Originally posted by c.d.
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And it was Juwes in the graphito message, not Jews.
Sir Charles Warren was a high-ranking Freemason, and some believed that he had it removed because he saw that a fellow Freemason had written the message.
The clue, it is claimed, is in that odd spelling of the word Jews - Juews. It is said that that is the way the word Jews is spelt in Masonic history.
In a different direction, here is an interesting read from a Jack the ripper tour website that posits that Catherine Eddowes left the article of clothing, when cleaning up menstrual fluids, after being released from jail:
There is no solid evidence supporting the theory that the killer of Kate Eddowes was the person who dropped the cloth in the doorway or wrote the message.
If, as is claimed, the killer used the cloth to wipe the blood off his knife and hands, why did that take him from Mitre Square to Goulston Street to carry out that simple task?
And given that PC Watkins checked Mitre Square at 1:30 and discovered Kate Eddowes's body just 14 minutes later at 1:44, the killer was under a serious time constraint.
The mutilation carried out in this murder was the most extensive of all but one.
Only the fifth victim, Mary Jane Kelly, was subjected to a more horrific attack. But Mary Jane Kelly was murdered in her own home. For the first time, the killer was operating in a private room behind a locked door so he could take his time.
So we have to ask if the killer wanted to clean himself up, why did he need to spend time cutting a square of cloth from out of her apron?
Why not simply spend 10 seconds wiping his hands and knife on the intact apron?
Catherine Eddowes:
She’s been lying in a cell in a drunken stupor. The doorway in Goulston Street is about an 8-minute walk from Bishopsgate Police Station. She steps inside the doorway for privacy and, feminine hygiene being what it was in 1888, she takes her piece of cloth, lifts her skirt and cleans herself.
The police surgeons pointed out that there was no way of knowing if the blood was human or animal blood, so they certainly had no way of knowing if it was arterial or menstrual blood.
She drops the cloth and then walks for 5 minutes up to a quiet, dark corner of Mitre Square.
The cloth remains inside the passage that leads to the stairway, out of sight of the police officers who are passing along Goulston Street.
Then, sometime after PC Long passes by at 2:20 am, a resident entering or leaving sees the filthy cloth and kicks it toward the entrance to the building, ready for PC Long to see it at 2:55 am.
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