I suppose your comments on the wire probability make sense Sam.....I did like the idea though because it would deal with the "silent" attack, the lowering without struggle and the throat cut itself.
So your question isnt easily answerable....how the cuts were actually executed...pardon the pun...to create "circular" wounds. Standing doesnt work....we dont have the blood evidence that suggests that in most cases, ...and on at least 3 victims the opinion was it was done when the victims were lying down. With the severity of some cuts the head would literally hang, held by the spinal column and/or some tissue not severed, ..on a standing victim.
What does seem to be clear though is that some of the Canonical murders began with some form of physical intervention rather than weapon usage. The knife was first used when the victim was incapable of putting up a defense and lying down,.. but in 2 Canonical cases, the weapon is used during the initial attack phase.
I think those are important features....and the man that Ripped his women open defeated them in physical combat before even using a knife.
Best regards Gareth.
So your question isnt easily answerable....how the cuts were actually executed...pardon the pun...to create "circular" wounds. Standing doesnt work....we dont have the blood evidence that suggests that in most cases, ...and on at least 3 victims the opinion was it was done when the victims were lying down. With the severity of some cuts the head would literally hang, held by the spinal column and/or some tissue not severed, ..on a standing victim.
What does seem to be clear though is that some of the Canonical murders began with some form of physical intervention rather than weapon usage. The knife was first used when the victim was incapable of putting up a defense and lying down,.. but in 2 Canonical cases, the weapon is used during the initial attack phase.
I think those are important features....and the man that Ripped his women open defeated them in physical combat before even using a knife.
Best regards Gareth.
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