I've just stumbled across the case of William Fish aka the Blackburn murderer. Also followed a strategy similar to Kate Webster of the Barnes Mystery and the body disposal is striking similar to the 1873 torso case (with the entire body being bled out).
It strikes me that mutilating a body and dumping it in pieces, removing the head and perhaps separately burying or burning it, would be a more successful strategy for making a body unrecognisable in the 1800s and then much less so from the twentieth century on. Meaning that bodies dumped in this way would be much more common in the earlier century.
One might say the Torso Murderer (or Murderers) only removed the heads because they wanted the enjoy mutilation in its own sake, but the removal of the then only recognisable features is one of the things which is common to all of the torso cases so the desire to prevent the victim being recognised seem consistent to me. With perhaps the exception of the 1873 case, where the face was in fact rendered unrecognisable, although if the later cases are the same perpetrator, they changed strategy to completely removing the heads, so perhaps the police came closer to finding out who the victim was than they thought and the perpetrator was spooked enough to change approach.
Which raises the other point. If the goal was to make the torso victim untraceable, that would tend to suggest a fear the victim could be traced back to the perpetrator. Which would make leaving the recognisable marks on the dumped limbs of Elizabeth Jackson a big mistake. The perpetrator would plausibly be someone who can be linked to Elizabeth Jackson. So, how much do we know about Elizabeth Jackson?
It strikes me that mutilating a body and dumping it in pieces, removing the head and perhaps separately burying or burning it, would be a more successful strategy for making a body unrecognisable in the 1800s and then much less so from the twentieth century on. Meaning that bodies dumped in this way would be much more common in the earlier century.
One might say the Torso Murderer (or Murderers) only removed the heads because they wanted the enjoy mutilation in its own sake, but the removal of the then only recognisable features is one of the things which is common to all of the torso cases so the desire to prevent the victim being recognised seem consistent to me. With perhaps the exception of the 1873 case, where the face was in fact rendered unrecognisable, although if the later cases are the same perpetrator, they changed strategy to completely removing the heads, so perhaps the police came closer to finding out who the victim was than they thought and the perpetrator was spooked enough to change approach.
Which raises the other point. If the goal was to make the torso victim untraceable, that would tend to suggest a fear the victim could be traced back to the perpetrator. Which would make leaving the recognisable marks on the dumped limbs of Elizabeth Jackson a big mistake. The perpetrator would plausibly be someone who can be linked to Elizabeth Jackson. So, how much do we know about Elizabeth Jackson?
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