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  • caz
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
    The only theory or agenda I have Caz is to ensure that there is equal time given to those of us who do not see a Ripper of 5 in the Canonical Group evidence.
    Fine. You can post your own ideas all day long to make sure of that. Nobody is trying to stop you. You may not 'see' a ripper in the Stride evidence and that's fine as far as it goes. But one has to know a ripper in order to see or not see him, surely. And what I don't understand is how you think you know that the ripper of Nichols and Chapman (or the ripper of Eddowes, or the ripper of Kelly) was the type to keep his cool in all situations, and would not have reacted violently towards anyone for any reason, outside of the very specific task of harvesting organs.

    When you review my quotes you often twist my words or throw in words of your own, like referring to Polly and Annies murderer as a "pussycat", something which I have never said or supported.
    I know how that feels - you do it to me all the time. If it results in us clarifying our views so we understand each other a bit better, it's not such a big deal.

    Here is a perfectly plausible example of what may have happened to Liz Stride, without any imagined interruptions or altered objectives....Liz Stride is inside the passage waiting for someone or something, she is accosted by a man also in the passage, who, as I believe you and others would...assumes Liz is there to solicit sex. She demurs, he gets rougher, poking her in the chest while her back is at the wall,...she decides to head out into the street for safety, she slips by him, he grabs her scarf, and in a moment of rage, perhaps rejection or something she said to him, he pulls her back twists the scarf, and slides a knife across her throat.

    Momentary madness, not a decided plan,.... or an urge to kill just anyone. Just a violent reaction to a rejection from a specific person. And that fits the known evidence, the physical evidence.
    Fine, but once again, how can you judge that the man who mutilated one or more women that year was not the 'type' to react just like Stride's killer reacted, in those exact circumstances? How are you ruling him out in favour of a complete unknown?

    Love,

    Caz
    X

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  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    The only theory or agenda I have Caz is to ensure that there is equal time given to those of us who do not see a Ripper of 5 in the Canonical Group evidence. When you review my quotes you often twist my words or throw in words of your own, like referring to Polly and Annies murderer as a "pussycat", something which I have never said or supported. But those 2 murders were clinical in many respects is a matter of evidence, not opinion, if you believe that contemporary medical officials could recognize a trained hand. I dont see the skill or the knowledge in either of the Double Event murders myself, that to me is a differentiator.

    Here is a perfectly plausible example of what may have happened to Liz Stride, without any imagined interruptions or altered objectives....Liz Stride is inside the passage waiting for someone or something, she is accosted by a man also in the passage, who, as I believe you and others would...assumes Liz is there to solicit sex. She demurs, he gets rougher, poking her in the chest while her back is at the wall,...she decides to head out into the street for safety, she slips by him, he grabs her scarf, and in a moment of rage, perhaps rejection or something she said to him, he pulls her back twists the scarf, and slides a knife across her throat.

    Momentary madness, not a decided plan,.... or an urge to kill just anyone. Just a violent reaction to a rejection from a specific person. And that fits the known evidence, the physical evidence. Its the added circumstantial evidence that will help uncover what actually happened, but suffice to say, without any evidence of an interruption or a killer bent on mutilating abdomens after he cuts throats, I see no reason to entertain that as a viable probability. If anything its within the realm of whats possible.....but probable, it aint.


    Cheers

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  • caz
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
    Actually Caz I am on the fence about Kate, have been for some time, and made no effort to disguise it. But lets not claim that her murder and Liz Strides murder resemble each other in any meaningful way.... as suggested by your "a similar act of violence".
    Hi Mike,

    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.
    But equally it does not exclude a serial mutilator, Mike, nor does it point to a first-time killer, nor to anyone she could have identified had she lived long enough. Whoever did this felt able to slip away while she was still dying from that single confident slice, without worrying if it would be enough to silence her for good. That suggests a killer who knew how to inflict a wound that would prove fatal without the need for a second or third. That, in my view, appears significant - particularly if whoever killed her would have had the time, had he chosen to use it, to inflict a second, deeper cut and make sure she was stone dead before taking his leave. If you don't think he had the time, that would apply equally to an enraged mutilator, who, judging it unsafe to stay and mutilate, didn't need her to bleed out any more quickly but merely took his revenge and his leave.

    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.
    You are telling me whoever killed Nichols and Chapman (and Smith, Tabram, Eddowes and Kelly) wasn't someone inclined towards violent behaviour? Stop it Mike, before I do myself a mischief laughing.

    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?
    Eh? Someone else? You are the one trying to inject someone else - some complete unknown - into the story to make it work for you. Until I see evidence that the killer we already know about was any less capable of a momentary loss of self control than the next man (which would feature the words: freezing, hell and over) I will not be eliminating him from the Berner St investigation, while remaining open to any new suspects you care to inject, who can be shown to have the necessary means, motive and opportunity.

    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
    Last edited by caz; 02-27-2014, 07:30 AM.

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  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Originally posted by caz View Post
    Hi Mike,

    I'm not sure whether you believe men who kill strangers for the hell of it don't actually exist, or that Unicorns do exist but are a rare type of horse.


    X
    I can say without equivocation that I do not see the murders of Mary Ann Nichols or Annie Chapman as the result of someone who merely kills for the hell of it. Particularly not in the Chapman case. Killing Annie was just a step in a process, not a goal unto itself.

    Cheers

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  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Originally posted by caz View Post
    So some unknown man who had never killed before was, in your view, quite likely to have gone into a momentary rage and cut Stride's throat, but another unknown man who had killed before, at least twice, was unlikely to have gone into a momentary rage for any reason and committed a similar act of violence, even though we know he was capable?

    I'd love to know what evidence you have, Mike, for the latter killer being the sort of calm and even-tempered cove who would never hurt a fly when he wasn't busy gutting prostitutes.

    Love,

    Caz
    X
    Actually Caz I am on the fence about Kate, have been for some time, and made no effort to disguise it. But lets not claim that her murder and Liz Strides murder resemble each other in any meaningful way.... as suggested by your "a similar act of violence".

    I do see evidence of malice or spite or whatever you wish to call it with Kate, the nose and the colon section seem unnecessary. Thats one reason why I am on the fence....Polly and Annie had wounds were created to kill and to enable access and extraction....there were few superfluous cuts. I see much more control in the cuts on those earlier victims as well, maybe due to the very poor lighting, maybe not.

    The evidence in the Stride case does not point to her having been killed by a serial mutilator Caz. A second murder in the vicinity is what created that supposition. 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. Since it happened on the property of men who the neighbors and the police thought ill of, maybe not so far fetched. But Kates murder cannot be categorized as such.

    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?

    Cheers

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  • caz
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
    Rage mate, thats the ticket to many violent mistakes...it can make monsters from mice, its why we have within our Criminal System the defensive posture of the term Temporary Insanity.

    My guess has been for some time that the cause of the death of Liz Stride might well be a case of momentary rage.

    And as I said, many of these types of murders end with some form of defacing or damage to the deceased...but they are not committed for that reason. The early murders, C1 and C2, seem to be bereft of rage to me..there is a clinical disposition. I think thats why the authorities suspected someone very accustomed to cutting up people or animals.
    So some unknown man who had never killed before was, in your view, quite likely to have gone into a momentary rage and cut Stride's throat, but another unknown man who had killed before, at least twice, was unlikely to have gone into a momentary rage for any reason and committed a similar act of violence, even though we know he was capable?

    I'd love to know what evidence you have, Mike, for the latter killer being the sort of calm and even-tempered cove who would never hurt a fly when he wasn't busy gutting prostitutes.

    Love,

    Caz
    X

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  • caz
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
    Ive said it before and Ill say it again......killing strangers to satisfy whatever psychological demons the killer has are rare types of murders, there are many, many more mundane and pedestrian reasons for killing that make up the majority of any years murder statistics...

    ...Jealousy, rage, greed, power seeking, religious differences, property disputes, ....there are so many common themes I for one dont assume a Unicorn when a Horse fits the bill just as well.
    Hi Mike,

    I'm not sure whether you believe men who kill strangers for the hell of it don't actually exist, or that Unicorns do exist but are a rare type of horse.

    Surely a fairer analogy would feature a horse and a zebra. But then most of us would assume a zebra in this case and maybe a couple of horses, while you would see a succession of black and white striped horses.

    Love,

    Caz
    X

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  • lynn cates
    replied
    good idea

    Hello PCFT. Thanks.

    Yes, that is always good.

    Cheers.
    LC

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  • GUT
    replied
    G'Day Michael

    Except to plead insanity, temporary or otherwise, you must satisfy M'Naghten ie not have the capacity, at the time of the offence, to know right from wrong.

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  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Originally posted by GUT View Post
    G'Day Michael

    So true but I would add anger/loss of control.

    Rage mate, thats the ticket to many violent mistakes...it can make monsters from mice, its why we have within our Criminal System the defensive posture of the term Temporary Insanity.

    My guess has been for some time that the cause of the death of Liz Stride might well be a case of momentary rage.

    And as I said, many of these types of murders end with some form of defacing or damage to the deceased...but they are not committed for that reason. The early murders, C1 and C2, seem to be bereft of rage to me..there is a clinical disposition. I think thats why the authorities suspected someone very accustomed to cutting up people or animals.

    Cheers GUT

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  • GUT
    replied
    G'Day Michael

    I would think that the desire to kill would fall under some variety of mental illness, which isnt necessary to commit murder, as I was attempting to explain. Normal everyday people commit murders far more frequently than people with those kinds of illnesses. For example, for retribution, envy, greed, lust, ...etc. They may also commit other indecencies to the corpse to conceal the actual motive for the murder...like chopping up a body to dispose of it. The point being, most kills are for very simple explainable reasons, and anything that they do to the body afterward may well be for reasons other than merely a desire to do so.
    So true but I would add anger/loss of control.

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  • PC Fitzroy-Toye
    replied
    Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
    Hello PCFT. Thanks.

    Of course, there are different accounts of the details.

    Cheers.
    LC
    Yes I agree, and I need to go over things more than once for things to take to memory and have read one of the dissertations on here about MJK and her heart ,still reawakening myself to the case and its good to discuss it with people of differing views and theorems as it makes you consider the case with a broader perspective.

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  • PC Fitzroy-Toye
    replied
    Thanks Michael I do agree that normal people are very capable of such an act as Im burdened with the knowlege of murders of people close to me or that I knew well, but of those that commited it I would say even if outwardly normal they did and do have an underlying instability which circumstance and emotional stress bought forth.
    Last edited by PC Fitzroy-Toye; 02-09-2014, 12:28 PM.

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  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Originally posted by PC Fitzroy-Toye View Post
    Michael, can not killing be a motive in its own right? Its a great taboo yet can be euphoric to those that cross that line, we are emotive creatures and if an ultimate feeling is found by death and butchery would that not be seeked and the opportunity taken if given?
    Hi PC,

    I would think that the desire to kill would fall under some variety of mental illness, which isnt necessary to commit murder, as I was attempting to explain. Normal everyday people commit murders far more frequently than people with those kinds of illnesses. For example, for retribution, envy, greed, lust, ...etc. They may also commit other indecencies to the corpse to conceal the actual motive for the murder...like chopping up a body to dispose of it. The point being, most kills are for very simple explainable reasons, and anything that they do to the body afterward may well be for reasons other than merely a desire to do so.

    Those motives are seemingly absent in the murders of Polly and Annie, because a man picked up strangers to kill and mutilate them. Was Liz Stride killed by someone she didnt know? We dont know. Was Kate..we dont know...was Mary, that is pretty likely considering her location and physical demeanor. In truth we dont know that any of the Canonicals were killed by strangers, but in the cases I mentioned, it seems the most logical answer.

    Cheers

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  • lynn cates
    replied
    thinking

    Hello Baranby. Thanks.

    Actually, the epithet refers to the author's being able to think in non-stereotypical ways.

    Cheers.
    LC

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