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Did he have anatomical knowledge?

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  • Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
    Hello batman. Thanks.

    Your reply addresses intestines. I thought uteri were the point?

    Is it possible that he were not stationary during the whole time?

    Cheers.
    LC
    The point is what all the evidences suggests. The explanation has to encompase the lot.

    If you look at Eddowes and imagine JtR kneeling by her right elbow you can see that he has placed another organ part with his right hand on his right side. Also by her left elbow is another organ part. This was likely placed with the left hand over her.

    This position with Eddowes places JtRs back to the wall so he has full frontal view of Mitre Square.

    The drapping of intestines is to get them out of the way.
    Bona fide canonical and then some.

    Comment


    • Hi Errata, all

      In a nutshell, what occupation(s) and/or experience is needed?

      Comment


      • Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
        Hi Errata, all

        In a nutshell, what occupation(s) and/or experience is needed?
        I can't really answer that. There are a number of was any single thing could have been done. Each of which has different requirements. If he knew exactly where a uterus was by feel, he had to have surgical experience. Whether on the living or dead. If he found the uterus through the vaginal canal, then all he needed was rudimentary anatomical knowledge.

        He had knife skills, but they didn't have to be gained through occupation. On the other hand he was not so skilled as to maintain perfect control over the blade, so I doubt a butcher or doctor. But maybe that was adrenaline, so it could be a butcher or doctor. I would think a butcher would do things differently than how Jack did it, but that assumes that the cutting is a means to an end, and not an end itself and I can't say that.

        He has to be smart, skilled, confident and lucky. How or why he was any of those things is totally up for grabs.

        I have reasons for thinking he was not a butcher or a doctor, but I can't exclude either from having done this. But if I can narrow down the weapons used, I might get a better handle on it.
        The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
          In a nutshell, what occupation(s) and/or experience is needed?
          He wasn't afraid to use a knife.

          Comment


          • orientation

            Hello Batman. Thanks.

            "This position with Eddowes places JtRs back to the wall so he has full frontal view of Mitre Square."

            Eh?

            Cheers.
            LC

            Comment


            • I think the only type of person who could realistically answer the question of anatomical knowledge would be a surgeon or maybe a surgeon who actually trains people to be surgeons as he would see first hand the attempt of a novice.
              Three things in life that don't stay hidden for to long ones the sun ones the moon and the other is the truth

              Comment


              • Originally posted by pinkmoon View Post
                I think the only type of person who could realistically answer the question of anatomical knowledge would be a surgeon or maybe a surgeon who actually trains people to be surgeons as he would see first hand the attempt of a novice.
                Which is exactly who/what Prosector was.
                Have you read his(?) posts on the subject?
                Regards, Jon S.

                Comment


                • Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
                  Hello Batman. Thanks.

                  "This position with Eddowes places JtRs back to the wall so he has full frontal view of Mitre Square."

                  Eh?

                  Cheers.
                  LC
                  Sorry I should have said full view of most of the NE entrance.



                  From what I understand, in the NW corner of Mitre Square the body was found with the left side near a drain and a wall. Her head wound have been in the direction of the other wall, NW, and her feet pointing SE while her right side is exposed to the square.

                  If JtR where at her feet he would be facing this corner and have to look hard left and back a bit to see down the square to see someone coming. He would have no chance of seeing someone coming from the NE entrance which is behind him to the right from this position.

                  The better position would have been on her left side. Then he would see all of the square but not the NE entrance much. He obviously didn't choose left because working from the left is not the position he wants to be in.

                  Being on her right allowed him to have his back to the SE but a view of the NE passage which would have been his escape route but also the route where the beat officers would stand a better chance of seeing him in the dark.

                  From my understanding, there where two beat officers near this murder and one of them (PC James Harvey I think) could have simply walked a few meters forward with his light and revealed JtR in the middle of his deeds but his beat and light didn't go that far. Yet if we estimate the times, JtR must have been there with eddowes.... but I need clarification on this.
                  Bona fide canonical and then some.

                  Comment


                  • sketch

                    Hello Batman. Thanks.

                    The sketch seems accurate. If her attacker is at her right, his face would be TOWARD the houses and he would be facing Mitre st. So his back would be AWAY from the square.

                    Cheers.
                    LC

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
                      Hello Batman. Thanks.

                      The sketch seems accurate. If her attacker is at her right, his face would be TOWARD the houses and he would be facing Mitre st. So his back would be AWAY from the square.

                      Cheers.
                      LC
                      Yes, that's in the description.

                      I find it quite shocking how informative JtRs victims where on how to evade the local authorities by taking their clients to these spots. I don't think JtR lured her there on a false pretense that his house was nearby. I prefer to think that like Chapman and Kelly, she led him, unfortuntely to her fate. It seems she may have been aware that this spot would only be visited by one PC who could see there while the other couldn't at night.

                      I speculate from what I have read that JtR would have had his back to the PC who walked past the SW entrance. That PC shined a light in. Jack would not have been lit up but would he have noticed with his back to that entrance? If he did, it didn't deter him.
                      Bona fide canonical and then some.

                      Comment


                      • Things I know.

                        Hello Batman. Thanks.

                        I think that Kate and her assailant were meeting there.

                        Moreover, I think he was aware of:

                        1. Watkins's beat

                        2. that he was going in reverse that night.

                        Cheers.
                        LC

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
                          Hello Batman. Thanks.

                          I think that Kate and her assailant were meeting there.

                          Moreover, I think he was aware of:

                          1. Watkins's beat

                          2. that he was going in reverse that night.

                          Cheers.
                          LC
                          Lynn

                          Now that can only point to a select few of likely suspects would you care to expand ?


                          Comment


                          • going to waist

                            Hello Trevor. Thanks.

                            "would you care to expand?"

                            Oh, no. Waist is large enough as it is. Must cut back on the haggis. (heh-heh)

                            Cheers.
                            LC

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
                              Which is exactly who/what Prosector was.
                              Have you read his(?) posts on the subject?
                              Thanks for the tip
                              Three things in life that don't stay hidden for to long ones the sun ones the moon and the other is the truth

                              Comment


                              • Did Dr. Bond miss a newly taught medical technique?

                                Hi. I was wondering if Dr Bond missed a new technique in vivisection, causing him to mistakenly conclude that the murderer did not have medical expertise.
                                I’m asking because apart from this, my suspect Francis Thompson, who trained as a surgeon, matches Bond’s profile on the killer.
                                Francis Thompson was a 29-year-old, eccentric, solitary homeless vagrant. My suspect, who had recently come to a small some of money to buy himself a long dark overcoat. He also, as some people knew, because he told people, carried a dissecting scalpel concealed under this coat. Dr Bond’s progile, based on the victim’s injuries, on who the police should be seeking was this,

                                ‘…The instrument must have been … a butcher's knife or a surgeon's knife… [the murderer would] probably be solitary and eccentric in his habits, also he is most likely to be a man without regular occupation, but with some small income or pension…all five murders no doubt were committed by the same hand…I think he must be in the habit of wearing a cloak or overcoat’

                                Now I’ve already read that Dr Frederick Gordon Brown, the doctor who gave evidence at the inquest for Ripper victim, Catherine Eddowes. Dr Brown replied when asked if the killer possessed great anatomical skill,

                                ‘A good deal of knowledge as to the positions of the organs in the abdominal cavity and the way of removing them.’

                                Dr. Bond concluded that the Whitechapel murderer was not a medical man for what he thought were very good reasons. He said,

                                ‘In each case the mutilation was inflicted by a person who had no scientific nor anatomical knowledge. In my opinion he does not even possess the technical knowledge of a butcher or horse slaughterer or any person accustomed to cut up dead animals.

                                Dr. Bond came to these conclusions based on his observation of how the victims were taken down, also their wounds, mutilations and the removal of their organs. None of it suggested any method. Things such as the way the killer had cut out Kelly’s heart straight from the pericardium showed to him less skill than a cat meat butcher.

                                This might have been because 47-year-old Doctor Bond had not been introduced to the Virchow method. This was a technique of dissection from Germany. It required the removal of the heart via the pericardium. This was the then a completely new technique that was taught almost exclusively in Thompson’s student college and medical infirmary. From 1878 to 1883 FT studied to be a surgeon at Manchester’s Owens Medical College. He also trained at Manchester’s Royal Infirmary. Thompson’s lecturer of pathology at Owens Medical College in Manchester was Julius Dreschfeld (1845-1907). Dreschfeld graduated from Owens Medical College and then travelled to Wuzburg where he studied under Rudolf Virchow, learning his new autopsy methods. When Dreschfeld returned to Manchester, as well becoming Thompson’s lecturer of pathology he became assistant physician at Manchester’s Royal Infirmary, introducing Virchow’s new techniques when Thompson trained there. Dreschfeld was seen as an authority on the method and was instrumental in introducing it to England.

                                So that’s how a medically trained suspect might have cut out Mary Kelly’s heart and Dr Bond might have mistakenly concluded the killer was not experienced in anatomy.

                                Thanks.
                                Author of

                                "Jack the Ripper, The Works of Francis Thompson"

                                http://www.francisjthompson.com/

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