Originally posted by Sam Flynn
View Post
There is some unneccesary point about evidence-twisting, but it is a step in the right direction.
Practical evisceration - yes, that can sometimes be the case. But in Nielsens case, it was to enable him to flush the organs down the toilet, was it not? Or to make the burning speedier? The Torso killer had no such problem, dumping into the Thames.
But yes, practically led on evisceration must be discussed as a possibility.
In Jacksons case, things point away from it. Some innards were left and others were taken out. That speaks against a practical evisceration.
How would you explain this from a practical perspective?
Facial damage was most certainly there in the torso series. The Tottenham torso had the nose cut off, and - not least - the 1873 torso had the whole face cut away from the skull. We don´t have to see the skull to conclude that the face was severely damaged on that occasion. In the other cases, we cannot verify or deny that there was facial damage.
PS. I think it needs to be pointed out that we only have Nielsens own word for how the cutting he did was practically led on. The possibility remains that he enjoyed it. But that is just a side remark.
Comment