Hi Harry,
As for #1, if you were to check the statistics for the number of Unfortunates living within the East End at that time it might explain how people could live in a small crowded area and still not know each other. As for the aliases, I wont belabor the point that having a murder victim use aliases which include the full name and partial address of the subsequent victim, supposedly by the same killer, is oddly coincidental and perhaps significant to the investigations.
#2, the man that saw and/or examined 4 of the 5 victims, the ONLY physician to do so, saw great differences with Liz Strides wounds and the skill and knowledge used by Kates killer. I don't find it difficult to accept the opinion of someone who saw firsthand the wounds we discuss, only the opinion of someone who critiques that opinion without any direct examination having been done.
All that links Polly Nichols murder to Mary Kellys is opinion, hardly a case closed scenario.
Originally posted by Harry D
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#2, the man that saw and/or examined 4 of the 5 victims, the ONLY physician to do so, saw great differences with Liz Strides wounds and the skill and knowledge used by Kates killer. I don't find it difficult to accept the opinion of someone who saw firsthand the wounds we discuss, only the opinion of someone who critiques that opinion without any direct examination having been done.
All that links Polly Nichols murder to Mary Kellys is opinion, hardly a case closed scenario.
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