probability her killer was interrupted is stepping a bit over the line
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Originally posted by Damaso Marte View PostThere's a limited extent to which I am willing to defend the views of Lynn Cates, seeing as I don't actually agree with them. I merely happen to understand and respect them.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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Originally posted by Boggles View PostReally? who did Schwartz interrupt then - Not Jack but someone else was knocking poor Stride to the floor at the same time (within 10 minutes) in same spot outside Dutfields yard?
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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Originally posted by Garry Wroe View PostAre you sure about that, Tom?
Which may have been the impetus for the GSG."Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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BS man was the tipsy man, but as Tom says Schwartz was there or there abouts before the alleged incident between the BS man and the woman, supposedly Stride.
If the Ripper was disturbed by Schwartz and Dimschitz then he hung around quite a while and didn't do much damage to his victim, compared to the other cases anyway.
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Originally posted by Garry Wroe View PostAre you sure about that, Tom?
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View PostI would agree with that except I would strike the word 'remote', since it's not more remote than any other possibility, and certainly less remote than some. But I agree that to say it's a probability her killer was interrupted is stepping a bit over the line since no one seems to have seen a man fleeing from the passageway post-murder.
It seems Damaso is ignoring my responses to him.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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White male.
30-45.
Separated or divorced from spouse.
Lived and worked in the area. (If he held a job at all)
Right-handed.
Nothing remarkable about his appearance.
No medical/anatomical knowledge.
Average intelligence. (Was literate, if only marginal)
May have wanted to be a cop at one point.
You're looking for a loser. A man who desired success among his peers but who was only ridiculed most of the time. Harbored a secret "I'll show them" attitude. Severe intimacy issues. Ex-lover pitied him and possibly gave him some form of support after their split. He was intimidated by women who had a strong personality because he dealt with alpha males on a regular basis. Obviously not the sharp-dressed criminal genius who fooled better, smarter men. And definitely not an eccentric artist who murdered women when he was bored.
He never communicated with his pursuers but he did pay attention to what "they" were saying about him and enjoyed it immensely. He got the recognition he so desired and all because of luck. He was perhaps the luckiest murderer in history.
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I saw this article, taken from a book in 1883. It made me consider what the mindset of men in the late 1800s was of women, and how Jack had this as his own outlook. He after all enlarged on it.
It's important to slip into that mindset to envision at the very least, the starting point, as I'm sure you all know. But reading this article made my skin crawl to think of those times.
Last edited by Beowulf; 05-14-2014, 10:56 PM.
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Out of the many documentaries, I think this one got it right for me personally (i forget the name of it for now). Nothing decidedly abnormal with him, maybe a little quiet, but not the top hat caped surgeon the general public think of when Jack is mentioned. This to me is JTR
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