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  • jerryd
    replied
    Originally posted by FrankO View Post
    In "An Exercise in Forensic Medicine Dr. Hebbert writes about the right arm: "The appearance of the hand would suggest maceration in water from three to our weeks..." About the trunk he wrote that death probably occurred about two months earlier. And regarding the left leg he thought death had occurred from 6 weeks to 2 months previously.
    Hi FrankO.

    The leg was found on October 17th. Counting back the minimum time frame of 6 weeks from Dr. Hebberts notes is the week of September 3rd thru the 9th. I do realize as JohnG pointed out that ToD is very difficult to determine, but I think Dr. Neville was in the ballpark.

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  • Trevor Marriott
    replied
    Originally posted by FrankO View Post
    In "An Exercise in Forensic Medicine Dr. Hebbert writes about the right arm: "The appearance of the hand would suggest maceration in water from three to our weeks..." About the trunk he wrote that death probably occurred about two months earlier. And regarding the left leg he thought death had occurred from 6 weeks to 2 months previously.
    Two things emerge from this either the doctor was wrong, or the body parts were not from the same body if the latter then there is a more plausible explanation other than murder.

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  • etenguy
    replied
    Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
    sorry eten. not even close.
    they didnt operate in the same state, let alone the same city.
    torsoman and the rippers territory actually overlapped (pinchin) and were within easy walking distance.
    I disagree - it demonstrates two similar types of killings, with the same victim type, dismemberment and mutilations occurring at the same time in relatively close proximity. I realise its not the same town, but the distance is not massive either by american standards. Chicago to Milwaukee is about 90 miles. An american would think it a short journey driving from milwaukee to Indiana where more of the Eyler murders took place. Just as if the torsoripper was a single murderer, he might get on a cart and travel to central or west London. If the Dahmer/Eyler murders were not solved, the argument that they were close enough to be one perpetrator would be even stronger than for torso-ripper because the murders were more alike.

    I get it is not as close as torso and ripper but close enough that suggesting that two murder series must be one on the basis of too much of a coincidence otherwise, loses a lot of its force. Proves nothing, but lessens (not negates) the power of that as a compelling argument for one murderer.

    Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
    i think the torsorippers chop shop was somewhere close to pinchin as theres evidence that torso was carried there.
    so his place would be easy walking distance to the ripper sites and easy cart distance to torso dumping areas. heck he may have even picked up the torso victims in WC brought them back to his chop shop near pinchin, cut them up and dumped them with use of a cart further west, probably becuase those locations had special meaning to him.
    Interesting and logical speculation, but far from being known. The torso may well have been carried to Pinchin, but it could have been carried from a cart or some staging post for some reason.
    Last edited by etenguy; 01-20-2020, 10:09 PM.

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  • Abby Normal
    replied
    Originally posted by etenguy View Post

    Since you mention Dahmer - wasn't Larry Eyler committing similar murders at the same time - or at least they overlapped. I don't think Eyler operated in the same town, but he murdered across a range of locations, including Chicago which is south of Milwaukee. They both killed, dismembered and mutilated (disembowelled and organs removed) their victims. Is this another example of two murderers with similar victimology and similarities in method operating in relatively close proximity at the same time (if the torso and ripper murderers was the other).
    sorry eten. not even close.
    they didnt operate in the same state, let alone the same city.
    torsoman and the rippers territory actually overlapped (pinchin) and were within easy walking distance.

    i think the torsorippers chop shop was somewhere close to pinchin as theres evidence that torso was carried there.
    so his place would be easy walking distance to the ripper sites and easy cart distance to torso dumping areas. heck he may have even picked up the torso victims in WC brought them back to his chop shop near pinchin, cut them up and dumped them with use of a cart further west, probably becuase those locations had special meaning to him.

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  • Abby Normal
    replied
    Originally posted by John G View Post

    When I first came onto this site I thought that posters like yourself, who were arguing that the C5 were probably not by the same hand, were seriously misguided. Now I've come to realize I was wrong. For instance, I no longer think it likely that Stride was a Ripper victim.

    The problem, I feel, at the heart of the single killer theory (if I may put it that way) is that it relies essentially on the issue of rare types of murder. However, that reasoning runs into difficulty because there was a huge number of rare murders and violent assaults during this period: Tabram, the C5, Mackenzie, Coles, Austin, the 1887-1889 Torso cases, the earlier 1873-1874 Torso cases, Tottenham Torso, Emma Smith, Ellen Bury etc, all of which have at least something in common with one or more of the other victims and therefore can be thetorically "linked" . Therefore, for a proponent of the theory, once a single victim is conceded the entire theory is undermined, i.e. because by implication you've accepted that there must have been an least one other rare murderer at large. As a result, in order to avoid this undesirable situation more and more victims get roped in an attributed to a single killer.

    Of course, this logic could be applied in a different context: serial killers are very rare. Whitechapel was a very small geographical area and it's therefore statically very unlikely that two serial killers would be active in the same area. George Chapman was a serial killer who lived in this area. Ergo George Chapman must be JtR!
    and you were doing so well!

    unfortunately your going backwards. the ripper is not a disorganized killer. see my previous post. total reliance on fbi profiling and opinions like its gospel is wrong. when they profiled the ripper, they had very little knowledge of the case (the average casebooker knows more) and didnt even seem to take into account, no automobile was available to the ripper. ive noticed some arrogance to their way of thinking and cant help note that they over egg the pudding on how effective all their profiling/ labeling stuff is. john douglas thinks hes solved everthing from the mad bomber to the golden state killer. like i said you need to take the fbi stuff with a grain of salt. id go with your garden variety experienced detective any day.

    re the number of victims. the average serial killer has about 15 kills. how many did you list? now i think theres not enough eveidence or linkage for all of them- smith seems like a gang rape attack, coles was probably killed by sadler etc. but alot does link them and its not even controversial at all to consider most were by a single hand... and the main thing that would link them IMHO would be which ones had post mortem mutilation first and foremost. how many that you listed have post mortem mutilation? probably wise to start there when seeing if possible link.
    re george chapman- george chapman has been and is a valid suspect for the ripper murders from the start by abberline no less and many others for many reasons. not sure what your trying to get at here.


    Last edited by Abby Normal; 01-20-2020, 09:19 PM.

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  • etenguy
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post

    I know whats coming next...Ted Bundy killed different ways, the Golden State killer did too, and the Freeway killer, ..what youll omit is that Dahmer did the same things with the same kinds of men, Gacy did it repeatedly the same way.
    Since you mention Dahmer - wasn't Larry Eyler committing similar murders at the same time - or at least they overlapped. I don't think Eyler operated in the same town, but he murdered across a range of locations, including Chicago which is south of Milwaukee. They both killed, dismembered and mutilated (disembowelled and organs removed) their victims. Is this another example of two murderers with similar victimology and similarities in method operating in relatively close proximity at the same time (if the torso and ripper murderers was the other).

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  • c.d.
    replied
    Ive fought consistently here about some of these points because I wanted some people to reconsider what their belief systems told them...


    Good advice that should be followed by everybody. Cough. Cough.

    c.d.

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  • c.d.
    replied
    Belief in the Canonical 5 never has been on the same level as religious doctrine. There is no requirement to believe it with every ounce of your being with the souls of your most beloved at stake. It is simply possible to accept it as being more likely than not.

    c.d.

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  • c.d.
    replied
    Why the accepted C5 theory bothers me so much is that it must have at its core a killer who is not consistent....

    This is true. But it seems to me the best course of action is to ask what might account for that and do we see instances of inconsistency in other murders in which it turns out they were actually committed by the same hand.

    A non-C5 theory must have at its core the belief that in the Fall of 1888 tiny Whitechapel was home to numerous serial killers some of whom targeted uteri, others were kidney men and others went looking for hearts.

    c.d.

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  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Originally posted by John G View Post

    When I first came onto this site I thought that posters like yourself, who were arguing that the C5 were probably not by the same hand, were seriously misguided. Now I've come to realize I was wrong. For instance, I no longer think it likely that Stride was a Ripper victim.

    The problem, I feel, at the heart of the single killer theory (if I may put it that way) is that it relies essentially on the issue of rare types of murder. However, that reasoning runs into difficulty because there was a huge number of rare murders and violent assaults during this period: Tabram, the C5, Mackenzie, Coles, Austin, the 1887-1889 Torso cases, the earlier 1873-1874 Torso cases, Tottenham Torso, Emma Smith, Ellen Bury etc, all of which have at least something in common with one or more of the other victims and therefore can be thetorically "linked" . Therefore, for a proponent of the theory, once a single victim is conceded the entire theory is undermined, i.e. because by implication you've accepted that there must have been an least one other rare murderer at large. As a result, in order to avoid this undesirable situation more and more victims get roped in an attributed to a single killer.
    Thank you for that John. Ive fought consistently here about some of these points because I wanted some people to reconsider what their belief systems told them, and Im really pleased at least 1 person did that as a result. You are correct...there are an unusual amount of unusual cases during this period.

    Why the accepted C5 theory bothers me so much is that it must have at its core a killer who is not consistent, and for me the evidence in the cases of Polly to Annie speak to the exact opposite conclusion. With the shortest interval between any other of the murders. He had found his way to get what he wanted. That's fodder for a killer profile...until the waters are muddied with unconnected crimes.

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  • John G
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
    The boy that is discovered in Bradford, cut in half, stuffed in a barrel....is that an indication of other bad people existed in the UK, or is Londons Torso-Ripper-Poisoner man just on a vaca that week?
    When I first came onto this site I thought that posters like yourself, who were arguing that the C5 were probably not by the same hand, were seriously misguided. Now I've come to realize I was wrong. For instance, I no longer think it likely that Stride was a Ripper victim.

    The problem, I feel, at the heart of the single killer theory (if I may put it that way) is that it relies essentially on the issue of rare types of murder. However, that reasoning runs into difficulty because there was a huge number of rare murders and violent assaults during this period: Tabram, the C5, Mackenzie, Coles, Austin, the 1887-1889 Torso cases, the earlier 1873-1874 Torso cases, Tottenham Torso, Emma Smith, Ellen Bury etc, all of which have at least something in common with one or more of the other victims and therefore can be thetorically "linked" . Therefore, for a proponent of the theory, once a single victim is conceded the entire theory is undermined, i.e. because by implication you've accepted that there must have been an least one other rare murderer at large. As a result, in order to avoid this undesirable situation more and more victims get roped in an attributed to a single killer.

    Of course, this logic could be applied in a different context: serial killers are very rare. Whitechapel was a very small geographical area and it's therefore statically very unlikely that two serial killers would be active in the same area. George Chapman was a serial killer who lived in this area. Ergo George Chapman must be JtR!
    Last edited by John G; 01-20-2020, 07:16 PM.

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  • FrankO
    replied
    Originally posted by jerryd View Post

    I don't discount the findings of Dr. Neville who examined the first piece of the body (the Pimilico arm). He stated death was 3 to four days prior to his examination of the arm on September 12th. The other parts were subject to decay for much longer and to me would have been more difficult to determine a date of death. So if the victim in which the arm belonged to died around September 8th or 9th, so be it for the rest of the matching body parts.
    In "An Exercise in Forensic Medicine Dr. Hebbert writes about the right arm: "The appearance of the hand would suggest maceration in water from three to our weeks..." About the trunk he wrote that death probably occurred about two months earlier. And regarding the left leg he thought death had occurred from 6 weeks to 2 months previously.

    Leave a comment:


  • FrankO
    replied
    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
    Yes, in the Torso series the murder scenes and the dumping scenes were separated. But it is only if we make the assumption that the Ripper could not have dumped his bodies elsewhere if he had had the need that this becomes of interest.
    This is clearly wrong, because I don’t assume the Ripper couldn’t have dumped his bodies elsewhere if he had the need and still think it’s interesting.


    It is a VERY easy equation that entirely allows us to see how a perceived difference in mindset may in fact be something totally different - a purely practical measure.
    It may, but then again, it may not.

    This is where so much goes wrong when people reason that there were two killers: they insert different mindsets into their thought-up killers, they divide them into categories that are not compatible with each other.
    I don’t insert anything. I see the facts of both series and they suggest different mindsets. End of story. Whether that means they were 2 different men with roughly similar cravings is another matter.

    But it is pure invention.
    Don't let the knowledgeable Mr. Geberth hear you.

    Plus, we of course do NOT know that the Ripper struck where he found his prey, the way disorganized killers will normally do. Instead, it seems that he may have used a ruse, feigning to be a punter and following his victims to secluded places, chosen by them. Alternatively directing them to such places. And that is anything but disorganized behavior.
    Where did I say the Ripper was purely disorganized? As far as I’m concerned, he wasn't, but he wasn’t much of a planner either with regards to the murders we ascribe to him and in that respect he was clearly different than Torso Man. Anyway, that he left clustered crime scenes (regardless of whether he covered 10 or 100 yards from the point of encounter to where he killed & mutilated) and that Torso Man didn’t remains a fact. That you don’t see any significance in it is not something new.

    Last edited by FrankO; 01-20-2020, 07:18 PM.

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  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    The boy that is discovered in Bradford, cut in half, stuffed in a barrel....is that an indication of other bad people existed in the UK, or is Londons Torso-Ripper-Poisoner man just on a vaca that week?

    Leave a comment:


  • John G
    replied
    Originally posted by jerryd View Post

    I don't discount the findings of Dr. Neville who examined the first piece of the body (the Pimilico arm). He stated death was 3 to four days prior to his examination of the arm on September 12th. The other parts were subject to decay for much longer and to me would have been more difficult to determine a date of death. So if the victim in which the arm belonged to died around September 8th or 9th, so be it for the rest of the matching body parts.
    I dont think time of death estimates can be remotely relied upon. Even today, estimating time of death is extremely difficult-the Forensic Science Regulator advises it shouldn't even be attempted. And asseseing time of death from a single body part must be even more daunting. Dr Neville, who wasn't a forensic scientist may therefore have been way out.

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