swift efficient kill in Stride's case than whoever it is you see as her killer.
The evidence in the Stride case does not point to her having been killed by a serial mutilator Caz.
The evidence suggests that she had her scarf pulled tight and twisted and she then had a knife run across her throat as she fell or lay on the ground. That could well be the result of a momentary reaction by someone inclined towards violent behavior.
If the Stride evidence can be interpreted as a momentary loss of self control by a killer, why then inject someone else into the story with an established agenda that apparently wasnt completed... or even attempted?
You see, I haven't closed my mind, Mike, while you seem to have ruled out a man known for exceptional violence on grounds you cannot possibly have established - that he was actually a pussycat who never lost control for a second or allowed anger to get the better of him.
It's amazing what one can grow to believe about this unknown mutilator when there's an agenda or theory that so badly needs him out of the picture.
Love,
Caz
X
Comment