Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Punishment

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • wigngown
    replied
    We have one on the Farm! A Billy Goat that is, not a suspect :-)

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    Originally posted by DJA View Post
    Knock yourself out,or find a Gruff Billy Goat.
    I believe you are attacking me, DJA.

    Kind regards, Pierre

    Leave a comment:


  • DJA
    replied
    Originally posted by Pierre View Post
    Hi,

    Yes, how interesting.

    If this happened in the past, there has to be an historical source giving a clear indication of it.

    That source should be an overlooked source and it should be easy to find.

    Kind regards, Pierre
    Knock yourself out,or find a Gruff Billy Goat.

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    Originally posted by DJA View Post
    If the files still exist,they will do enormous damage even today.

    There was an enormous cover up.

    Jack was well connected.

    Really doubt it was a big secret in certain quarters.
    Hi,

    Yes, how interesting.

    If this happened in the past, there has to be an historical source giving a clear indication of it.

    That source should be an overlooked source and it should be easy to find.

    Kind regards, Pierre

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    Originally posted by John G View Post
    Hi Pierre,

    According to Douglas, Burgess, Burgess and Ressler (2006), "MO and victimology are important factors in an investigation, but they are often somewhat generalized and offer less about the subtle details about personality and, ultimately, identity that are often necessary to track down an offender. However, personation, that is, the offenders signature, or his "calling card", is an individualized set of indicators that can point specifically to an offenders personality." (19)

    Hi John,

    Do you happen to know which the indicators are?


    In respect of multiple crimes there is often repeated personation. An example they give is Nathaniel Code: "He left his signature-gags, duct tape and bodies with gun shot wounds and gashed throats-at each of the three crime scenes. This linked Code with all eight murders."(ibid)

    But that says nothing about how the signature could be connected to one specific person. So how did they link Code to the murders? Certainly not by using the internal similarity between indicators in a signature? They must have found Code - did they find him due to the indicators?

    However, "the signature is not necessarily evident in each of the serial offenders crimes. Contingencies can arise, such as interruptions, or unexpected victim responses, that cause the offender to abandon these unnecessary steps. In such instances, the offender will be much less satisfied and gratified by his offence." (ibid, 22).

    Keppel et al, 2005, claimed that the C5 plus Tabram were linked by various signature characteristics, including picqurerism [which I would dispute], posing, overkill, and "leaving the bodies on the open and on display in an effort to further degrade them and shock those who discovered the bodies."
    Yes. But still, those indicators do not point out one single person as a murderer, not even at one single murder site. So how could this sort of analysis be of any use for that?

    Kind regards, Pierre

    Leave a comment:


  • wigngown
    replied
    Very interesting DJA, thank you. I haven't seen the letter you mention but will find & read it. Best regards.

    Leave a comment:


  • DJA
    replied
    Originally posted by wigngown View Post
    You mirror my thoughts entirely DJA. I think that when the Killers identity is revealed, as it will be, we will understand how he was able to escape the gallows and how he's remained an enigma for such a long time. I only hope that those who knew & kept the secret are damned for their actions.

    Best regards.
    Have you read WE Gladstone's letter to The Times?

    He pretty much said that Jack was performing research on these unfortunate women that would benefit the masses.

    I have no doubt who put that idea in his mind.

    There was an element of truth to that though.

    My family,like Eddowes',has a genetic predisposition to a group of diseases that he was actually researching.
    Eddowes and Nichols were long term patients of Jack's,initially as inpatients together. Same disease.

    Might give some readers an insight into the class differences involved here.

    Leave a comment:


  • John G
    replied
    Originally posted by Pierre View Post
    Hi John,

    OK. Do you know any of the motivations for that?

    And how much could the signature analysis give - could you build a theory of a killer and which aspects of the killer could it throw light on?

    How could it be of any help with hypothesizing about the ID of a serial killer?

    Regards, Pierre
    Hi Pierre,

    According to Douglas, Burgess, Burgess and Ressler (2006), "MO and victimology are important factors in an investigation, but they are often somewhat generalized and offer less about the subtle details about personality and, ultimately, identity that are often necessary to track down an offender. However, personation, that is, the offenders signature, or his "calling card", is an individualized set of indicators that can point specifically to an offenders personality." (19)

    In respect of multiple crimes there is often repeated personation. An example they give is Nathaniel Code: "He left his signature-gags, duct tape and bodies with gun shot wounds and gashed throats-at each of the three crime scenes. This linked Code with all eight murders."(ibid)

    However, "the signature is not necessarily evident in each of the serial offenders crimes. Contingencies can arise, such as interruptions, or unexpected victim responses, that cause the offender to abandon these unnecessary steps. In such instances, the offender will be much less satisfied and gratified by his offence." (ibid, 22).

    Keppel et al, 2005, claimed that the C5 plus Tabram were linked by various signature characteristics, including picqurerism [which I would dispute], posing, overkill, and "leaving the bodies on the open and on display in an effort to further degrade them and shock those who discovered the bodies."
    Last edited by John G; 03-16-2016, 03:51 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    Originally posted by John G View Post
    Profilers woukd say signature analysis, and I would probably agree.
    Hi John,

    OK. Do you know any of the motivations for that?

    And how much could the signature analysis give - could you build a theory of a killer and which aspects of the killer could it throw light on?

    How could it be of any help with hypothesizing about the ID of a serial killer?

    Regards, Pierre

    Leave a comment:


  • John G
    replied
    Profilers would say signature analysis, and I would probably agree.
    Last edited by John G; 03-16-2016, 03:05 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    [QUOTE=Elamarna;373880][QUOTE=Michael W Richards;373878]

    Hi Steve,

    I appreciate this post, thanks for writing it
    .

    Michael,

    very much like that post, it does need to be pointed out sometimes, that there is nothing concrete to link any of the killings.

    There are assumptions that they are linked based on the:
    Similarity of some injuries.
    Signature indications.

    Time scale (for the series of murders).
    MO indications.

    Limited area of killings.
    MO indications.

    Class and gender of victims (all poor, all women).
    Victimology indications.
    All apparently killed after dark.
    MO indications.

    Steve - do you have any ideas about which one of the three indications - signature, MO or victimology - would be the most important in understanding a serial killer?

    And what could the three different types give us in terms of knowledge about the killer?

    I don´t know so I don´t have any answer. I will have to think about this.

    Regards, Pierre

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    Originally posted by DJA View Post
    It's a damn sight more than you deserve.

    There is much more.
    Hi DJA,

    I would really appreciate if there is much more.

    By "much more", do you mean substantial data or what do you mean?

    And how would you define "much more"?

    Regards, Pierre

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    [QUOTE=Michael W Richards;373878]

    They are all unsolved murders assumed by many to have been a series.

    Hi Michael,

    Since you point out the fact the murders are assumed to be a series, do you know about any theory that has given connections between a single person and the whole series, that is, separate evidence at each murder site pointing towards one single person?


    Or do you perhaps know any theory giving connections to one single person from two or three murder site findings?

    For example, Fishermans theory gives only 1-3 connections för one murder site.

    Or do you think that the assumption about a series is exclusively constructed from the perspective of victimology and MO?

    Thought youd appreciate punctuating in your own fashion.
    I did. Thanks. I gets more transparent.

    Best wishes, Pierre

    Leave a comment:


  • wigngown
    replied
    You mirror my thoughts entirely DJA. I think that when the Killers identity is revealed, as it will be, we will understand how he was able to escape the gallows and how he's remained an enigma for such a long time. I only hope that those who knew & kept the secret are damned for their actions.

    Best regards.

    Leave a comment:


  • DJA
    replied
    If the files still exist,they will do enormous damage even today.

    There was an enormous cover up.

    Jack was well connected.

    Really doubt it was a big secret in certain quarters.

    Leave a comment:

Working...
X