Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Example of a serial killer

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Originally posted by Takod View Post

    It takes more belief and scepticism of the evidence to suggest that there was more than one person running around subduing prostitutes, and then cutting the throat all the way back to the vertebrae than it does to accept that this is not ordinary behaviour - the possible likelihood that there was more than one person running around, even a copycat, committing exactly the same crime, in the same time and in the same places and with the same MO simply beggars belief.
    But we don't have copycat like crimes in the remaining C5, do we? Liz Stride is murdered...that's it, Kate Eddowes murder greatly resembles the first 2 but with some additional unexplained components which may or may not be symbolic, and Mary is killed unlike any other victim, both in circumstantial and physical evidence. Despite the attempts to create some bridge between these killings and the Torso murders, it seems to me that we have a serial killer who predates the Ripper, in that same area. The cuts to the vertebrae are very important, in the first 2 cases it appears similar technique and a double cut are present. The depth and repetition of the cuts indicate the killer sought swift incapacitation and perhaps maximum bloodletting. There is evidence of 2 cuts with Kate, but who can be sure what order of cuts took place in room 13?

    The Canonical Five are not identical murders in any way, and that alone doesn't mean they weren't connected by killer, but when the circumstantial evidence, and a few other unsolved murders of youngish women in the area during that same year and into the next are factored in, it changes the possibilities.

    Leave a comment:


  • Takod
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
    The Canonical Group concept relies on a foundation of belief, not evidence.
    It takes more belief and scepticism of the evidence to suggest that there was more than one person running around subduing prostitutes, and then cutting the throat all the way back to the vertebrae than it does to accept that this is not ordinary behaviour - the possible likelihood that there was more than one person running around, even a copycat, committing exactly the same crime, in the same time and in the same places and with the same MO simply beggars belief.

    Leave a comment:


  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
    Thanks for the corrections on a spelling issue. Using the recent case in Toronto to illustrate my point about fixed characteristics isn't intended as a message that I believe all serial killers exhibit repetitive characteristics, its just to point out that some do. Based on that possibility alone, I feel its bad form to simply assume murders that are unlike the preceding or subsequent murders are just anomalies but still connected by the same killer. They may well be indications that other killers are possible.

    The Canonical Group concept relies on a foundation of belief, not evidence. The evidence itself isn't sufficient to connect the five murders to one person. So, what could be wrong with approaching this mystery from the point of view that some murders within the assumed group should be removed from it, based on the "anomalies".

    If a revised approach creates a Canonical Group of 3 as most probably connected and supported within the known evidence, we have a whole different landscape, with more that 3 times that number during that period that were committed by others. I think that kind of baseline will prevent the speculation that seems to be gaining traction, that not only the Five Canonicals but a whole variety of other murders were committed by one man,.. who apparently just stabs some, just poisons some, slits some throats, mutilates some corpses and dismembers some.
    Its always interesting to see that people don't dispute common sense here....although that's not always the case.

    To re-start the discussion, using the above, a serial killers is someone who is guilty of killing 2 or more people, so even with my post above, its pretty clear that there was a serial killer working in the East End during that period. That usually evolves into a discussion of 2 or more serial killers working simultaneously. For me, other than a "series" of Torso murders and the likelihood that one man or group was responsible, that needn't be the case here. If we imagine that Polly and Annie were definitely connected by killer, thereby making them 2 of the serial killer victims, there are enough variances within the remaining Canonical Victims list to still leave room for 3 different people, or groups, as killers.

    My point being....how much would perspectives change on these murders if a much smaller C group, maybe just 2 victims, is broadly presumed to be by one man. How would people approach investigating the remaining crimes? Lets leave presumption to a minimum and carve this C group down to a more evidence based number. I don't think anyone would argue too strongly against linking Polly and Annie, but many of us disagree on what happened from that point on. Maybe its because many of us still cling to a model that has a magnet like killer figure with remarkable range from skilled to amateur and with differing motivations.

    Leave a comment:


  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Thanks for the corrections on a spelling issue. Using the recent case in Toronto to illustrate my point about fixed characteristics isn't intended as a message that I believe all serial killers exhibit repetitive characteristics, its just to point out that some do. Based on that possibility alone, I feel its bad form to simply assume murders that are unlike the preceding or subsequent murders are just anomalies but still connected by the same killer. They may well be indications that other killers are possible.

    The Canonical Group concept relies on a foundation of belief, not evidence. The evidence itself isn't sufficient to connect the five murders to one person. So, what could be wrong with approaching this mystery from the point of view that some murders within the assumed group should be removed from it, based on the "anomalies".

    If a revised approach creates a Canonical Group of 3 as most probably connected and supported within the known evidence, we have a whole different landscape, with more that 3 times that number during that period that were committed by others. I think that kind of baseline will prevent the speculation that seems to be gaining traction, that not only the Five Canonicals but a whole variety of other murders were committed by one man,.. who apparently just stabs some, just poisons some, slits some throats, mutilates some corpses and dismembers some.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Ad nauseum [sic]k

    Leave a comment:


  • caz
    replied
    Originally posted by c.d. View Post
    Hello Michael,

    The only thing that you have demonstrated is that one particular serial killer in Toronto was consistent in the way that he killed. In no way have you demonstrated that therefore ALL serial killers must act in a similar manner.

    You did get the "ad nauseum" part right though.

    c.d.
    No he didn't. It's spelled "ad nauseam".

    Leave a comment:


  • Ginger
    replied
    Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post
    I'm also pretty sure, but I can't recall the details, that there are cases of serial killers who killed victims by shooting, strangulation, knife, and blunt force trauma, basically, the method of killing can be highly variable.f
    HH Holmes comes right to mind. The man was in many ways like a real life Dr. Phibes.

    "I was not satisfied in taking [life] in the ordinary way. I sought devices strange, fantastical and even grotesque." - HH Holmes

    Leave a comment:


  • JeffHamm
    replied
    I don't think they are suspecting any further murders to be attributed to McArthur. They found on his computer file folders, containing photos, of the 8 murders to which he confessed, and an empty folder with the fellow's name who he had tied up at the time of his arrest. It appears, therefore, that McArthur kept photo trophies of his murders, so it seems likely that those are all of them. Not impossible that he failed to document some, but by the sounds of it, unless something else strongly ties him to another murder, it looks like he's responsible for 8, and no more.

    Also, I can think of some serial killers who didn't do things the same way every time. Zodiac, for example, killed with a gun, knife, and killed couples in remote areas and a cab driver in the city. Also, David Berkowitz (Son of Sam), reports his first attack was with a knife before he switched to a handgun. Ted Bundy reported attacking someone in the street with a piece of wood, then seems to have entered a residence to attack a woman in her bed (and carried her off), before he developed his method of abducting the victim in plain sight, and then overpowering them in his car - he later (in Florida) returned to breaking and entering residences and attacking the victims there. Dennis Rader (BTK), attacked families, sometimes killing the children sometimes not, and his victims ranged quite a large range in ages.

    There are consistencies to be found in all of the above series, but those consistencies are not always in the same thing - Ted Bundy targeted a particular look, particularly early on, BTK didn't, for example. What is, and what is not, consistent in a series is particular to the offender and it can lead to working out how they are thinking, which can be useful in then deciding what other cases might be linked to that particular series. But what links one series could be very different from what links another. Zodiac's letter writing, for example, and his use of code, and his ever increasing claims of more victims, and the descriptions of his attacks (sometimes sudden and blitz, sometimes taking the time to tie up victims and talk to them, etc) indicate that control and fulfilling his sense of being powerful is driving him. He's not so concerned about how he commits the crime in terms of the method per se, but he is determined to act out some fantasy where he is better than everyone else. Interestingly, BTK's letter writing and trying to keep his crimes in the news were probably more to fuel his sexual fatacies - the news reports provided him with his own custom porn. He also was control oriented, but his crimes were much more immediately sexual (he masturbated at the scenes) than Zodiac's appear to be (although he may have masturbated later - we don't know, but nothing in Zodiac's confirmed letters has the sexual overtones of BTK's writings).

    I'm also pretty sure, but I can't recall the details, that there are cases of serial killers who killed victims by shooting, strangulation, knife, and blunt force trauma, basically, the method of killing can be highly variable. The more variable the crimes, the harder it is to spot a pattern that suggests considering the crimes as a series. Which, as Ginger points out, could mean that unsolved series are unlike the ones that get solved (recognizing that a series of offenses are linked can greatly aid investigators from moving someone from the "person of interest" list to "cleared" or "primary suspects" lists and being able to sort through the large number of POIs that arise in a case, and clear them, saves a lot of time and resources - both of which are precious and limited quantities.

    With regards to JtR, the focus on a quick and silent overpowering of the victim, followed by a swift killing, followed by mutilations focused primarily on the abdomen and later facial mutilations as well, with the taking of body parts as trophies, are the consistencies in pattern that indicate that the mutilation of the victim is the motive, and the lack of torture of the victim, with no apparent need to have the victim in a prolonged state of fear (otherwise, he would have found a way to get the victim somewhere "private" where he could indulge in those types of behaviors), link Nichols, Chapman, Eddowes, and Kelly pretty strongly. Stride is connected due to the temporal and spatial proximity to Eddowes combined with the thought that her killer may very well have been "interrupted" (I'll leave everyone to their own thoughts on that as this isn't the right thread for it). Earlier murders, such as Tabram, fit the pattern of high risk location, quick and silent overpowering of the victim, and a destructive attack on the breasts and abdomen well beyond what was needed to kill her. She's worth considering because, while the specific details of the injuries are markedly different, they are consistent with a mind-set that could produce the C5 crimes (particularly as Tabram's murder was earlier, and offender's learn from each crime what "works for them", and what "they could improve upon next time"). It's also what makes one question the later murder of Alice McKenzie, while there was some postmortem abdominal injuries, they were far less severe than the earlier murders; more "tentative" if you will, which greatly raises the possibility of someone performing those actions not because they are driven to by a desire to mutilate, but rather against their inclination to but attempting to divert attention (i.e. a copy-cat trying to "cover their tracks").

    Just my thoughts, which one may agree or disagree with as freely as you wish.

    - Jeff

    Leave a comment:


  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by Busy Beaver View Post
    Piers Morgan- Confessions of a serial killer
    I've always thought he was a bit dodgy.

    Leave a comment:


  • Busy Beaver
    replied
    After watching Piers Morgan- Confessions of a serial killer, I was trying to make a comparison of Bernard Giles and JTR. But all I could come up with was the fact that they killed five women. Giles was asked a number of questions about the killings. He said that the women were complete strangers and he wouldn't murder someone he knew, He said he was to be able to go from killer to loving husband without his wife suspecting, he killed after he finished a college course in the afternoons, his motive was sexual and he had these thoughts from about six years old, two of his victims were murdered within yards of his trailer home he shared with his wife and baby daughter, the other victims were murdered in bush areas, bodies hidden from view (unlike JTR bodies on show). All apart from one were hitch-hikers and very young 14-22yrs. Giles said that if the women had engaged in more conversation with him, he may have let them go, they didn't so he killed them. The Police also said that the Killer was someone local as the five victims had been killed in a short space of time. Quite an interesting documentary.

    Leave a comment:


  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
    Stabs? There were no stabs of any consequence in the canonical Ripper murders, which were characterised by long, deep cuts to the throats and abdomens of the victims.
    Im referring to those who also suspect Martha Tabram was killed by the same man,..Hi Sam, which is quite a few people it seems. In addition to your observation I think the Victimology is equally as important. I don't think Polly or Annies killer wanted to struggle much, and I don't see any evidence that suggests he had prior knowledge of them, or them of him. An opportunity arose when he was out probably barely containing his impulses. I believe the fact he chose these two women,.. who are very close fits in looks and age, and who were both under the weather in some form, ..is also what we should see in any later murders.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
    They need for someone who only stabs outdoors to evolve within 2 months to virtually disassembling bodies indoors....
    Stabs? There were no stabs of any consequence in the canonical Ripper murders, which were characterised by long, deep cuts to the throats and abdomens of the victims.

    Leave a comment:


  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    The point of this thread is to illustrate that when certain patterns and characteristics seem to be repetitive and as such are likely to be fixed characteristics, you probably have the same individual. When you consider the obvious disregard for historical preferences just within the Canonical Group it seems practical to separate the known wheat from the guesstimated chaff. In your post Robert you speculate that the "Jack the Ripper" character probably committed more than those Five, indicating that you believe the evidence in each is similar to the predecessor.

    I suggest that Polly and Annie are so similar they must be grouped together, and the traits and characteristics in those 2 murders were consistent. From target, to subduing, to killing then mutilating, they are only separated by the more aggressive wounds on Annie and the actual removal of internal abdominal organs. There is a learning evident there, and a time frame between them that suggests someone unable to hold back his dark desires for long.

    Those kills suggest someone who killed working street women who were alone, and in these cases, both were compromised physically..one by sickness, one by booze, making them easier acquisitions. He had a strong urge to cut flesh, and a fascination or interest with internal organs. He has learned to kill quickly and quietly, perhaps by years of animal dissections, and he would have probably been obviously mentally ill in some fashion. We have suspects that match those traits.

    What makes the actual Ripper kills unique for me are those features, if they are absent, it doesnt mean that the killer changed. It very often means that the person making the argument needs him to have changed to validate their position. They need for someone who only stabs outdoors to evolve within 2 months to virtually disassembling bodies indoors....because some contemporary opinion suggested it was likely.

    That specific period in time is fascinating, not for one unique series of murders, but for the treachery, treason and terrorism rife throughout London. Its a mistake to just assume a premise here, keep an open mind...there were many bad guys, and ladies about....why the women were killed is far more relevant than how they were killed when looking for a killer, but Ive suggested why the first 2 Canonical were killed....madness met opportunity. Look with a un-jaundiced eye and see if any other murders within the unsolved files have all those qualities. I surely have, and see one or 2 in addition to Polly within that group of 13. Kate, and Alice.
    Last edited by Michael W Richards; 02-03-2019, 09:16 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Robert St Devil
    replied
    I dunno Michael, "soliciting outdoors" brings to mind Mary Kelly's indoor murder however... even tho Annie Chapman's murder is technically outdoors, it was not outdoors in the sense of being "out in public" [Eddowes, Mitre Sq]; iow the backlot of 29 Hanbury was never-ever going to be under a constable's patrol. A person had to pass thru a house to arrive there, and the most-only risk of detection was from a resident or neighbor [Kelly, #13 Miller's Court], so the murderer was afforded limited privacy.

    For me, the Jack the Ripper murders are Chapman, Eddowes and Kelly - for the overkill, consistencies, organ-removal, &c. Of course, Jack the Ripper would be my prime suspect for the murders of Nicholls and Stride -and- a person of interest in the torso killings as well as Tabram, Mackenzie, &c. Much like this Toronto serial killer who has 8 known victims but may be under suspicion for other similar cases.

    For me, largest travesty in this case is printing the inquests in the newspapers. It's alright to report on the murders, but those inquests revealed too much about the scenes of the crime. Take Jack the Ripper's staging or posing of the victim's legs - only an investigator who had seen the scenes of the Chapman and Eddowes crimes could look on the Kelly crime-scene and notice a familiarity that was peculiar to the Whitechapel murderer. Instead, the inquests were allowed to be published so the authorities, in effect, were giving away all their "poker-tells".

    ​​​​...

    My gut is telling me that this Toronto killer was a community serial killer; community in the sense of focusing on people you work with, attend class with, know through church, &c. Compared to Jack the Ripper who is believed to be a society serial killer; society in the definition of strangers, random prostitutes, "one-night stands", online advertising, &c.
    Not to jest or make light of the Toronto tragedies but... 8-to-10 murders over 8 or 10 years is a lethargic kill-rate compared to the 3-to-7 murders that Jack the Ripper committed over 3 months. It would seem that the former may have afforded himself more time for consistencies. Maybe. Possibly?

    Leave a comment:


  • seanr
    replied
    I met a friend of a friend at a party, who was a psychologist/ criminologist by profession, whose work dealt with British offenders (including meeting them) and he was doing work in particular in identifying individuals and trying to identify signals that they may be entering a time of their life where they may be at a heightened risk of offending.

    When getting into discussion around why offenders, particularly sociopaths in the cases we were talking about, I asked a question why some particular dangerous offenders exhibit very different behaviours from other similar offenders. His illuminating response was that in discussing these we're are talking about a subset of a subset (sociopaths who have committed serious offences) and that there are actually so few that conclusive data isn't available even now after some years of study in the area, there is still not enough data to reach statistical significance on serious offender behaviour.

    There are good reasons to be very cautious in making conclusions about an offenders behaviour based on observations on the behaviour of another offender. There is strong risk of Survivorship Bias (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Survivorship_bias) in drawing conclusions on all serial killer behaviour based what we know about serial killers who have been caught.
    Last edited by seanr; 02-02-2019, 09:43 AM.

    Leave a comment:

Working...
X