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The GSG - Did Jack write it? POLL
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View PostHi HarryD
anyone can lose their temper.
My take is that after spending considerable time and money on Stride, and she still refusing to accompany him to a secluded spot he simply lost his temper and attacked her.
That would mean he proceeded to kill Stride afterwards, despite being seen by no less than two eyewitnesses. He could've left Stride alone and gone in search of another victim (which he did anyway), but now he's a murder suspect. Then there's, of course, the thorny matter of the cachous.
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Originally posted by Harry D View PostHello, Abby.
That would mean he proceeded to kill Stride afterwards, despite being seen by no less than two eyewitnesses. He could've left Stride alone and gone in search of another victim (which he did anyway), but now he's a murder suspect. Then there's, of course, the thorny matter of the cachous.
I have always felt that (in one scenario) he could have cut her throat in the initial attack that Scwartz witnessed, but that Schwartz didn't see that much detail. And that after everyone leaves the scene, stride stumbles into the yard toward the singing/voices for help but expires in the yard. In this scenario, he only notices Schwartz after the cut throat. which would explain the single cut and the "not too loud" screams.
In another, after the witnesses flee,he drags her into the yard, then cuts her throat. But spooked by being seen, and possibly the nearby singing voices, and/or the approach Diemshitz, he splits to fight another day, or hour in this case.
Either way, its why she wound up with only a cut throat and not inside out.
Yes the caschous is somewhat enigmatic, I'll admit- but in my opinion she just held on to them during the attack. Its common knowledge with forensic experts that people can hold onto items through violent attacks, accidents unto death."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 Abby Normal View PostHi Harry
I have always felt that (in one scenario) he could have cut her throat in the initial attack that Scwartz witnessed, but that Schwartz didn't see that much detail. And that after everyone leaves the scene, stride stumbles into the yard toward the singing/voices for help but expires in the yard. In this scenario, he only notices Schwartz after the cut throat. which would explain the single cut and the "not too loud" screams.
In another, after the witnesses flee,he drags her into the yard, then cuts her throat. But spooked by being seen, and possibly the nearby singing voices, and/or the approach Diemshitz, he splits to fight another day, or hour in this case.
Either way, its why she wound up with only a cut throat and not inside out.
Yes the caschous is somewhat enigmatic, I'll admit- but in my opinion she just held on to them during the attack. Its common knowledge with forensic experts that people can hold onto items through violent attacks, accidents unto death.
The major problem isn't whether she held onto the cachous but why she would have taken out the packet in the first place. I mean, this is surely something she would do whilst relatively relaxed and not after just being assaulted, let alone during the assault. And certainly not whilst her violent assailant was close by. No, I think her killer was far more cunning and appeared unthreating, leaving Stride blissfully unaware of the danger she was in; that's why she was relaxed enough to take out the packet of cachous. Someone like JtR, for example. Someone very unlike unsubtle BS man.
Of course, consideration also needs to be given to the fact that Stride was violently murdered in Dutfield's Yard, by a silent killer who gave his victim no opportunity to cry out or, apparently, make a sound. No one, not even Mrs D, who was sat just feet away in the kitchen with the window open heard a thing. Again, this seems like a very cunning and experienced killer. Someone like JrR. Someone very unlike clumsy BS man.Last edited by John G; 04-24-2015, 01:20 PM.
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Originally posted by Dane_F View PostBecause he felt it was Jews that interrupted him. You're just talking in circles now.
Anyway, the point was the apron, the GSG gives us context for it. Did he really NEED to write death to all Jews after he just pulled someone's intestines out and sprayed them all over the ground?
You seem to be assuming that the B.S. man was Liz's killer which is a very big assumption.
Did he need to write death to all Jews or something like it? No, but it seems odd that he didn't.
c.d.
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
I have always felt that (in one scenario) he could have cut her throat in the initial attack that Scwartz witnessed, but that Schwartz didn't see that much detail. And that after everyone leaves the scene, stride stumbles into the yard toward the singing/voices for help but expires in the yard. In this scenario, he only notices Schwartz after the cut throat. which would explain the single cut and the "not too loud" screams.
In another, after the witnesses flee,he drags her into the yard, then cuts her throat. But spooked by being seen, and possibly the nearby singing voices, and/or the approach Diemshitz, he splits to fight another day, or hour in this case.Regards, Jon S.
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Originally posted by c.d. View PostHello Dane,
You seem to be assuming that the B.S. man was Liz's killer which is a very big assumption.Bona fide canonical and then some.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostIn either case there would be considerable blood loss in the entry, and down the front of her clothes, not to mention a trail of blood from the gateway to where she was found.
Schwartz doesn't describe her neck being cut. He describes her being thrown down. Its a few feet from where her body was found. I don't see whats in the way of him dragging her in before killing her.Last edited by Batman; 04-24-2015, 07:46 PM.Bona fide canonical and then some.
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Originally posted by c.d. View PostHello Dane,
You seem to be assuming that the B.S. man was Liz's killer which is a very big assumption.
Did he need to write death to all Jews or something like it? No, but it seems odd that he didn't.
c.d.
Other people have made assumptions about who the killer was based off witnesses, tried to interpret the GSG with their own understanding, and attempted to make nearly everything that occurred that night accidental. I tend to shy away from that stuff. I can see arguments for multiple different scenarios.
As far as what JTR wrote, the Police didn't find it odd and took the GSG very seriously. His message apparently had a strong effect to the people that lived and worked the crime scenes. That to me is far more telling than if someone 125 years later finds it menacing enough or not.Last edited by Dane_F; 04-24-2015, 09:16 PM.
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Originally posted by John G View PostHi Abby,
The major problem isn't whether she held onto the cachous but why she would have taken out the packet in the first place. I mean, this is surely something she would do whilst relatively relaxed and not after just being assaulted, let alone during the assault. And certainly not whilst her violent assailant was close by. No, I think her killer was far more cunning and appeared unthreating, leaving Stride blissfully unaware of the danger she was in; that's why she was relaxed enough to take out the packet of cachous. Someone like JtR, for example. Someone very unlike unsubtle BS man.
Of course, consideration also needs to be given to the fact that Stride was violently murdered in Dutfield's Yard, by a silent killer who gave his victim no opportunity to cry out or, apparently, make a sound. No one, not even Mrs D, who was sat just feet away in the kitchen with the window open heard a thing. Again, this seems like a very cunning and experienced killer. Someone like JrR. Someone very unlike clumsy BS man.
In both those scenarios, she takes the cashoo out before he attacks her. Probably whilst they were meandering about.
I agree, BS mans actions seem very un ripper like. All I can say is that I think he may have just lost his temper once he realized she wasn't falling for the ruse."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 c.d. View PostHello Dane,
You seem to be assuming that the B.S. man was Liz's killer which is a very big assumption.
Did he need to write death to all Jews or something like it? No, but it seems odd that he didn't.
c.d.
I don't think any murder detective would think it was a big assumption, let alone a very big one, that a man seen assaulting the victim shortly before her dead body was found was her killer.
On the contrary, I would think that that man would most likely be her killer.
Don't you?"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 Wickerman View PostIn either case there would be considerable blood loss in the entry, and down the front of her clothes, not to mention a trail of blood from the gateway to where she was found.
good point and normally one would think so.
However, her scarf was found to be pulled very tight around her neck when her body was found. the dr made an emphatic point about it.
If the killer had pulled her scarf tight in the initial attack, perhaps the point where Schwartz says he saw his hands go up near her shoulders, then perhaps it restricted the blood flow. Like a tourniquet almost. The gash in her neck was directly above the pulled tight scarf.
Her hand that was found with blood on it was because she instinctively reached to her throat because of the tight scarf and or the cut. this action could have also stemmed the blood flow.
She then expires in the yard, falling to the ground and bleeds out where she lay."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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good reasons
Hello Harry.
"That would mean he proceeded to kill Stride afterwards, despite being seen by no fewer than two eyewitnesses. He could've left Stride alone and gone in search of another victim (which he did anyway), but now he's a murder suspect. Then there's, of course, the thorny matter of the cachous."
Quite.
Cheers.
LC
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backward person
Hello Abby.
". . . he could have cut her throat in the initial attack that Schwartz witnessed, but that Schwartz didn't see that much detail. And that after everyone leaves the scene, Stride stumbles into the yard toward the singing/voices for help but expires in the yard."
She was walking backwards then?
Cheers.
LC
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