Originally posted by Fisherman
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Blood oozing
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostPayne-James did not comment on times longer than seven minutes. In the exact same way, my analogy left out that kind of question, so the analogy is a perfect one. The kind you so dislike.
Payne James said that blood can flow for up to 7 minutes. That's it.
He did not say a iot about whether it could flow BEYOND seven minutes, and it´s time you realized that.
Otherwise, if that's not what he's saying, who knows what the upper limit is? 10 minutes? 15 minutes? 20 minutes? Half an hour?
And if we don't know his answer to that question, the answer he did give is worthless.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostYou are trying to misrepresent me, and you are trying to create the impression that I am a devious person who consciously misled Payne-James.
But, having done so, you are now deliberately and wilfully replacing the correct word of "ooze" with "bleed", "flow" or "run" in ALL your posts in order to try and limit the amount of time that Nichols could have lain dead before being seen by Neil, consistent with the answer you extracted from Payne-James, thus attempting to pin the blame for the murder on Lechmere, and you will have to explain to me why this should not be considered devious.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostSo why didn't he say so at the inquest?
He said the blood was running, and not only that it was oozing.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostHe said the blood was running, and not only that it was oozing. And it was running minutes after too, as Mizen arrived. That paints a pretty clear picture.
And if you ignore the fact that Mizen did not say that the blood was running when he arrived then you could think the blood was running when he arrived, as opposed to, say, when the body was moved onto an ambulance.
And, most importantly, if you ignore the fact that oozing blood is also running, but the word "oozing" allows us to be more specific as to the rate it is running, then you can replace an unambiguous word that a witness expressly used to describe the rate of blood flow with a more ambiguous word to make it seem like there was more blood flow than there really was in order to frame an innocent person for murder.
Well done.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostYes, that´s possible. But it is nevertheless the only source we have, and so it remains our best guess that the term was used.
It's a fantastic source but one which you seem utterly determined to ignore. And the fact you claim that an unattributed newspaper article is "the only source", proves that you are deluding yourself here.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostThe problem is that we cannot establish what it took for Neil to use the term profusely. It may have been enough that the blood was steadly running into the pool, which is what I think happened. There was never any torrent of blood, as I said before.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostEhrm - to "rely" on it would mean that I discarded alternative suggestion. Do you see me doing that, or do you see me saying that "profusely" is the only and therefore also the best source there is?
Comment
-
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostBut that is not true, is it? He used BOTH oozed and running. Why is it so important for you to leave that out?.
But even if it did, why would I use a vague and ambiguous word which could mean either running very quickly or running very slowly (i.e. oozing), or something in between, when I could use a clear, specific and unambiguous word which tells us, within its very meaning, how slowly the blood was running?
When you have the specific word of "oozing", the word "running" becomes useless and redundant. It does not contradict the fact that the blood was "oozing" but it adds absolutely nothing to it either. So the only sensible word to use here is "oozing", especially as this was the word used by Neil to describe the blood coming from the neck as opposed to the pool of blood on the ground.
The real question is why do you keep replacing the word "oozing" with other, ambiguous words such as "bleeding", "flowing" or "running"?
Comment
-
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostAnd just as it is impossible for us to establish what he would have meant by "profusely", it is equally impossible to gauge "oozing".
"Oozing" is a word found in any dictionary and only has one essential meaning so it is not "impossible" to gauge it as you bizarrely claim. It is a very simple matter.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostJust how logical is it that it went from oozing to running, David?
Blood that is oozing is, of course, flowing (gently) which means it is running by definition.
Whereas blood that is running is not necessarily oozing, it could be fast flowing.
So oozing blood is also running blood whereas running blood is not necessarily oozing blood.
Do you actually understand that? It's very simple for anyone who speaks English.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostWhy did not Mizen use "oozing" if that was what he saw?
So, the truth emerges: You really DO doubt that PC Neil saw blood oozing from the wound?
Is that right?
Because I can't think of any other purpose in you asking that question.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostElamarna:
Did I EVER say there was no blood under her? Did I not always say that there was a pool of blood under her, containing around half a pint of blood?
“I don´t think any such pool was ever mentioned in any source at all. Maybe you know better?”
However you have subsequently said that you consider the pool to have been under the neck only, not under the back as well.
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostAnd THAT, my friend, is the pool under the neck that is described. It was a mere fifteen centimeters in diameter, and the blood from it had run towards the gutter, as per Mizen.
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostAre you rooting for the idea that there was suddenly TWO pools of blood, both of them the same size and both of then running towards the gutter? Can you find any report at all mentioning TWO pools of blood?
That would suggest that the pool was an extension of the pool by the neck, but was under her, so could not be seen without moving her.
An extension is just that a continuation of the original, not a total separate object.
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostBut where, oh where, was that blood when the police checked the clothing for it at the morgue? You see, they could not find any blood but for in the upper part of the clothing, around neck and shoulders.
I pointed to the thread “Polly’s wounds what were they like” posts #174, and #179 yesterday. Has you appear to not want to consider those at all one feels the data must be presented again.
Let just refresh ourselves with Thain’s comment:
“He helped to put the body on the ambulance, and the back appeared to be covered with blood, which, he thought, had run from the neck as far as the waist.”
You say the Police could find no blood apart from neck and shoulders.
A look at the press articles in detail gives slightly a different story:
Firstly as reported on this site from the inquest:
“He noticed blood on the hair, and on the collars of the dress and ulster, but not on the back of the skirts.
ECHO 3RD
INSPECTOR HELSON,
There was no blood on the seat of the ulster or petticoats. The back of the bodice of the dress was saturated with blood near the neck. There was a discoloration as of a bruise, under the jawbone.
Manchester guardian 4th
“Inspector Helson, J division, gave a description of the deceased's clothing. The back of the bodice of the dress, he said, had absorbed a large quantity of blood, but there was none upon the petticoats. .
The Star 3rd
INSPECTOR HELSTON
“ No blood had soaked through the petticoats or the lower part of the ulster, but the back of the bodice had absorbed a good deal which had apparently come from the neck, and so had the corresponding part of the ulster.”
And just to be fair, we have another report first published in the East London Observer of Sept. 1st, 1888, it provides some further information
“Contrary to anticipation, beyond the flannel petticoat, and with the exception of a few bloodstains on the cloak, the other clothing was scarcely marked. The petticoat, however, was completely saturated with blood, and altogether presented a sickening spectacle.”
This last report is contrary to all the preceding ones, claiming the lower clothing is marked and the upper is not. Odd report.
From those it is clear there was NO blood on her skirts or the Seat(backside) of her coat. But Nowhere does it say the blood is only in the areas you say it is, that is personal interpretation of the sources.
Maybe you are right, maybe I am, but it's certainly not definitive.
None of them actual contradict what Thain said do they?
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostSo you are seriously suggesting that Llewellyn took it upon himself to comment on the scarcity of blood, failing to realize that there may have been blood under the body? Here´s Neil from the inquest:
Yes, why not he seems to have had a bad day.
Originally posted by Fisherman View Post"I said to him, "Run at once for Dr. Llewellyn," and seeing another constable in Baker's row I sent him for the ambulance. The doctor arrived in a very short time. I had, in the meantime, rung the bell at Essex Wharf, and asked if any disturbance had been heard. The reply was "No." Sergeant Kirby came after, and he knocked. The doctor looked at the woman, and then said, "Move the woman to the mortuary. She is dead, and I will make a further examination of her." We then placed her on the ambulance, and moved her there.
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostSo we can see that Neil was around as the body was removed and wheeled away. Now, let´s see how the questioning proceeds:
The Coroner - Did you notice any blood where she was found?
Witness - There was a pool of blood just where her neck was lying. The blood was then running from the wound in her neck.
So Neil was asked, after he had told the coroner that he saw the body wheeled off, if there was any blood where Nichols had been found, and Neil says that there was "a pool". Not two pools. A pool.
No one has suggested two pools.
So this comment by Neil refers to what he saw when the body was removed?, Therefore is wording “running from the neck” also refering to this period? any if not what definitive information in the source leads you to that conclusion.
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostAnd what about Helson, who said "He noticed blood on the hair, and on the collars of the dress and ulster, but not on the back of the skirts" ?
If she was lying in a pool of blood, how come none of it was set off on the clothes? Is that not rather remarkable?
steve
Comment
-
Originally posted by Fisherman View Post[B]No, it is based on a combonation of Llewellyn telling us that the buk of the blood went into the abdominal cavity, AND the fact that highly absorbing cloth will be soaked through in large areas due to capillary power. Didn´t happen here, though.
Second point, from looking at the reports of the clothing it seems it did to some extent, its how one looks at it.
steve
Comment
Comment