This thread is to discuss the issue of whether JTR strangled his victims. I wanted to first point out how common "garrotting" was in the Victorian era. The article below from http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/com...cle4368413.ece, discusses the garrotting "panic" which took place in the 1850's and 1860's. It was the result of the use of "garrotting" which usually involved robbery by choking a person from behind, often using a ligature or the robbers own arm (like a "chokehold"). I believe that this would be the most likely form of strangulation that would be used by JTR due to its ability to silence the victim, keep the victim from calling out, how quickly it renders the victim unconscious, and the fact that it doesn't leave obvious marks as either a ligature, or manual strangulation. I also seem to recall the comment by doctor's on how one or two Ripper victims appeared to have marks under the jawline. Though I'm certainly not a medical expert this would be the type of marks I would expect if someone were choked in this manner.
The Garotting panic
A wave of fear swept mid-Victorian society about what The Times called “a modern peril of the streets [that has] created something like a reign of terror”. Garotting was a form of violent robbery that involved choking the victim from behind, reportedly carried out by street ruffians and even by 12-year-old girls. As The Times protested in November 1862: “Our streets are actually not as safe as they were in the days of our grandfathers. We have slipped back to a state of affairs which would be intolerable even in Naples.” The paper carried pro-hanging leading articles, and in 1856 complained about the “over-magnanimous spirit of British law, which always presumes a man innocent until he is proven guilty”.
The upshot was a backlash against liberalising law reforms. Flogging had been abolished in 1861. It was brought back under the Garotter's Act of 1863, which even the Home Secretary described as “panic legislation after the panic had subsided”.
Below are two illustrations. One is from the Illustrated Police News on August 7, 1880. The other comes from the Victorian Web at http://www.victorianlondon.org/crime...sentations.htm . Both show an illustration of a chokehold applied by the perpetrators of a robbery.
The Garotting panic
A wave of fear swept mid-Victorian society about what The Times called “a modern peril of the streets [that has] created something like a reign of terror”. Garotting was a form of violent robbery that involved choking the victim from behind, reportedly carried out by street ruffians and even by 12-year-old girls. As The Times protested in November 1862: “Our streets are actually not as safe as they were in the days of our grandfathers. We have slipped back to a state of affairs which would be intolerable even in Naples.” The paper carried pro-hanging leading articles, and in 1856 complained about the “over-magnanimous spirit of British law, which always presumes a man innocent until he is proven guilty”.
The upshot was a backlash against liberalising law reforms. Flogging had been abolished in 1861. It was brought back under the Garotter's Act of 1863, which even the Home Secretary described as “panic legislation after the panic had subsided”.
Below are two illustrations. One is from the Illustrated Police News on August 7, 1880. The other comes from the Victorian Web at http://www.victorianlondon.org/crime...sentations.htm . Both show an illustration of a chokehold applied by the perpetrators of a robbery.
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