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  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by Errata View Post

    Also, in the reports it never says it was the severance of the right carotid. It just says the carotid.
    Ok, you have me puzzled now, Dr Phillips identifies the right carotid. We are talking about Mary Kelly?

    "...leads me to the conclusion that the severance of the right carotid artery, which was the immediate cause of death,..."

    .

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  • Errata
    replied
    Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
    I'm not sure if there's a hard and fast rule on being ambidexter. In my youth I won competitions playing darts, I'm right handed, I couldn't throw a dart, or a ball, or write, with my left hand to save my life.
    I can kick a ball with either foot, I just kick harder with my right.
    In cricket I can bat either handed, and catch with either hand, but only ball with my right.
    I imagine most people are the same, some things you can do with a favored hand, yet other activities can be done with either hand.

    .
    Which is why there true ambidexterity, which means doing every task equally well with either hand, and functional ambidexterity, where traditional handedness doesn't apply. For example, a person who writes with their right hand should be using scissors with their right hand, bat righty, kick left footed, stab right handed, etc. But say with me, I write right handed, use an exacto knife right handed, use scissors with either hand, stab and slice lefty, dial a phone left handed, use a sword it either hand, hand stitch left handed, am left eye dominant, I'm all over the place. The neuropsychologists were very fond of me. Of course, I have a left handed parent and a right handed parent. So a lot of it isn't dominance, it's about who taught me what. I just started to learn tradition wood carving and wood turning, and because it's a skill I'm picking up later in life, I am truly ambidextrous when it comes to those skills.

    Also, in the reports it never says it was the severance of the right carotid. It just says the carotid.

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  • Wickerman
    replied
    I'm not sure if there's a hard and fast rule on being ambidexter. In my youth I won competitions playing darts, I'm right handed, I couldn't throw a dart, or a ball, or write, with my left hand to save my life.
    I can kick a ball with either foot, I just kick harder with my right.
    In cricket I can bat either handed, and catch with either hand, but only ball with my right.
    I imagine most people are the same, some things you can do with a favored hand, yet other activities can be done with either hand.

    .

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  • Errata
    replied
    Originally posted by John Wheat View Post
    There is the possibility of Jack the Ripper being ambidextrus.
    True ambidexterity is rarer than albinism. I am considered functionally ambidextrous, but I cannot do things equally well with each hand. I'm right handed, but a number of skills right handed people do with their right hand I have switched to my left. Basically I've just divvied up the labor. And I honestly think if my handwriting wasn't so terrible, I wouldn't be considered functionally ambidextrous. It just so happens that even if I were to sign my name with a pen in my teeth it wouldn't look that different than signing with my dominant hand.

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  • John Wheat
    replied
    There is the possibility of Jack the Ripper being ambidextrus.

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  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by DRoy View Post
    Jon,

    Thanks for the reply.

    Yes you were correct about what was on the table, not sure why I thought the intestines were there!

    I get confused when people comment on left or right side of the bed. I always picture the killer on top of her and therefore the left side of the bed would be from the perception of the killer, not MJK's perception. Am I doing this wrong?

    Everything you said about the ribcage sounds like a sound theory to me.

    Cheers
    DRoy
    Hi DRoy.
    Everything about the body is viewed from the perspective of the body. The left side of the bed means, the left side from the body's point of view.
    In other words, Mary's left side.
    This is how any medical report should be interpreted, though I do recall one exception, I can't think who it was now.




    On the subject of directionality of the cut throat..

    I think most people have always assumed Mary was murdered while in the same pose as she was found, flat on her back. I find it strange that no-one appears to have questioned this.

    When Dr Phillips suggested she died due to the right carotid artery being cut, he was also assuming she was flat on her back when murdered. Therefore the logical conclusion is that the blood spray on the partition came from the right side of her neck.
    There is no reason to suppose this is true.

    Thankfully, Dr Bond tells us clearly that the cuts across the throat betrayed no evidence of directionality, whether L-R or R-L, could not be determined.

    It is my suspicion Mary was face down with her head near the top right corner of the bed. In my view Mary had been strangled just as the others appear to have been.



    The fingers on one hand were clenched, and ecchymosis was seen in the skin across the neck. Although neither of these are proof of strangulation, both are consistent with this mode of attack.

    In my view he then pushed her face down on the bed, climbs upon her back and pulls her head up to expose the neck, with his right hand he cuts her throat L-R, causing the spray from the left carotid artery to mark the partition.



    He then rolls her over onto her back into the position in which she was found.

    This makes Mary's death more consistent with the previous victims, not that it had to be done this way, but it is necessary to show that there is no reason to reject a right handed assassin for Mary Kelly's murder.

    .
    Last edited by Wickerman; 04-13-2013, 01:21 AM.

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  • Errata
    replied
    Originally posted by DRoy View Post
    Jon,

    Thanks for the reply.

    Yes you were correct about what was on the table, not sure why I thought the intestines were there!

    I get confused when people comment on left or right side of the bed. I always picture the killer on top of her and therefore the left side of the bed would be from the perception of the killer, not MJK's perception. Am I doing this wrong?

    Everything you said about the ribcage sounds like a sound theory to me.

    Cheers
    DRoy
    I think we are functioning from a face up Mary Kelly point of view.

    Leave a comment:


  • DRoy
    replied
    Jon,

    Thanks for the reply.

    Yes you were correct about what was on the table, not sure why I thought the intestines were there!

    I get confused when people comment on left or right side of the bed. I always picture the killer on top of her and therefore the left side of the bed would be from the perception of the killer, not MJK's perception. Am I doing this wrong?

    Everything you said about the ribcage sounds like a sound theory to me.

    Cheers
    DRoy

    Leave a comment:


  • Errata
    replied
    Originally posted by niko View Post
    Hi Erreta. I "like" your last post !! you give the impression on saying that some of the cut throat's were done from behind, this makes me sugest that the murderer was right handed, correct me if I'm wrong. How about this !! if Kelly's right cartoid artery was cut would that not mean the cut was from left to right ?

    Just another of my silly comments, I've read that in old freemason rituals the direction of the cut throat was from left to right !!

    Niko
    Well, here's the rub. We assume it was the right carotid. The coroner didn't actually say. There is a carotid on both sides of the neck, the blood was on the right wall, we assume she wasn't face down, so then it would be the right carotid. But it could have been the left. She could have been on her stomach. But considering her neck was severed down to the bone, I rather assume both carotids were cut.

    There's no way to tell the directionality of the cut. Typically, the entry wound is deeper than the taper, or where the cut ends. So on a single cut, like with Stride, we can tell the direction of the cut. But the rest had their throats sawed through, and that completely obscures the entry point. If we assume that the entry was on the right, and that the severance of the right carotid was accomplished on the first cut, then that would imply a right handed man in front of her, or a left handed man behind her. And it could be an either handed man on the side of her, though left handed appears to be somewhat easier. But that assumes she was on her back. If she was on her side, then the start of the cut could be on the right or left. If she was on her side and the right carotid was severed, she would have to be rotated on her back for the blood to hit the right wall. If the left carotid was severed, the she would have to be moved onto her stomach for the blood to hit the right wall. And if she as on her stomach, then it's the reverse of if she was on her back.

    But we don't actually know the entry point, we don't know her position when her throat was cut, we can't tell the directionality of the cut, And there is nothing to rule out either a right or left handed man. He could have done it with the knife in his mouth for all we know. Though I admit, a knife in the mouth lacks a certain amount of control. And then when it all boils down to it, even if we did know what hand he used, it doesn't help. He could have been a right handed man who used his left to do this one thing because it was easier. Which is something we do all the time.

    European and American table manners are the perfect example. When you use a knife and fork, the fork is in your left, the knife in your right. In Europe, when you finish cutting you put the knife down, and eat with your fork in your left hand. When American's put their knife down, you switch your fork from left hand to right, and then eat. American's are much more rigid about handedness. I guess the the theory is that if we don't switch the fork to the dominant hand we will stab ourselves through the soft palate or something. I was taught European table manners, and I was made fun of. A lot. But I'm far more flexible with handedness than anyone else I know. But given that eating is a dexterity skill rather than a strength skill, people who keep the fork in their left hand make their left more dextrous. So an English Ripper can more easily use his left than an American Ripper.

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  • niko
    replied
    famous left hander's

    Hi Erreta. I "like" your last post !! you give the impression on saying that some of the cut throat's were done from behind, this makes me sugest that the murderer was right handed, correct me if I'm wrong. How about this !! if Kelly's right cartoid artery was cut would that not mean the cut was from left to right ?

    Just another of my silly comments, I've read that in old freemason rituals the direction of the cut throat was from left to right !!

    I was surprised when I googled "famous lefthander's" and found out that this American president's were lefthanded.

    Gerald Ford.

    Ronald Reagan.

    George H. W Bush.

    Bill Clinton.

    Barack Obama.

    And yes !! Jack the ripper is on this list of famous lefthander's, all the best.

    Niko

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  • Errata
    replied
    Originally posted by niko View Post
    Hi everyone !! I was wondering if the other victim's throat wound's could shed some light to wether the murderer was left or right handed. Here are some description's of the neck wound's from the victim's inquests.

    Nichols - left to right.

    Stride - left to right.

    Chapman - from the left side of the neck on line with the angle of the jaw carried entirely round and again infront of the neck. (left to right I supose)

    Eddowes - the throat cut across. (it does not say left to right nor right to left)

    Kelly - severance of the right cartoid artery.(no left to right nor right to left is mentioned)

    I thought it would be rather easy to determind if the murderer was left or right handed BUT now I think it's impossible to really know !! all the best.

    Niko
    It all depends on whether or not he cut her neck from behind or from the front. And I think it changed. We know that for the most part, the victim's throats were cut when already on the ground. Eddowes may be the exception. Nichols I think was from behind. And by behind I mean he was kneeling above her head as opposed to at her side or whatever. The bruises on the jaw indicate that he was behind her, and he lifted her jaw to access to neck. Chapman cannot have been from behind, since she was sort of wedged int a corner, and there was room for him to get behind her. Stride I think was absolutely from behind, Eddowes may have been upright and moving, but I'm not sure. And then there's Kelly.

    And I just totally thought of something. We know that arterial spurt only comes out maybe an inch or two. It not like a Vegas fountain or anything. If the marks on the wall are from arterial spurt, then the marks are too high and too far away for her to have been just lying on the bed. She had to be pretty elevated, and about the level she was found... which is clearly not a sleeping position. But the pillows weren't soaked the way you would assume if her throat had been cut on them. The corner of the mattress was soaked. But she was left on pillows.

    We always assumed that he wouldn't sit in a pool of blood or anything, but blood clearly isn't a problem for him. What if he was kneeling at the headboard, and her head was in his lap? It's a pretty intimate gesture, but let's pretend. That would elevate her head and shoulder actually a little higher that the pillows would. If he cut her throat while her head was in his lap, the arterial spurt would be at the right level. And after she dies, he rolls her off his lap towards the wall so he can get up prepare and move her towards the center. Her head would be in the corner, and she would still be bleeding out. Soaking the mattress corner.

    She wouldn't see the knife coming, because he is behind her. But there are some problems with this. It is a VERY intimate gesture. Which means she either knew him fairly well, or she wasn't doing it of her own free will. Which would mean that she was unconscious, already dead, comatose, drunk, something. Though I suppose she might entertain the request. There's no harm in it really. But it just seems so odd. He would be holding her head in his lap while she was dying. Watching her. And he never seemed particularly interested in the death before. And she would have bled on his pants, although if they were black wool I'm not sure it would matter. But he burned clothes, and maybe the bloodstained pants were in there.

    Is this possible? Am I missing something?

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  • niko
    replied
    The neck wound's

    Hi everyone !! I was wondering if the other victim's throat wound's could shed some light to wether the murderer was left or right handed. Here are some description's of the neck wound's from the victim's inquests.

    Nichols - left to right.

    Stride - left to right.

    Chapman - from the left side of the neck on line with the angle of the jaw carried entirely round and again infront of the neck. (left to right I supose)

    Eddowes - the throat cut across. (it does not say left to right nor right to left)

    Kelly - severance of the right cartoid artery.(no left to right nor right to left is mentioned)

    I thought it would be rather easy to determind if the murderer was left or right handed BUT now I think it's impossible to really know !! all the best.

    Niko

    Leave a comment:


  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by DRoy View Post
    Jon,
    I was under the impression that at least her intestines were also placed on the table.
    Dr Bonds report makes no mention of organs, only flaps of flesh.

    Out of curiosity, how do you see the heart being removed from the pericardium as being a left handed operation?
    Just a guess really, if the heart was removed while the body was in this same position and the killer is standing beside the bed then using his right hand to reach up under the ribcage to remove the heart would be a bit of a contortion.
    Interestingly, we do not know if the heart was pulled out or if a knife was used to sever the attachments.

    I am certainly right handed but I don't think I would have a problem pulling a heart out with my left hand, but some might.
    That action is the only left-handed action I can see and a right handed person should have no problem doing it. Reaching up under the ribcage is easier done by a left hand if the killer is standing at the left side of the body.

    .

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  • DRoy
    replied
    Errata,

    I have no idea how to comment! You are the most inspirational writer on these boards. So always willing to share personal experiences yet give such an emotional and yet relevant aspect... Thank you for all that you contribute! If i can, thank you...

    Besides Errata being ninja to the fielld and this topic, anyone willing to share or challenge?

    Leave a comment:


  • Errata
    replied
    Originally posted by DRoy View Post
    Errata,



    Assuming just during Ripper re-enactments right?

    DRoy
    Mostly. He has also been a King Duncan to my Macbeth for a very dodgy blocking run in a truck. (Yes, we did Shakespeare in a truck) And once he hid behind a door and scared me, and I told him I would get him back when he least suspected it, so he woke up in the middle of the night to me standing over him a large sledgehammer. Which could have backfired if he didn't have an as intense appreciation for creepy as I do. He occasionally sneaks up to me in a store and starts not so surreptitiously sniffing my hair. It's true love.

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