Originally posted by Trevor Marriott
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The Whitehall Mystery
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Originally posted by John G View PostWe have the opinion of people who go actually worked there! There view clearly implied that access would have been extremely difficult and that the vault itself was a darkened labyrinth. In fact, as I've noted before, even the site foreman was of the opinion that no one could find the vault unless they knew the site personally or had it minutely described to them.
So perhaps your good self and others who it would seem favor a serial killer should perhaps take a step back and not be so confident of that belief.
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Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View PostBut lets not lose sight of the fact that we still do not know who put the parts there or for what purpose, or how the victim died.
So perhaps your good self and others who it would seem favor a serial killer should perhaps take a step back and not be so confident of that belief.
www.trevormarriott.co.uk
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Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post"The arm was surrounded at the upper part with a piece of string, which made an impression on the skin, and when it was loosened there was a great deal of blood in the arm."
Does this not suggest a tourniquet ?
www.trevormarriott.co.uk
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Originally posted by RockySullivan View PostI don't know. He says not an anatomist but someone who knows joints? What does that indicate? Why the pieces of newspaper staged on the torso with animal blood?
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostThat is a very curious detail indeed. I can´t help but to think that it may involve some sort of message or commentary involving the press - or to be more precise, it´s coverage. But that has to remain a guess only. What do you make of it yourself?
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Originally posted by RockySullivan View PostWell one clipping was from the aug 24 echo. It would be helpful to find a copy of this edition, but aug 23 was the day of the verdict in the Tabram inquest. I would assume the echo on august 24 covered the TaBram verdict since it was the following day and i think the killer was showing the police this was his work.
Did both the Echo material and the Chronicle ditto have blood on them? And the inquest quote you posted, from what paper is it? Have you found confirmation in other sources on the issue?
The Tabram inquest is covered in the Echo of the 23:rd, but of course there may have been further information on the murder in the next days issue of the paper.
The combination of the date of the Echo snippet and the blood on the paper pieces makes for tantalizing grounds for speculating about a wish on behalf of the killer to blame the papers for something, of course. Proving such a thing is a lot harder to do, however...
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Originally posted by RockySullivan View PostI don't know. He says not an anatomist but someone who knows joints? What does that indicate? Why the pieces of newspaper staged on the torso with animal blood?
But would anyone else wanting to do the same for some unlawful purpose bother to be so precise and conform with medical guidelines? I would suggest the answer is no, remove it the easiest and quickest way possible at the joint.
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Originally posted by RockySullivan View PostI don't know. He says not an anatomist but someone who knows joints? What does that indicate? Why the pieces of newspaper staged on the torso with animal blood?
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Originally posted by Debra A View PostI think they were trying to suggest that a butcher or hunter would be more used to opening joints to remove the limbs of animals and a surgeon wouldn't necessarily perform an amputation by removing a limb at the joint and so might be less practiced in the technique.
Yes, but of course Dr Biggs considered this opinion to be "quite bizarre." (Marriott, 2015).
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Originally posted by RockySullivan View PostWell one clipping was from the aug 24 echo. It would be helpful to find a copy of this edition, but aug 23 was the day of the verdict in the Tabram inquest. I would assume the echo on august 24 covered the TaBram verdict since it was the following day and i think the killer was showing the police this was his work.
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Originally posted by John G View PostHello Debra,
Yes, but of course Dr Biggs considered this opinion to be "quite bizarre." (Marriott, 2015).
Yes, he did.
But in some ways what the LVP doctors said about doctors maybe being less practiced in the opening of joints makes sense if it was common practice to amputate legs mid-thigh or below the knee, rather than at the hip or knee joints.
Someone once posted civil war medical diagrams showing leg amputation here:
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Originally posted by John G View PostThis may be little more than a coincidence. For example, another interesting incident happened on 24 August: a right foot and left leg were found near to Guildford railway station, possibly tossed from a train. It was subsequently discovered that they were the remains of a bear!
how did someone mistake bear parts for human at first? sounds silly but are we sure it was a bear?Last edited by RockySullivan; 07-08-2015, 09:30 AM.
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Originally posted by RockySullivan View PostCould the animal blood have a connection to that?
how did someone mistake bear parts for human at first? sounds silly but are we sure it was a bear?
It was definitely a bear's leg. I mentioned it much earlier in the thread. It had been discarded by a man who bought it to eat but didn't like the tatse. It had been boiled and skinned, which made it look more like human flesh.
Re animal blood- I wouldn't be surprised if Victorian butchers used old newspapers to wrap meat up.
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Originally posted by Debra A View PostHi Rocky
It was definitely a bear's leg. I mentioned it much earlier in the thread. It had been discarded by a man who bought it to eat but didn't like the tatse. It had been boiled and skinned, which made it look more like human flesh.
Re animal blood- I wouldn't be surprised if Victorian butchers used old newspapers to wrap meat up.
George Budgen deposed: I live in Salisbury-buildings, Walworth, and am a bricklayer’s labourer, in the employ of Messrs. Grover. I was in this vault last Tuesday afternoon, just before three o’clock. I went there because my foreman, Mr. Cheney, told me there was a parcel there, and I was to examine it. I looked at it, and found that the top was bare, and the rest wrapped in some old cloth, but could make nothing of it. I thought it was some old bacon at first. I took hold of the strings around it, and dragged it into the light and cut the strings, three or four in number. On opening the old wrappers I saw that the parcel contained part of a human body.
[Coroner]How long before had you been in the vault? - Not for a long time. I had no occasion to go there.
[Coroner]Had you ever seen the parcel before? - No. I took a lamp down; without it I should not have been able to see anything. It was as dark as the darkest night. The police afterwards took charge of the remains.
[Coroner]What was said to you when you were sent to the vault? - The foreman only asked me to go and see what the parcel was.
Bond: The arms had been removed at the shoulder joints by several incisions, the cuts having apparently been made obliquely from above downwards, and then around the arm. Over the body were clearly defined marks, where string had been tied. It appeared to have been wrapped up in a very skilful manner.
The wrapping and strings might indicate profession of the killer?
Inspctr Marshall:
The string with which the parcel was tied was a miscellaneous lot. One piece is of sash-cord, and the rest is of different sizes, and there is also a piece of black tape.Last edited by RockySullivan; 07-08-2015, 10:57 AM.
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