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  • Abby Normal
    replied
    Originally posted by Simon Wood View Post
    The only problem with this load of hokum is that the name "Jack the Ripper" was not known to the public until after the murder of Eddowes.
    I think fiver was just referring to the serial killer, who yes at this point was not known as the ripper. Fiver, the ripper at this point was only known as the whitechapel killer or leather apron.

    please take note.

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  • c.d.
    replied
    Originally posted by Enigma View Post

    Possibly blackmailing serial killers is very effective, but we just don't get to hear about it. Neither the serial killer nor the blackmailer are going to tell are they?
    Most likely the blackmailer is not going to be doing any telling (of anything) if you get my drift.

    c.d.

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  • c.d.
    replied
    There seems to be another issue here that needs to be addressed. Once Eddowes was paid by the Ripper was she going to allow him to continue killing and just keep her mouth shut as long as the money kept coming? Did she have no empathy for any victim?

    c.d.

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  • Simon Wood
    replied
    The only problem with this load of hokum is that the name "Jack the Ripper" was not known to the public until after the murder of Eddowes.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fiver
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
    Well, we know that she was intending to sell information about someone she knew, and we know that privately there was some reward monies available. We know that she said she didn't have any fear doing this. We also know that she was drunk without having any money, by 8pm Saturday night. And we know that she was found in a place that was in the opposite direction of where her "partner" would be...with a bed already secured by said partner. We know that a robbery was taking place that weekend very close to the location where she was found, and that criminals were in that area, at that time. Was she hoping to negotiate a bigger windfall? Did the person/people who bought her drinks reassure her of her safety when they suggested meeting later around Mitre Square
    We know that a newspaper reporter claimed that the superintendent of the casual ward claimed that Eddowes claimed that she knew who the Ripper was and that she was planning. Maybe that's what happened, or maybe the reporter made it up to sell more newspapers, or the superintendent made it up to get more attention, or Eddowes was wrong.

    If Eddowes said that, then we know she was not afraid of collecting the reward before the Ripper found out she knew. That requires a great deal less courage and stupidity than trying to blackmail a serial killer. It takes even more courage and stupidity to meet that serial killer alone or while drunk or at 1:30AM or at a secluded spot, let alone meeting the killer alone and unarmed, at 1:30AM at a secluded spot, while drunk.

    We know that Eddowes was drunk, but how she got the money is speculative. She could have gotten a short-term job hawking or charing. She could have begged it, or stole it, or got it by prostitution. The idea that Eddowes got that money from the Ripper is the least credible explanation, though if it is true it strongly implies the Ripper was a poor man. A glass of gin cost about 3 pence - a rich man would have had enough pocket money to get Eddowes so drunk she would never wake up again.

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  • Al Bundy's Eyes
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post

    I am aware of all you posted there, that doesn't negate what I said...we know this person knew Kate, we know Kate saw her shortly before she was murdered, and I don't see, without questioning either the reporters honesty or accuracy, or the character of the superintendent, that it cant be accepted as stated. The only connection to MJK is the fact she is the very next presumed Ripper victim and Kates aliases reveal almost the complete name and address of Mary. That's just coincidental to many, perhaps you too, but not to me. Its part of a puzzle. Kates last 24 hours are mysterious.
    A fair point, yet you doubt John Kelly, or at least question his statements, such as to what was meant by 'partner', yet the superintendent "knew Kate". John Kelly knew Kate, and saw her in the 24 hours before her death, yet his statements are suspect, the superintendents are undoubtable?
    Really, I'm not trying to be argumentative, but why does one report from someone who "knew Kate" outweigh the others from someone who knew her for years?

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  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Originally posted by Al Bundy's Eyes View Post

    It's from The East London observer, and is the sole source of this quote, obtained by an inquisitive reporter.
    We treat inquest statements with caution, this must surely be treated the same.
    Also, this statement implies that Kate's reason for returning to London was to claim this reward, not because the hop picking was unsuccessful.
    It's one quote. It's far from concrete. Particularly when there is little else to back it up.
    Also, there is nothing in this to suggest a MJK conspiracy?
    Unless I've missed something?
    I am aware of all you posted there, that doesn't negate what I said...we know this person knew Kate, we know Kate saw her shortly before she was murdered, and I don't see, without questioning either the reporters honesty or accuracy, or the character of the superintendent, that it cant be accepted as stated. The only connection to MJK is the fact she is the very next presumed Ripper victim and Kates aliases reveal almost the complete name and address of Mary. That's just coincidental to many, perhaps you too, but not to me. Its part of a puzzle. Kates last 24 hours are mysterious.

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  • Al Bundy's Eyes
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
    Fair question A.B.E., and no, not to my knowledge. But the source is a superintendent of a casual ward in Shoe Lane that Kate had stayed in, and is therefore someone Kate did know. Not like a Carrie Maxwell, or George Hutchinson kind of claim. In this case we know she knew Kate, and saw Kate shortly before her murder. Interestingly she says she warned Kate about such a venture....something that people here point out all the time, but they forget that Kate answered that herself..."no fear of that".

    Coincidental that Kate made that claim, that she was warned about the dangers, and then she ends up murdered?
    It's from The East London observer, and is the sole source of this quote, obtained by an inquisitive reporter.
    We treat inquest statements with caution, this must surely be treated the same.
    Also, this statement implies that Kate's reason for returning to London was to claim this reward, not because the hop picking was unsuccessful.
    It's one quote. It's far from concrete. Particularly when there is little else to back it up.
    Also, there is nothing in this to suggest a MJK conspiracy?
    Unless I've missed something?

    Leave a comment:


  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Fair question A.B.E., and no, not to my knowledge. But the source is a superintendent of a casual ward in Shoe Lane that Kate had stayed in, and is therefore someone Kate did know. Not like a Carrie Maxwell, or George Hutchinson kind of claim. In this case we know she knew Kate, and saw Kate shortly before her murder. Interestingly she says she warned Kate about such a venture....something that people here point out all the time, but they forget that Kate answered that herself..."no fear of that".

    Coincidental that Kate made that claim, that she was warned about the dangers, and then she ends up murdered?

    Leave a comment:


  • Al Bundy's Eyes
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
    Well, we know that she was intending to sell information about someone she knew, and we know that privately there was some reward monies available. We know that she said she didn't have any fear doing this. We also know that she was drunk without having any money, by 8pm Saturday night. And we know that she was found in a place that was in the opposite direction of where her "partner" would be...with a bed already secured by said partner. We know that a robbery was taking place that weekend very close to the location where she was found, and that criminals were in that area, at that time. Was she hoping to negotiate a bigger windfall? Did the person/people who bought her drinks reassure her of her safety when they suggested meeting later around Mitre Square?

    I think Kate had bigger balls than brains, and she allowed this to happen by using that "high risk" strategy you mentioned. Its more a matter of connecting the known dots than anything, my conclusion is based around those dots.
    Hi Michael,
    You'll know better than me, are there other sources for Kate alluding to knowledge of the killer other than the one newspaper quote? Also, what are the provenance of the sources, in as much as, what makes them more than hearsay?
    I'm only familiar with the one source.

    Leave a comment:


  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Well, we know that she was intending to sell information about someone she knew, and we know that privately there was some reward monies available. We know that she said she didn't have any fear doing this. We also know that she was drunk without having any money, by 8pm Saturday night. And we know that she was found in a place that was in the opposite direction of where her "partner" would be...with a bed already secured by said partner. We know that a robbery was taking place that weekend very close to the location where she was found, and that criminals were in that area, at that time. Was she hoping to negotiate a bigger windfall? Did the person/people who bought her drinks reassure her of her safety when they suggested meeting later around Mitre Square?

    I think Kate had bigger balls than brains, and she allowed this to happen by using that "high risk" strategy you mentioned. Its more a matter of connecting the known dots than anything, my conclusion is based around those dots.

    Leave a comment:


  • etenguy
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post

    I for one don't buy into the recent suggestions that all five women conspired to do anything as a group, nor do I believe that they all knew each other. I do suggest Kate may have tried to blackmail the person she threatened to expose, because there are inconsistencies with her supposed patterns and unexplained assistance from some source (getting her drunk), plus the apparent need for aliases that suggest all was not normal in Kates life. I also know that having a robbery going on in that area, on that night, does put criminals in the vicinity, so its not suspicions without merit. There is also a suggestion of police surveillance, the only people near to that square that we can identify are police...3 detectives in a nearby alley, 2 patrolling the square, 1 living in the square and 1 retired policeman, working in a warehouse in the square.

    When those kinds of anomalies crop up I take note, and when a review of the aliases reveal almost the complete name and address of the very next woman to be killed by the alleged Ripper,.. its with some validation. Cumulative data suggesting Kate was engaged in some activity that did not involve John, that she was in the immediate area of criminals committing a crime at the time, and that one result of her murder that night was that no-one went to collect any rewards for giving someone's name to the authorities.
    I can understand why you think these factors combine to suggest something was happening outside of the normal. Do you have any other reason though to suggest Kate was trying to blackmail the killer? It seems a high risk strategy to do that at 1.30am in a secluded spot.

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  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Originally posted by Enigma View Post

    Agreed, even if they were acquaintances it is a big step to say they conspired in a plot.
    I for one don't buy into the recent suggestions that all five women conspired to do anything as a group, nor do I believe that they all knew each other. I do suggest Kate may have tried to blackmail the person she threatened to expose, because there are inconsistencies with her supposed patterns and unexplained assistance from some source (getting her drunk), plus the apparent need for aliases that suggest all was not normal in Kates life. I also know that having a robbery going on in that area, on that night, does put criminals in the vicinity, so its not suspicions without merit. There is also a suggestion of police surveillance, the only people near to that square that we can identify are police...3 detectives in a nearby alley, 2 patrolling the square, 1 living in the square and 1 retired policeman, working in a warehouse in the square.

    When those kinds of anomalies crop up I take note, and when a review of the aliases reveal almost the complete name and address of the very next woman to be killed by the alleged Ripper,.. its with some validation. Cumulative data suggesting Kate was engaged in some activity that did not involve John, that she was in the immediate area of criminals committing a crime at the time, and that one result of her murder that night was that no-one went to collect any rewards for giving someone's name to the authorities.
    Last edited by Michael W Richards; 10-28-2019, 10:25 AM.

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  • Enigma
    replied
    Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post

    I don't know, I can't think of another case where it's been tried before? Maybe it works well but just hasn't caught on?

    - Jeff
    Possibly blackmailing serial killers is very effective, but we just don't get to hear about it. Neither the serial killer nor the blackmailer are going to tell are they?

    Leave a comment:


  • JeffHamm
    replied
    Originally posted by c.d. View Post
    As a rule of thumb, attempting to blackmail a serial killer is generally considered to be a bad idea.

    c.d.
    I don't know, I can't think of another case where it's been tried before? Maybe it works well but just hasn't caught on?

    - Jeff

    Leave a comment:

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