Me too, Damaso.
I also think Mylett's death could be explained by a killer rapidly going off the boil after Kelly and finding himself outdoors again in the depths of winter. I think it was only luck that Kelly turned out to have a room of her own to offer Jack.
Serial killers tend to like their creature comforts.
Love,
Caz
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Originally posted by Mr Lucky View PostI'm not sure if it is a classic series unless you stop at Kelly, which leaves Mylett, Mackenzie and Coles as the victims of another, yet they share similarities with Tabram and Nichols. So what's going on?
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Hi Michael,
Originally posted by Michael W Richards View PostWe have evidence in some cases, not all, that some kind of ligature or artifact may have been used to choke the women first.
That alone is enough to create the silence that seems to accompany "Ripper" murders, and hardly something that would be considered a unique approach and used only by Jack.
The quiet connected with the killings was in the public domain, the use of a ligature wasn't. So why would a copy-cat use a ligature?
How many victims wore scarves? Which ones?
How many had the protruding tongue?
The postmortem evisceration is what really matters most when we talk about Jack, and if he killed only the Canonicals, and was institutionalized or incarcerated during the winter of 89.....then explain Alice Mackenzie in terms that do not suggest a very similar style murder to some of the Canonicals.
Slitting the throat isnt enough of a litmus test, its not really a unique choice for that era or any era for that matter.
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We have evidence in some cases, not all, that some kind of ligature or artifact may have been used to choke the women first. That alone is enough to create the silence that seems to accompany "Ripper" murders, and hardly something that would be considered a unique approach and used only by Jack.
How many victims wore scarves? Which ones? How many had the protruding tongue?
The postmortem evisceration is what really matters most when we talk about Jack, and if he killed only the Canonicals, and was institutionalized or incarcerated during the winter of 89.....then explain Alice Mackenzie in terms that do not suggest a very similar style murder to some of the Canonicals.
Slitting the throat isnt enough of a litmus test, its not really a unique choice for that era or any era for that matter.
Cheers
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Hi Caz,
Originally posted by caz View PostI have asked this in the past, and nobody seems to know that either.
If it is a complete mystery how one killer managed to overpower his victim(s) swiftly and silently before inflicting a fatal wound, it would be an even bigger mystery how one or more copy-cats could have known to use a similar method, let alone been able to achieve the same result each time.
So did John Brown manage to kill in silence?
Well, here's what his neighbour, Mr Redding, said at the trial;-
'I live next door to the prisoner—I have known him living there twelve months—about 10 minutes to 11 on Saturday night, 29th September, I heard someone walk downstairs in the next house—immediately after I heard a scuffle in the front room and heard a woman call out "Oh, don't!"—I went with my wife to the front door, and heard a thud, as from somebody falling on the floor; then all was quiet; as we got to the door I saw the prisoner leave the house by the front door; he slammed it after him and walked hurriedly away' - Oldbaileyonline
What is fairly mind boggling for me is the idea of several different killers being able to pull off such a clever collective trick, back in 1888, of looking for all the world like one of the many classic serial murder cases of subsequent decades.
I'm not sure if it is a classic series unless you stop at Kelly, which leaves Mylett, Mackenzie and Coles as the victims of another, yet they share similarities with Tabram and Nichols. So what's going on?
How would they have known how to achieve this, if it was by design, and what are the chances of them doing so by accident?
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Originally posted by Mr Lucky View PostHi Damaso,
Thanks, that's very interesting - nobody knows - so how did the copy-cat know?
I have asked this in the past, and nobody seems to know that either.
If it is a complete mystery how one killer managed to overpower his victim(s) swiftly and silently before inflicting a fatal wound, it would be an even bigger mystery how one or more copy-cats could have known to use a similar method, let alone been able to achieve the same result each time.
What is fairly mind boggling for me is the idea of several different killers being able to pull off such a clever collective trick, back in 1888, of looking for all the world like one of the many classic serial murder cases of subsequent decades.
How would they have known how to achieve this, if it was by design, and what are the chances of them doing so by accident?
Love,
Caz
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Originally posted by Damaso Marte View PostIt's indisputable that Eddowes was subdued, lowered to the ground, and then cut. It's a good bet that this was done in silence, just like the other canonicals, because we had people living in the square and a night watchman closeby who heard nothing. I have no idea how this happened, and neither do you or any other poster on this site.
Thanks, that's very interesting - nobody knows - so how did the copy-cat know?
Possibilities include:
(a) Eddowes was incapacitated with some kind of headlock
(b) Eddowes fainted
(c) Eddowes WAS strangled, but for some reason no signs of strangulation appeared on the body
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Originally posted by Mr Lucky View PostHi Damaso,
So how was the cutting on the ground in silence actually done ?
Possibilities include:
(a) Eddowes was incapacitated with some kind of headlock
(b) Eddowes fainted
(c) Eddowes WAS strangled, but for some reason no signs of strangulation appeared on the body
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Originally posted by Michael W Richards View PostLets take another example rather than just Canonicals....does anyone see familiarity with the 5 in the murder of Alice Mackenzie?
The police sure did. Does that mean we have the same person...or does it indicate that people were influenced by what they have read...even killers.
Alice Mackenzie was stabbed in the throat, like Nichols and Tabram, and throat was also attacked from the left side, like Nichols, Stride and Eddowes
I raised this issue before, but in Ontario last year we had a murder that involved cutting up the body afterwards. Within a month another murder occurred in Buffalo, NY, that involved the same attributes. Did killer B get ideas from killer A?
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Lets take another example rather than just Canonicals....does anyone see familiarity with the 5 in the murder of Alice Mackenzie?
The police sure did. Does that mean we have the same person...or does it indicate that people were influenced by what they have read...even killers.
I raised this issue before, but in Ontario last year we had a murder that involved cutting up the body afterwards. Within a month another murder occurred in Buffalo, NY, that involved the same attributes. Did killer B get ideas from killer A?
Cheers
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Originally posted by Mr Lucky View PostSo in regards to next murders, the double event, what's the evidence for any kind of strangulation?
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Chapman
The first official mention of any of these women being throttled in any way occurs during the Chapman Inquest when Dr Phillips states;-
he was of opinion that the breathing was interfered with previous to death
The face was swollen and turned on the right side. The tongue protruded between the front teeth, but not beyond the lips. The tongue was evidently much swollen.
I think it unlikely that a copy-cat killer would attempt to strangle Chapman simply because there is nothing about this in the press reports of the Nichols murder, and he would be unlikely to do so based on the slim reference in the Tabram murder.
The standard serial killer compelled by his own internal drives would likely repeat what he had done previously
The learning killer could just use the same proven method to achieve the same result.
So it seems likely that by suffocating Chapman her killer appears to be the same person who killed Nichols and Tabram, as using this initial suffocation method prior to using the knife wasn't in the public domain.
So a quick overview-
1- All three victims Tabram, Nichols and Chapman show some sign of throttling/strangling
2- All three victims are killed in near silence*, or at least, without any screams heard
3- The press do mention that Tabram appears to be strangled, but in connection with the difficulty in identifying her.
4- No press/official mention of any kind of suffocation in Nichols
5- Dr Phillips deposes at inquest that Chapman showed signs of suffocation.
* = possible exceptions - Harriet Lilley, Albert Cadosche
The question is would a copy-cat killer attempt to fit his rogue killing in with the previous murders by using suffocation of some kind, this isn't an aspect of the crimes that had caught the publics imagination in the way that some characteristics of the killing did, though the silence of the murderer was certainly part of the publics perception ( Leather Apron moved silently for example.) However this information was for the first time actually given in evidence at the inquest by the Doctor and recorded in the press, surely no-one hoping to achieve a realistic copy-cat killing could fail to take this into account.
So in regards to next murders, the double event, what's the evidence for any kind of strangulation?
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Ok, just to look at some other aspect of the copy-cat notion and how it fits in with the crime scenes
Had nobody connected the throttling with the silence of the attack ?
Tabram/Nichols
As I posted earlier that difficulty in identifying Tabram had been put down as being due to the throttling she had received prior to being murdered, but nowhere is this throttling given as a possible reason for no-one hearing her actually being murdered
The difficulty of identification arose out of the brutal treatment to which the deceased was manifestly subjected, she being throttled while held down, and the face and head so swollen and distorted in consequence that her real features are not discernable.
Despite this lack of difficulty in identifying her, most who study the crime now believe Nichols was asphyxiated in some way, prior to being murder by the knife injuries, but there is no direct contemporary mention anywhere of throttling or strangulation in connection with her attack. However one of mysteries connected with the Nichols murder was again, just as with Tabram, the silence of the attack.
The absence of screams and noise was still noted by Swanson in his 19 October report -
'Coffee stall keepers, prostitutes, the night watchman in Winthrop street - as street parallel to Buck's-row - as well as the inhabitants of Buck's-row, were questioned but were unable to help the police in the slightest degree. They had not seen the woman, nor had they heard any screams or noise.'
'Well, I heard something I mentioned to my husband in the morning. It was a painful moan - two or three faint gasps - and then it passed away. It was quite dark at the time, but a luggage train went by as I heard the sounds. There was, too, a sound as of whispers underneath the window. I distinctly heard voices, but cannot say what was said - it was too faint.'
If the investigators are expecting the witnesses to have heard screams during the night, have they assumed that the women were conscious and capable of screaming when first attacked, and that the nature of the attack would have allowed/provoked the victim into responding in this way?
The appearance of the body, and in regards to the location of the blood at the Nichols murder, suggest that the knife had only been used on the woman when she was already lying down, how did she end up lying down?
However this occurred, would this delay while the killer got her on to the ground have given her the opportunity to scream?
So, is the killer throttling the women as a way of killing in silence or does he have another way of silently incapacitating the victim, who he then throttles before attacking with the knife ?
The killer compelled by his own internal drives would likely repeat what he had done previously, but if the women had been attacked by the killer with intention of them being incapacitated or silenced immediately, then the throttling was just a way of bringing this about and the learning killer could just use a different method to achieve the same result.
The copy-cat should try to stick with the method that had been used before, otherwise, the danger is that the copy may well be recognize as an original.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostPhillips had to have considered any possibilities involving both the killer and the witnesses manhandling the body in the yard. Naturally, he would not question a policeman, and would likely expect another medical man to indicate that they were responsible.
The only policeman to whom suspicion could be attached was not questioned directly on the matter, and may not have even been in the courtroom as the subject evolved.
She may have bled to death rather slowly but there is no indication she was conscious. The fact she retained hold of the cachous, and that apparently there was no blood on her left hand would suggest she was not conscious, wouldn't it?
Isn't it natural that a person bleeding from the throat will raise both hands to feel her neck?, this would also require her rolling onto her back however momentary, but her clothes show no such activity, nor of her even raising her left hand.
There is just nothing to indicate her being conscious that I can see.
No matter how many alternate scenario's are proposed, the action of a bloodied hand of another person feeling for a pulse must be the least complicated and most likely solution.
All the best,
Fisherman
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