Originally posted by David Orsam
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Pc Long and the piece of rag.
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostAnd by the way, my wife has taken ill and is in the hospital, so my generosity is limited.
You will be ignored from now on.
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostAnd by the way, my wife has taken ill and is in the hospital, so my generosity is limited.
You will be ignored from now on.
Best wishes to you and your wife.
JohnLast edited by John G; 10-06-2016, 12:46 PM.
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Originally posted by John G View PostI hope your wife recovers soon, Pierre. This must be a difficult time for you, and any recent out of character posts you may have made are therefore completely understandable at what must be a very stressful time.
Best wishes to you and your wife.
John
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Happy to oblige....
Originally posted by Pierre View Post
And another thing: why did he chose a bit of the apron?
Why not a bit of some other clothing?
Regards, Pierre
And it was white, so perhaps more clearly distinguished from the other clothes.
If we believe the killer deliberately wanted to leave evidence from the murder (perhaps to draw attention to the GSG), the white apron would be more likely to be noticed than some of her perhaps darker skirts.
Sorry to hear about your wife - I hope she recovers soon. God bedring.
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[QUOTE=Kattrup;394649]Happy to oblige....
I do not know, but I would guess there could be two reasons for picking the apron: it was the outermost piece of clothing, so if he wanted a piece of cloth before starting on the abdominal mutilations, it was the first in line.
And it was white, so perhaps more clearly distinguished from the other clothes.
If we believe the killer deliberately wanted to leave evidence from the murder (perhaps to draw attention to the GSG), the white apron would be more likely to be noticed than some of her perhaps darker skirts.
That is rather advanced, that´s good.
There was also some symbolic meanings of the apron in the 1880s. Rather interesting. I´ll wait to hear if someone knows anything about them.
Sorry to hear about your wife - I hope she recovers soon. God bedring.
Best wishes, Pierre
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostMy response was quite a detailed one in three paragraphs, Simon. Yours was four words.
So I think we can let the readers of this thread decide for themselves whose response is pathetic.
As usual yours David, was very easy to understand, as was Kattrups."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
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View Postsimons woods response, like most of his cryptic, ask- another- question- instead- of- answering posts is pathetic.
As usual yours David, was very easy to understand, as was Kattrups.
Abby - why do you think he chose the apron?
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Originally posted by Kattrup View PostThe title of this thread is misleading, in that it uses the word 'rag' for something that was easily identifiable as a piece of apron.
If I find half an apron, I can surely refer to it as such.
Calling it a 'rag' gives a false impression. It was a sizable piece of cloth, and white. Not that difficult to notice.
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostWell that's fine. It's just that you made a positive statement, telling me that nobody in Mitre Square could have known that Long had found something resembling a piece of apron and I was wondering what possible basis you had to make such an extraordinary statement. I take it from your answer that you had no basis.
Now my response to everything you've asked me is that it's all very simple. What must have been reasonably obvious from the start was that the bloodstained material was a piece from some recently worn item of female clothing (not an old rag, as some seem to think). Long's discovery of the material would not have been a secret within the police and it is 100% clear from Halse's evidence that the news of the discovery had filtered across to Mitre Square. As soon as Halse mentioned that a piece of Eddowes' apron was missing, it did not require the presence of Sherlock Holmes in the square for someone who knew about Long's discovery to suggest that the material found by Long was probably the missing piece of apron.
Consequently I just can't see what problem you are having with this Simon. It's child's play. Just common sense. And I might add that I haven't said that the piece of apron was "uniquely identifiable" as such but when Halse mentioned the missing piece of apron it's nothing more complicated than adding 2 + 2 to get 4 for someone to work out that Long's bloodstained item of clothing must have been the missing piece of the apron. Like I said, Sherlock Holmes not needed to solve this particular case.
Dr Phillips had possession of the Gs piece and he it would seem didnt go to the mortuary until the post mortem.
As to Longs testimony he says he found the rag "Lying in a passage leading to the staircases" The term "In the entrance" would be more fitting if he were able to see it wasnt there at 2.20am, having regard it was no doubt pitch black inside the stairwell, and of course there is no evidence to show he went inside the entrance at 2.20am. So I say again if it was there at 2.20am he could not have seen it without physically going inside.
There are clearly ambiguities here especially as it was supposed to be directly under the graffiti which was at the entrance.
On another ambiguity regarding Halse in another report he says he went to the mortuary and saw the body stripped and found a piece missing. That could be interpreted to mean that when he went to the mortuary he saw the body but it had already been stripped.
And another, Collard produces the list of clothing which doesn't show any apron, suggesting she wasn't wearing one. Then in another report he is quoted as saying when referring to the mortuary piece she was "apparently wearing" it. Either she was, or she wasn't a simple question asked at the time would have cleared this up, especially as so much emphasis was put on the apron pieces.
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostAnd by the way, my wife has taken ill and is in the hospital, so my generosity is limited.
You will be ignored from now on.
having been on the road all day, i have only just seen this post.
so very sorry, i hope she recovers fully.
please accept my best wishes for the pair of you.
Steve
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The apron was so dirty,that at first glance it seemed black.
Who said that? Walter Dew is reported as saying it.
A seemingly black piece of cloth,lying on a black background(the floor),on a dark night,in a dark recess,and a second or two's glance by a person passing by,and it would be easy to see.Then we have someone who surpasses even Hutchinson for a wonderful gift of sight,and recall.
Long states about 2.20,Halse states about 2.20,and they didn't see each other,and there is no ambiguity?As trevor states it's full of it.
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