Fisherman,
Have you seen the actual detailed notes that you seem to refer to,and that Kileen made,both of his attendance at the death scene and later at the autopsy.Or,like myself,do you rely on inquest testimony that is refered to by various authors.If it is the later,it is quite evident that Kileen is not adamant about anything,and gives,if examined closely,only short descriptive information of a vague nature.He only declares it could have been a penknife that was responsible for thirty eight of the wounds,an observation that was met with amazement at the time.While naming the organs penetrated,and number of penetrations,there is no explanation of how far the penetration extended,or damage caused to those organs.As to the weapon causing the one wound,to the sternum,his thinking was either a dagger or a sword bayonet,two distinctive different types,leaving,in soft tissue,two dissimilar type wounds.However directed at the sternum,and with force,both would penetrate and become embedded requiring considerable force to remove.That force,with the twisting and leverage required,would cause an entirely different appearance at the surface skin and to the wound in general,causing difficulty in identifying the actual weapon.A penknife,if that was the weapon used throughout,would cause the same dissimilar appearance.
Have you seen the actual detailed notes that you seem to refer to,and that Kileen made,both of his attendance at the death scene and later at the autopsy.Or,like myself,do you rely on inquest testimony that is refered to by various authors.If it is the later,it is quite evident that Kileen is not adamant about anything,and gives,if examined closely,only short descriptive information of a vague nature.He only declares it could have been a penknife that was responsible for thirty eight of the wounds,an observation that was met with amazement at the time.While naming the organs penetrated,and number of penetrations,there is no explanation of how far the penetration extended,or damage caused to those organs.As to the weapon causing the one wound,to the sternum,his thinking was either a dagger or a sword bayonet,two distinctive different types,leaving,in soft tissue,two dissimilar type wounds.However directed at the sternum,and with force,both would penetrate and become embedded requiring considerable force to remove.That force,with the twisting and leverage required,would cause an entirely different appearance at the surface skin and to the wound in general,causing difficulty in identifying the actual weapon.A penknife,if that was the weapon used throughout,would cause the same dissimilar appearance.
Comment