Originally posted by Fisherman
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The Whitehall Mystery
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Originally posted by John G View PostBut wouldn't most prostitutes be involved in prostitution only on a casual basis? Surely that's the case with the Whitechapel victims, all of whom had friends, family or partners who would have noticed if they'd gone missing.
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Originally posted by John Wheat View PostYes but without the heads in the case of the Torso Killer identification in the late 1800's would be extremely difficult.Last edited by John G; 06-23-2015, 04:21 AM.
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Originally posted by John G View PostYes, in this respect the Torso killer was clearly far more organized than JtR. However, surely difficulties with identification would apply whatever the social status of the victim. And I wonder how common it was for people to go missing. I mean, today 275000 Britains go missing every year, and they can't all be socially disconnected.
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Originally posted by RockySullivan View PostPerhaps...or were the rippings a way the killer could get what he wanted without going through the dismemberment and disposal and yet not being connected to the victim"Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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Originally posted by RockySullivan View PostPerhaps...or were the rippings a way the killer could get what he wanted without going through the dismemberment and disposal and yet not being connected to the victim
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Originally posted by John G View PostYes, in this respect the Torso killer was clearly far more organized than JtR. However, surely difficulties with identification would apply whatever the social status of the victim. And I wonder how common it was for people to go missing. I mean, today 275000 Britains go missing every year, and they can't all be socially disconnected.
On the other hand, the 1857 Waterloo Bridge mystery, involving a cut up corpse of a murdered man, never was solved - the head was never found with the rest of the corpse.
Jeff
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Originally posted by Mayerling View PostThere had been cases over the years where the head of a cut up corpse was recovered and identified, leading to finding the perpetrator(s), and eventually convicting them. In 1726 a Mr. Hayes was identified when his head was found and after it was identified it led to the arrest, trial, and conviction of Catherine Hayes and her associates in his murder. In 1836 the head of a woman was found in a canal near the Thames, and identified by the dead woman's brother as Hannah Brown, who had just married a grocer named James Greenacre. Greenacre was captured while preparing to flee with his mistress, and eventually tried and convicted and hanged.
On the other hand, the 1857 Waterloo Bridge mystery, involving a cut up corpse of a murdered man, never was solved - the head was never found with the rest of the corpse.
Jeff
Thanks for the information; this clearly highlights the risk of allowing the head of a dismembered corpse to be discovered. I believe that the Torso killer retained the head to prevent identification of the victim, and possibly as a trophy.
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Originally posted by John G View PostBut wouldn't most prostitutes be involved in prostitution only on a casual basis? Surely that's the case with the Whitechapel victims, all of whom had friends, family or partners who would have noticed if they'd gone missing.Last edited by Fisherman; 06-23-2015, 10:47 AM.
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Originally posted by Mayerling View PostOn the other hand, the 1857 Waterloo Bridge mystery, involving a cut up corpse of a murdered man, never was solved - the head was never found with the rest of the corpse.
Jeff
Edit because I looked it up:
It was written in the book 'Unsolved murder mysteries'. London, 1924 Charles E Pearce that a member of the French Secret Police told Anderson that the victim was an Italian spy.Last edited by Debra A; 06-23-2015, 01:15 PM.
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Originally posted by John G View PostA much simpler explanation is that JtR and the Torso murderer were different killers: Occam's razor.
Serial murders before the ripper in London in the 1800s? All of a sudden TWO men pop up and start myrdering prostitutes and both go for the uterus? Incredibly un likelyLast edited by RockySullivan; 06-23-2015, 09:38 PM.
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Originally posted by RockySullivan View PostI don't agree john, two killer removing uteri is unlikely. And the glaring similarities with the pinchin torso and stride murder
Serial murders before the ripper in London in the 1800s? All of a sudden TWO men pop up and start myrdering prostitutes and both go for the uterus? Incredibly un likely
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Originally posted by John G View PostI would have thought there would have Bern far more than two serial killers in London in the 1800s. There is no similarity between Stride and the Pinchin Street Torso, apart from geographical location. The Torso killer's abdominal mutilations/ incisions differed from JtR. We cannot possibly know that either JtR or Torso intended to remove the uterus or what the motive was.
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Is there anything about September 8th that might indicate (if the torso/ripper are the same) why some one would commit a murder n the same day two years in a row? There may be something significant about that day...like the killer has off, some type of event that takes place, the killers wife or family is away
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Originally posted by RockySullivan View PostIt seems clear to me that the ripper intended to remove the uterus...that's why he took it with him. Unless you believe he randomly sliced in the dark and luckily out popped a kidney or a uterus? Clearly his intention was to do so. And same for the torso killer. There are similarities with the circumstances of the stride murder and the pinchin torso. Proximity, Schwartz railway arch, lipski. And the anniversary of chapman murder. There are too many similarities between the torso killer and the ripper that stretch beyond the explanation of simple coincidencesLast edited by John G; 06-24-2015, 03:41 AM.
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