Originally posted by Michael W Richards
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Mary Jane Violence
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Originally posted by Al Bundy's Eyes View PostHi Sam,
"The partition was so thin I could have heard Kelly walk about in the room. I went to bed at half-past one and barricaded the door with two tables. I fell asleep directly and slept soundly."
Elizabeth Prayers inquest testimony.
Her official inquest statement also preserves the same sequence of events as recounted in the Telegraph transcript: "On the stairs I could [have seen] a glimmer through the partition if there had been a light in the deceased's room. I did not take particular notice - I could have heard her moving if she had moved. I went in about 1:30 [and] put two tables against the door. I went to sleep at once."
Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
In your world, perhaps. But that is a world in which the fewest cohabitate with you. That is not to say that you must be wrong, although I certainly believe you are. There can be no rational reason to discard the evidence pointing to a shared identity, only cramped efforts to explain them away. Which is what I am seeing here.
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Originally posted by Al Bundy's Eyes View PostHi Sam,
"The partition was so thin I could have heard Kelly walk about in the room. I went to bed at half-past one and barricaded the door with two tables. I fell asleep directly and slept soundly."
Elizabeth Prayers inquest testimony.
c.d.
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Originally posted by Lipsky View Post
Fisher, is your attempt to sound like Rust Cohle deliberate?
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Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
I hope you don´t mind me answering you, Gareth. I noticed that on the other site, you lament how I make too many posts.
Now, back to the REAL discussion.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
From what I gather, Rust Cohle is a fictional character, but since I have not had the joy/poor luck to watch any of the material involving him, I must leave your question unanswered. I am sorry if that nags you in any way, but you are of course always welcome to ask your question in another manner so that I can answer it. He who dares, wins.
"He who dares, wins" -- true for the Ripper as well, right? His audacity served him well.
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostShe also qualified her statement by saying that she often heard such cries "from the back of the lodging-house, where the windows look into Miller's Court". Well, Kelly's room's windows looked into the Court, and Kelly's room was at the back of the house, so it would have been quite natural for someone living at the front of the house to perceive that the sound emerged from somewhere in the direction of the Court, and to describe it in similar terms.
If Prater's room actually overlooked the Court (i.e. it was above Kelly's), then she'd have said "I often hear such cries in the Court, outside my window"; in other words, Prater would not have referred to the back of the lodging house if she also lived at the back of the lodging-house.
But she didn't, of course. She lived at the first floor front room (Daily Telegraph 10th Nov), above the shed (Daily Telegraph, 13th Nov), from which vantage-point a mere tap on Kelly's window or door was extremely unlikely, if not impossible, for Prater or her cat to hear... especially from behind a shut (and barricaded) door.
Can you point me to those sources? I don't doubt what you say, it's just that I can't find them using the Casebook press reports search function.
I've no problem with that but, whatever disturbed Diddles, it wasn't a mere knock on Kelly's door or a tap at her window.
As to sounds from inside the house, considering what we know of Victorian creaky old furniture, boots on hardwood, what dragging a bed across the floor might have sounded like from rooms up above, whether she was oriented towards the front of the Dorset facing house or not, she probably heard lots that was going on inside the house. Ill find that specific..."I could hear when Mary moved things about..."
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Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
I still looking for that specific reference Sam, in the meantime I found this in the Nov 12th Times "Shortly afterwards, when inside her father's house she heard a cry of "Murder" in a woman's voice, and she alleges the sound came from the direction of Kelly's room." ... That seems to indicate that Elizabeth could hear things from, at the very least, the immediate area of Mary Kellys room. We know that there was an upper window above the 2 that Marys room had, I contend that may have been a hallway windowKind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
In your world, perhaps. But that is a world in which the fewest cohabitate with you. That is not to say that you must be wrong, although I certainly believe you are. There can be no rational reason to discard the evidence pointing to a shared identity, only cramped efforts to explain them away. Which is what I am seeing here.
I think that people are correct when they see someone plunging into the abyss in that room, whomever did this was never the same after it, but I don't believe that it has to be interpreted as a result of prior murders culminating in a masterpiece of gore...I think someone was very angry, then curious. I think there may well have been an attempt to make this look Ripperish after the murder itself, and this guy didn't understand these acts true significance to the real Ripper. Breast under the head, uterus between the legs...Annies killer had no time or interest for such rubbish. The intestines were in the way, thats all.
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Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
I hedged in Marys case because I believe he had ample alone time to take off her arms, or legs, or head while in that room. If he can strip her thigh clean with a knife, cutting off the tissues that cling to the bone.. and all that muscle, tendon and fat..he could have easily cut through a thigh bone in the same time, or removed it at the hip joint, or cut off her head. He didn't.
Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by Lipsky View Post
It doesn't nag me. Take the time to watch some of "the material involving him" -- then maybe you'll find my comment was maybe less negative than what you perceived.
"He who dares, wins" -- true for the Ripper as well, right? His audacity served him well.
But I agree that the Rippers audacity served him well.
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