Originally posted by jc007
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JTR: Not even the skill of a butcher?
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Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by jc007 View PostYou sure Sam?
Dr Brown: "He [the killer] must have had a good deal of knowledge as to the position of the abdominal organs, and the way to remove them."
No mention of medical or surgical skill. This exchange then followed...
Mr. Crawford: "Would not such knowledge be likely to be possessed by one accustomed to cutting up animals?"
Dr Brown: "Yes."Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Browns post mortum report:
I believe the perpetrator of the act must have had considerable knowledge of the positions of the organs in the abdominal cavity and the way of removing them. The parts removed would be of no use for any professional purpose. It required a great deal of medical knowledge to have removed the kidney and to know where it was placed. Such a knowledge might be possessed by some one in the habit of cutting up animals.
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostHe apparently believes in geometric patterns of an occult nature deliberately carved into the East End landscape by the killer. That, I'm afraid, is worse than guesswork - it's patent nonsense.
That and posting long quotes in Bold renders the material difficult to read. It is almost as annoying as TYPING IN ALLCAPS WHICH IS SLIGHTLY MORE ANNOYING THAN POSTIN without any capitalization. and using fragments.
--J.D.
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[QUOTE=Ben;8711]It wasn't encumbent upon any of those three to prove a negative. If they didn't detect any evidence of anatomical skill, they had only to say so, citing as evidence the description of the wounds already published. That's what Bond did; he described Kelly's horrific injuries in meticulous detail and went on to deduce from that that the killer possessed no anatomical knowledge. Did Phillips give any "reason" for disagreeing with Bond?
Nick Warren who is both a qualified and practising surgeon as well as having authored a work on the Whitechapel murders,contends from personal experience that because the kidney is so difficult to expose from the front of the body the keller must have possesssed some anatomical experience.
He doesnt go quite so far as Dr Brown did in the particular case of Catherine Eddowes,who concluded he had both anatomical and surgical skill.But he based his case primarilly upon "the careful extraction of the the left kidney"."I should say someone who knew the position of the kidney must have done it.....I believe the perpetrator of the act must have had considerable knowledge of the position of the organs in the abdominal cavity and the way of removing them.....
Now he did admit that such knowledge might be possessed by someone in the habit of cutting up animals.Chief Inspector Swanson therefore ,in his report, stated that both doctors---he didnt even mention to the other two only the City police doctor[Brown] and the metropolitan police doctor[Phillips], concurred that the medical evidence so far showed that the murder could have been committed by a person who had been a hunter,a butcher,a slaughterman,AS WELL AS a student in surgery or a properly qualified surgeon.Brown was particularly persuaded by the fact that the kindney is a difficult organ to locate in the first place and for the same reason is difficult to "carefully extract"-which was how the removal of the kidney was described by Brown.This is because it is hidden by membrane.
A visit to Kew and a sight of the Whitechapel Murder files makes it
clear beyond any shadow of doubt that the police for a long time were almost exclusively concentrating on finding a doctor.In the files you will find numerous records of them trailing and tracking down certain doctors in France as well as England.Clearly there was something in the manner of strangulation/throat cutting and or mutilation that had given rise to such suspicion.
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With all due respect to Mr. Warren, I think he over estimates the level of skill required to find and remove a human kidney--with no concern about the surrounding tissue and the survivability of the "donor!"
As you quote, "Now he did admit that such knowledge might be possessed by someone in the habit of cutting up animals."
Or, frankly, one who simply knows where it is located.
I am not saying Mr. Warren is wrong; he may be correct. The problem is there is a broad range possible from "looked at an anatomy atlas to know where it is located" all the way to "qualified surgeon."
That, of course, assumes the kidney was an intentional find rather than an organ-of-opportunity.
I, personally, fall somewhat in the middle. As I argued previously, Jack used the wrong tools for a "qualified surgeon" or anyone with experience in dissection. He made the wrong abdominal incision--particularly if you accept "the Five" were killed by the same person which not everyone HERE accepts. I do not buy some neophyte with a long knife randomly rooting around and finding the kidney either, in the dark, and in those time constraints! I also feel the kidney was intentional. Jack has the uterus. If he wants a "trophy," the liver is rather obvious! Why would he want a kidney? I do not have a firm idea, but there are, as you know, a lot of theories.
Which, I think, leaves us with a very broad range.
--J.D.
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Must not make jokes about kidney recipes..."The human eye is a wonderful device. With a little effort, it can fail to see even the most glaring injustice." - Quellcrist Falconer
"Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem" - Johannes Clauberg
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Originally posted by Doctor X View PostIf he wants a "trophy," the liver is rather obvious!Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostIt's also large enough to make smuggling it away in a coat or trouser pocket a little bit tricky, DrX!
No more than a kidney and a uterus. The uterus is far harder to free than a liver, incidentally. Anyways, my point was that if he just wanted "an organ of opportunity" the liver is "right there." Does not have to take the whole thing, of course.
Not to mention the fact that the liver is less accessible - stomach, small intestine, pancreas and colon all crowding into its space to greater or lesser degrees.
the colon, small intestines, pancreas are all ventral--or behind--the omentum. The liver is most anterior.
It is right there. Incidentally, "Right is left" on a CT scan--you are looking "up" so that organ to which the arrows point that demonstrate "partial thrombosis" and "biliary ductal dilatation" is the liver. It is right there. Not trying to be pedantic [He is, and pretentious.--Ed.] Shh! You cannot miss it.
The liver also has more numerous and complex connections
So this is important to correct:
in the form of blood-vessels, ducts and ligaments - and is thus less easy to "set free" than the left kidney.
Now, as I blathered above, it is not impossible or difficult in that you must be a trained surgeon, et cetera. However, removing the liver is far more easy than the left kidney.
Just ask these guys:
Yours truly,
--J.D.
P.S. JSchmidt: Actually, that was on of the suggestions a poster sent me privately--he may have posted them publicly; I do not know.
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Originally posted by Doctor X View PostAh . . . no. Look, it is literally right there. The liver is anterior to those structures
"FAR more easy than the left kidney"? I respectfully disagree, DrX.Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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While I admit to a somewhat black humour, the possibility of cannibalism as a motivation exists. Albert Fish and Fritz Haarmann come to mind."The human eye is a wonderful device. With a little effort, it can fail to see even the most glaring injustice." - Quellcrist Falconer
"Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem" - Johannes Clauberg
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostThanks, DrX, but that's only the front surface - the liver "cups" the stomach, pancreas and duodenum and extends backwards and behind them
In order to liberate the liver you've got to get your hands "right in there" in order to sever the various attachments, and it's a pretty tight space in which to work.
"FAR more easy than the left kidney"? I respectfully disagree, DrX.
Anyways, the only way to "solve" that is to view a dissection which you may not easily be able to do.
That will still not solve the expertise problem, because we do not have accurate photographs of the crime scene, et cetera so modern investigators could see how "skilled" the kidney removal actually was.
Fava beans anyone? Chianti?
--J.D.
P.S. JSchmidt: Yup. That is one possibility. Certainly that came to the mind of the author of the "From Hell" letter to Lusk--whoever he was. . . .
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Originally posted by Doctor X View PostNot really, you just have to lift and separate.
I'll just leave a metaphorical comparison. "Liver = watermelon"; "kidney = tomato". The fava beans I'll leave to you.Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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