So, I could use some hole poking in a idea here. I'm not sure if this would explain the asphyxia, but I think it's an interesting idea.
Wickerman and I recently went a few rounds on strangulation and throttling and why these women didn't fight like hell. And it got me thinking that there had to be something else going on. So I sort of backtracked and came across something that might work.
I was looking for something that would not allow the victim to cry out, move, fight, or do much of anything until unconsciousness, when they would be laid down and their throats were cut. But it at least one, maybe two or three instances, either not work, or not cause death. Because Nichols and Chapman showed clear signs of asphyxia. The others did not.
And then after some very peculiar reading I came across something called a reflex vagal inhibition death. Which is where through some mechanism the Vagus nerves are overstimulated, causing cardiac arrest. A punch to the throat, strangulation, hanging, whatever. But it doesn't always happen. There are some martial arts moves that enhance the possibility, but there is no guaranteed way to make this work. But the most common way this ends up killing people is choking, like on a ham sandwich. Now these women clearly didn't choke on food. But one of the Coroners mentioned that Chapman (?) would not have been able to cry out had she been gagged. Which got me thinking.
If Jack the Ripper used a gag, not one of those cop comedy ones, but a real one, shoved down past the epiglottis, this not only prevents crying out, but also severely inhibits any vocalization. It also makes a person literally gag, constantly, which generates a lot of nasal mucus. So even when you can breathe through your nose between gagging, its too stuffed to get any real air. Evidently this works fairly well. It isn't as fast as strangulation, but it has the advantage of leaving the killer free to physically subdue the victim. So they can't fight. It leaves them helpless until they die. Constantly retching might do that as well, but this would ensure it. This could explain why Nichols and Chapman had signs of asphyxia. AND Eddowes didn't. (personally, I don't either Stride or Kelly were JtR's victims, and that is going to color my analysis on this)
Neither Nichols nor Chapman have all the signs that one normally associates with death by asphyxia. I think it's possible that Nichols was suffocated by the gag. Not to death, but to unconsciousness. I think Chapman, because she was dying of lung disease had a much more fragile system. I think the gag caused reflex vagal inhibition death. Which could account for the earwitness. And I think that either the gag didn't suffocate Eddowes at all (although it still would have kept her quiet) or something made him not wait for it to work, and he killed her while she was still aware.
Major holes in this theory include:
Limited victim selection
no evidence
how do you put a gag in someone's throat without them biting the crap out of you?
It's an idea.
Wickerman and I recently went a few rounds on strangulation and throttling and why these women didn't fight like hell. And it got me thinking that there had to be something else going on. So I sort of backtracked and came across something that might work.
I was looking for something that would not allow the victim to cry out, move, fight, or do much of anything until unconsciousness, when they would be laid down and their throats were cut. But it at least one, maybe two or three instances, either not work, or not cause death. Because Nichols and Chapman showed clear signs of asphyxia. The others did not.
And then after some very peculiar reading I came across something called a reflex vagal inhibition death. Which is where through some mechanism the Vagus nerves are overstimulated, causing cardiac arrest. A punch to the throat, strangulation, hanging, whatever. But it doesn't always happen. There are some martial arts moves that enhance the possibility, but there is no guaranteed way to make this work. But the most common way this ends up killing people is choking, like on a ham sandwich. Now these women clearly didn't choke on food. But one of the Coroners mentioned that Chapman (?) would not have been able to cry out had she been gagged. Which got me thinking.
If Jack the Ripper used a gag, not one of those cop comedy ones, but a real one, shoved down past the epiglottis, this not only prevents crying out, but also severely inhibits any vocalization. It also makes a person literally gag, constantly, which generates a lot of nasal mucus. So even when you can breathe through your nose between gagging, its too stuffed to get any real air. Evidently this works fairly well. It isn't as fast as strangulation, but it has the advantage of leaving the killer free to physically subdue the victim. So they can't fight. It leaves them helpless until they die. Constantly retching might do that as well, but this would ensure it. This could explain why Nichols and Chapman had signs of asphyxia. AND Eddowes didn't. (personally, I don't either Stride or Kelly were JtR's victims, and that is going to color my analysis on this)
Neither Nichols nor Chapman have all the signs that one normally associates with death by asphyxia. I think it's possible that Nichols was suffocated by the gag. Not to death, but to unconsciousness. I think Chapman, because she was dying of lung disease had a much more fragile system. I think the gag caused reflex vagal inhibition death. Which could account for the earwitness. And I think that either the gag didn't suffocate Eddowes at all (although it still would have kept her quiet) or something made him not wait for it to work, and he killed her while she was still aware.
Major holes in this theory include:
Limited victim selection
no evidence
how do you put a gag in someone's throat without them biting the crap out of you?
It's an idea.
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