Sam Flynn: We do know about Kelly "The skin and tissues of the abdomen from the costal arch to the pubes were removed in three large flaps" (Bond), and we can see from the photograph that her entire abdomen was thus laid open. These were "super-flaps" by any description.
Well, obviously - but we donīt know how they were shaped, do we? If they were three parallel, long flaps, say 35 centimeters long and 10 centimeters wide, then they may well have looked just like Jacksons flaps. They would have been "long" as Hebbert said, and "large" as Hebbert also said. And they could be described as "slips", just as Hebbert did. Therefore, we cannot say that they cannot have been miror images of each other.
It's trickier to tell with Chapman, but we know that her abdomen was opened in three flaps again, with the cuts biased towards the right hand side of her body.
No, there were four flaps - but one of them went missing. But letīs leave Chapman aside for now, and concentrate on Kelly and Jackson.
In respect of Jackson, however, not only are there only two pieces of abdominal flesh removed, but they are described as "slips" of flesh. "Slips", as I've shown, is another word for "strips", and the definition of "strips" is long, narrow pieces. So, in number and in nature, the resemblance is not so significant.
Gareth, a slip MAY look like a strip, but Hebbert didnīt use strips - he used "slips"! So letīs ask you: Would a 35 by 10 centimeter flap qualify as a slip? I say yes, and I canīt see you disagreeing with that. But thatīs your decision.
In terms of motivation, it might be significant that, as the only torso victim from whom "slips" of abdominal flesh were removed, Jackson was the only one who was pregnant, and her foetus was cut from her womb.
May or may not, Gareth. There can be no way of knowing that, and it remains a suggestion only. The more important thing to remember is that Jackson had her abdominal wall removed to an extent in large flaps.
The two strips of flesh could therefore have been cut "along the bump", with the specific intention of exposing the womb in order to remove the baby.
If they were "cut along the bump", why where they narrow strips? It was said that the foetus was six, seven months old, was it not? This is a link to a picture of a seven months pregnant woman:
If the killer cut along the bump, Iīd say he would not produce any narrow slips at all. He would take away all of the abdominal wall!
Well, obviously - but we donīt know how they were shaped, do we? If they were three parallel, long flaps, say 35 centimeters long and 10 centimeters wide, then they may well have looked just like Jacksons flaps. They would have been "long" as Hebbert said, and "large" as Hebbert also said. And they could be described as "slips", just as Hebbert did. Therefore, we cannot say that they cannot have been miror images of each other.
It's trickier to tell with Chapman, but we know that her abdomen was opened in three flaps again, with the cuts biased towards the right hand side of her body.
No, there were four flaps - but one of them went missing. But letīs leave Chapman aside for now, and concentrate on Kelly and Jackson.
In respect of Jackson, however, not only are there only two pieces of abdominal flesh removed, but they are described as "slips" of flesh. "Slips", as I've shown, is another word for "strips", and the definition of "strips" is long, narrow pieces. So, in number and in nature, the resemblance is not so significant.
Gareth, a slip MAY look like a strip, but Hebbert didnīt use strips - he used "slips"! So letīs ask you: Would a 35 by 10 centimeter flap qualify as a slip? I say yes, and I canīt see you disagreeing with that. But thatīs your decision.
In terms of motivation, it might be significant that, as the only torso victim from whom "slips" of abdominal flesh were removed, Jackson was the only one who was pregnant, and her foetus was cut from her womb.
May or may not, Gareth. There can be no way of knowing that, and it remains a suggestion only. The more important thing to remember is that Jackson had her abdominal wall removed to an extent in large flaps.
The two strips of flesh could therefore have been cut "along the bump", with the specific intention of exposing the womb in order to remove the baby.
If they were "cut along the bump", why where they narrow strips? It was said that the foetus was six, seven months old, was it not? This is a link to a picture of a seven months pregnant woman:
If the killer cut along the bump, Iīd say he would not produce any narrow slips at all. He would take away all of the abdominal wall!
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