How much of an advantage would it have been for the ripper to have had local knowledge and should we see it as an important criteria when we try to build up a picture or profile of him?
A first point would have to be that the killer would surely have been reliant on the local knowledge of the victims who plied their trade on those streets. They tended to keep to the same areas and so they knew the safest spots and would have known the streets that were patrolled by beat Constable’s (possibly down to at least some of the timings). This couldn’t be said for the killer though. There’s no way that he would have been aware of police beats at the varied locations of his murders. It would have required a feat of memory similar to London taxi drivers ‘The Knowledge.’ And how could he have known to which spot the victim would take him? He couldn’t possibly have known every nook and cranny, every court and alley. And at the height of the murders wouldn’t these women have been just a tiny bit suspicious if the client had insisted on a location of his choice, and one that she wasn’t familiar with?
The second point is knowledge of potential escape routes. Is this really such an important point? Sadly these women were the ideal victims as we all know. The killer knew that they would have taken him to a relatively secluded spot where he was likely to get a good few minutes head start before the body was found. It’s difficult to imagine him expecting to duck and dodge down unknown streets and alleys to avoid the police. The killer would have known where he was headed after each murder so basically all he’d have needed was his bearings. A general idea of where he was going and roughly how to get there (probably intending to aim for a few main streets as a guide)
In short, I don’t think that local knowledge was anywhere near as important as it’s sometimes considered. A basic sense of direction would have told the killer how he’d arrived at that final spot and so the return would have been obvious and not far and you can walk around a quarter of a mile in 5 minutes. If a body was discovered and the Police were sent for, the chances of rounding up an unknown suspect half a mile or more away from the scene are about as close to nil as possible.
A first point would have to be that the killer would surely have been reliant on the local knowledge of the victims who plied their trade on those streets. They tended to keep to the same areas and so they knew the safest spots and would have known the streets that were patrolled by beat Constable’s (possibly down to at least some of the timings). This couldn’t be said for the killer though. There’s no way that he would have been aware of police beats at the varied locations of his murders. It would have required a feat of memory similar to London taxi drivers ‘The Knowledge.’ And how could he have known to which spot the victim would take him? He couldn’t possibly have known every nook and cranny, every court and alley. And at the height of the murders wouldn’t these women have been just a tiny bit suspicious if the client had insisted on a location of his choice, and one that she wasn’t familiar with?
The second point is knowledge of potential escape routes. Is this really such an important point? Sadly these women were the ideal victims as we all know. The killer knew that they would have taken him to a relatively secluded spot where he was likely to get a good few minutes head start before the body was found. It’s difficult to imagine him expecting to duck and dodge down unknown streets and alleys to avoid the police. The killer would have known where he was headed after each murder so basically all he’d have needed was his bearings. A general idea of where he was going and roughly how to get there (probably intending to aim for a few main streets as a guide)
In short, I don’t think that local knowledge was anywhere near as important as it’s sometimes considered. A basic sense of direction would have told the killer how he’d arrived at that final spot and so the return would have been obvious and not far and you can walk around a quarter of a mile in 5 minutes. If a body was discovered and the Police were sent for, the chances of rounding up an unknown suspect half a mile or more away from the scene are about as close to nil as possible.
Comment