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Did The Ripper Remove Organs?

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  • Did The Ripper Remove Organs?

    The title says it all. Did the killer removed organs? Trevor has a theory which you can check out on the thread below.

    I have posted these previous but I think it is worth posting them again for the benefit of those who want to believe that the killer removed the organs from the victim’s at the crime scenes in almost total darkness using what has been described as a long bladed knife Pic 1 shows the location of the uterus in the lower


    This is my summary of the opposing viewpoint…

    Trevor’s theory is that the killer didn’t remove any organs from his victims and that any missing organs were removed at the mortuary by organ thieves seeking to profit from them. He arrives at this conclusion because he is convinced that the killer didn’t have enough time, or the correct conditions in Mitre Square, to have removed them. Of course we can’t know exactly how long the killer actually had but this appears not to concern Trevor. He proceeds with his theory from this assumption. We know that the Doctors at the time saw no issue with the killer removing organs. No one at the time, whether Doctor or surgeon, ever said “hold on, our killer couldn’t possibly have done this.” Not one. Also, the police and the medical profession at the time would have been fully aware of any trade in organs and that they were being stolen from mortuaries so that we can’t accuse them of being unaware of any possibility of this having occurred. The removal of a victims organs is hardly an everyday occurrence so they would have been aware of alternative possibilities. Not one single person spoke about the possibility of this happening. The police and doctors all accepted that the killer had taken organs. They were there and they weren’t idiots. So what other points can be made?

    1. The theory is based around the killer having around 8 minutes or so to complete his work. Some knowledgeable people with medical knowledge have certainly doubted that it was possible but equally some have said that it wasn’t. It seems impossible to come up with a definitive minimum time required though which makes it impossible to show anything like conclusively that this couldn’t have been achieved.

    2. We can’t assume that the killer had only 8 minutes or less. We need to ask if it’s reasonably possible that the killer might have had more time? We know from other threads that the poor synchronisation of clocks was an issue for Victorians. It’s been stated that it wasn’t unknown to see different times on the different faces of some tower clocks. Even in 2025 our clocks, watches, mobile phones and laptops aren’t always synchronised. This isn’t a theory; it’s a fact. So we have to face the very real possibility of poor synchronisation having an important effect. Let’s just pick 3-5 minutes as an example (it could have been more, it could have been less) We cannot assume that Bishopsgate Police Station clock, Lawende’s watch, the clock that Harvey used and the clock that Watkins used were synchronised. In fact the likelihood is that they weren’t. So if Lawende and co thought that it was around 1.35 when they saw Eddowes, what if it was actually 1.30 GMT? And when Watkins believed that it was 1.44 when he discovered the body what if it was 1.48 GMT? Trevor makes a point that if there was a delay between Lawende passing and the couple entering the square it would have reduced the time available. This is obviously true but we can’t state it as a fact. I’m not stating as a fact that they could have entered straight away but it’s just as likely. So let’s suggest that they entered after a minute, meaning that Eddowes was killed at 1.31/1.32. If Watkins found her at 1.48 and we allow a minute for the killer to escape this would have meant that he’d had 16 or 17 minutes to do what he did. This is reasonably possible. It could have been less; it could even have been a little more. So we cannot say that the killer had just 8 minutes and so we certainly can’t say that he didn’t have enough time. This is just a fact.

    3. Although it’s debatable as to whether Stride was actually a ripper victim and accepting that Trevor disputes the Kelly’s heart was taken away, isn’t it at least suggestive that the two canonical victims that certainly didn’t have organs removed were the two where it can reasonably be suggested that the killer could have been interrupted?

    4. Why would organ thieves have removed organs before the autopsy? This can’t have been their usual method of course because corpses generally didn’t arrive at the mortuary with their abdomen’s already opened. There can’t have been any desperate time issues forcing these thieves to change their usual methods. So why would we think that they did on these occasions?

    5. Why would they have removed organs prior to the autopsy when staff at the mortuary (at least one of whom had to have been in on it) would have known that doctors had already examined the body in the mortuary. Yes, they can’t have been certain that those doctors had looked inside the opened abdomen but why would they have risked it? Phillips had been brought in specifically because he could compare Eddowes to Chapman. So the thieves would have been aware of the possibility that the doctors had noted the presence of one or both of the organs which were now mysteriously absent at the autopsy.

    Why would they have risked not being able to take organs again from that mortuary.

    6. Why operate during daylight hours with people coming and going (especially with such a high profile corpse) when they could have waited until after dark with far less chance of being disturbed?

    7. As we know that a part of the uterus was missing from the whole we might ask how this could have occurred while the body was lying on a slab with a light? Surely this kind of thing was more likely to have occurred if organs were being removed under more difficult circumstances?

    8. It’s suggested that no organ was removed from Kelly despite the doctor saying that the heart was absent after he’d listed all of the other organs found in the room. He couldn’t have mislaid the heart so why didn’t he state whereabout in the room that it was? Unless it had been taken away?

    Also, the issue of the heart is based on the assumption that we know why the killer removed organs. That he collected them as souvenirs is a possibility of course but might it not have been just to add to the shock/horror value? Maybe even a suggestion of cannibalism? The bodies were clearly displayed to shock after all. But in Miller’s Court the killer had time to make a scene about as shocking as it possible could have been so perhaps he just didn’t feel the need to remove organs? Or perhaps his destination after the murder was different for that night for whatever reason and he knew that he had nowhere to stash an organ?


    For me there’s no reason to doubt that the killer took organs away. There is no evidence for it and the reasons for assuming it just don’t add up.


    13
    The killer removed organs from Chapman, Eddowes and possibly/probably Kelly
    100.00%
    13
    The killer didn’t remove organs; they were stolen from the mortuary
    0%
    0
    Regards

    Sir Herlock Sholmes.

    “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

  • #2
    Message for Jon Menges

    Jon whenever I create a poll I always click on the ‘show voters names’ part but this time it looks like I forgot to do that. Is it possible for you to change that retrospectively? Maybe it isn’t?

    Thanks either way.
    Regards

    Sir Herlock Sholmes.

    “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
      Jon whenever I create a poll I always click on the ‘show voters names’ part but this time it looks like I forgot to do that. Is it possible for you to change that retrospectively? Maybe it isn’t?
      Ahem, I voted with anonymity in mind haha

      Comment


      • #4
        of course the ripper removed organs AND took them away. he gutted the victims, pulled out there intestines, removed internal and external body parts but didnt remove the missing organs!?! yeah right.
        "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

        Comment


        • #5
          I don't like dwelling on the injuries inflicted on the victims, but the removal of a kidney in near darkness (although perhaps it wasn't as dark as is usually supposed to be) in eight minutes, is exceptional. It is difficult to believe. Yet the Aldgate area somewhat exceptionally, included people who absolutely would have had the skill to do this in darkness or near darkness, and would have been used to doing it at speed because their livelihoods depended upon it. It is clear that the City police were convinced that the kidney had been removed and by a local man.

          Comment


          • #6
            Trevor doesn't believe that the killer could have removed organs in almost total darkness with a long bladed knife. A letter to the police in October 1888 from R. Hull of Bow, which I have previously quoted, makes it clear that an experienced butcher/slaughterer could do exactly that, and swiftly. A long bladed - 6-8 inches - sticking knife was the one he would normally use to do the job.

            "There has been nothing done yet to any of these poor women that an expert butcher could not do almost in the dark...As to the time taken ... I think it would be reduced to about one third stated by them."

            We know from the police surgeon that removal was done by someone used to removing organs "with one sweep of the knife". This is the work of a butcher/slaughterer not an organ thief who would have to have been more careful to avoid damaging the organ.

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Doctored Whatsit View Post
              Trevor doesn't believe that the killer could have removed organs in almost total darkness with a long bladed knife. A letter to the police in October 1888 from R. Hull of Bow, which I have previously quoted, makes it clear that an experienced butcher/slaughterer could do exactly that, and swiftly. A long bladed - 6-8 inches - sticking knife was the one he would normally use to do the job.

              "There has been nothing done yet to any of these poor women that an expert butcher could not do almost in the dark...As to the time taken ... I think it would be reduced to about one third stated by them."

              We know from the police surgeon that removal was done by someone used to removing organs "with one sweep of the knife". This is the work of a butcher/slaughterer not an organ thief who would have to have been more careful to avoid damaging the organ.
              So, how would a butcher or slaughterer have the anatomical knowledge to locate the organs in a human body and remove them in almost total darkness from a blood filled abdomen wake up to reality!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

              Another quote from Dr Brown` inquest testimony.
              “Dr Brown—“The bladder was in no way injured in the body, and I may mention that a man accustomed to remove the portions removed was asked by me to do so as quickly as possible. He accomplished the task in three minutes, but not without injuring the bladder”

              So Dr Brown asked a medical colleague who was an expert in female anatomy to try to replicate the perpetrator’s handiwork in conditions better suited to the job than kneeling on a cold, dark, dingy, rain-soaked pavement in Mitre Square. Yet with presumably better lighting, and without the adrenalin-pumping anxiety of possible discovery by a passing policeman, he could not remove the uterus with the cool surgical precision displayed by the killer and damaged the bladder in doing so, something the killer managed to avoid doing. In attempting the removal of the uterus the expert took three minutes bearing in mind this was carried out in a mortuary, of course we do not know if this timed exercise was carried out with the abdomen already open or the expert had to open the abdomen

              So how much longer would it have taken to locate and remove a kidney by such an expert in 1888, given the degree of difficulty and location? I would suggest at least 3-4 minutes, thus making a maximum total of approximately 7-8 minutes just to remove the organs alone, notwithstanding for the killer to carry out all the other mutilations etc to the body, which would have added to that time, and based on the results of Dr Browns medical expert in female anatomy to have been able to remove these organs in at least 7-8 minutes to have been able to do that I would suggest the killer would have had to have been on the same professional and medical level as Dr Browns expert, and not a butcher or slaughterer, that being so I have to ask why would such an expert need to kill to obtains organs when they were freely available to bona fide medical personnel at mortuaries under the Anatomy Act 1832.


              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post

                So, how would a butcher or slaughterer have the anatomical knowledge to locate the organs in a human body and remove them in almost total darkness from a blood filled abdomen wake up to reality!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

                Another quote from Dr Brown` inquest testimony.
                “Dr Brown—“The bladder was in no way injured in the body, and I may mention that a man accustomed to remove the portions removed was asked by me to do so as quickly as possible. He accomplished the task in three minutes, but not without injuring the bladder”

                So Dr Brown asked a medical colleague who was an expert in female anatomy to try to replicate the perpetrator’s handiwork in conditions better suited to the job than kneeling on a cold, dark, dingy, rain-soaked pavement in Mitre Square. Yet with presumably better lighting, and without the adrenalin-pumping anxiety of possible discovery by a passing policeman, he could not remove the uterus with the cool surgical precision displayed by the killer and damaged the bladder in doing so, something the killer managed to avoid doing. In attempting the removal of the uterus the expert took three minutes bearing in mind this was carried out in a mortuary, of course we do not know if this timed exercise was carried out with the abdomen already open or the expert had to open the abdomen

                So how much longer would it have taken to locate and remove a kidney by such an expert in 1888, given the degree of difficulty and location? I would suggest at least 3-4 minutes, thus making a maximum total of approximately 7-8 minutes just to remove the organs alone, notwithstanding for the killer to carry out all the other mutilations etc to the body, which would have added to that time, and based on the results of Dr Browns medical expert in female anatomy to have been able to remove these organs in at least 7-8 minutes to have been able to do that I would suggest the killer would have had to have been on the same professional and medical level as Dr Browns expert, and not a butcher or slaughterer, that being so I have to ask why would such an expert need to kill to obtains organs when they were freely available to bona fide medical personnel at mortuaries under the Anatomy Act 1832.


                www.trevormarriott.co.uk
                How many times had these experts been asked to perform this operation at speed? Had they ever worked with a production line of bodies, where they performed this operation multiple times in near total darkness?

                It's fair to assume that on cobbles or against an outdoor floor was not their normal working environment. The bladders probably have no economic value to them, perhaps particularly true if they are used to working with cadavers, so they will not have practiced their craft over multiple attempts, to ensure the bladder remains in tact and usable.
                Last edited by seanr; Today, 12:06 AM.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Hi Trevor,

                  To quote from the same letter, "I have never seen the inside of a human being, but, I presume there is little difference between such and a sheep or pig". This general concept seems to have been accepted by the police surgeons at the time, who made it absolutely clear to everyone that anyone accustomed to cutting up animals would have the relevant anatomical knowledge. We all know that comment and what it means.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Doctored Whatsit View Post
                    Hi Trevor,

                    To quote from the same letter, "I have never seen the inside of a human being, but, I presume there is little difference between such and a sheep or pig". This general concept seems to have been accepted by the police surgeons at the time, who made it absolutely clear to everyone that anyone accustomed to cutting up animals would have the relevant anatomical knowledge. We all know that comment and what it means.
                    Of course there is a difference between a human and an animal as to where the organs are located

                    You are forgetting the murder of Eddowes took place in the darkest part of Mitre Square, so how was a killer able to put his hand into a blood-filled abdomen which had been ripped open, in almost total darkness and be able to locate the organs in the first instance, then try to grip the slippery organs and then remove them in double quick time. It didn't happen!!!!!!!!!!!!!

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Hi Trevor,

                      I am forgetting nothing. Don't ask me how it was done, I wasn't there. I am quoting the evidence of the police surgeons who attended at the time. They specifically said there was enough light. They were there, they saw the evidence, and all of the conclusions about people accustomed to cutting up animals were theirs. We weren't there, alleged modern experts weren't there. I am quoting known factual evidence from 1888, not modern opinions from people who didn't see any of the evidence.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Doctored Whatsit View Post
                        Hi Trevor,

                        I am forgetting nothing. Don't ask me how it was done, I wasn't there. I am quoting the evidence of the police surgeons who attended at the time. They specifically said there was enough light. They were there, they saw the evidence, and all of the conclusions about people accustomed to cutting up animals were theirs. We weren't there, alleged modern experts weren't there. I am quoting known factual evidence from 1888, not modern opinions from people who didn't see any of the evidence.
                        And their opinions back then have now proved to be wrong.

                        Even Dr Brown back then was sceptical about the time it would have taken the killer and so he got another medical colleague to do a test, which failed.


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