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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by Elamarna View Post
    With all due respect I do not think you have understood that paper, it talks about venous pressure in the liver, not system wide arterial pressure.

    It also makes it clear that there must be a time gap after asphyxiation without any blood letting for this to occur.
    This is of course as far as we know not the case with Nichols.



    Venous pressure not arterial as Paul points out.


    Steve
    Letīs see his next post, shall we?

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by Elamarna View Post
    He does not, he talks of blood from vessels he sees in the abdominal area, you infer he means all the body, but he does not say that.
    Second point, from looking at the reports of the clothing it seems it did to some extent, its how one looks at it.


    steve
    The arteries and veins of the abdominal area are actually part of a closed blood circuit. When they are emptied, it is due to the system not refilling them.

    And yes, the clothing issue is how one looks at it. Like how the police looked at it, stating that there was blood only at the upper parts.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by Elamarna View Post
    Well you certainly appeared to in post #290
    “I donīt 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.


    It was never described as being 15 centimeters, it was described as 6 inches in the sources and that is what we should work with (the fact that 15centermeters is almost equal to 6 inches is actually irrelevant.).



    Don’t think so, you were obviously confused I posted in post #296 :
    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.



    Well that is a matter of opinion is it not? I see that you fully ignore the points raised many times about this in favour of your own interpretation.

    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?




    Yes, why not he seems to have had a bad day.



    Which does not show Llewellyn carried out any comprehensive examination of the scene





    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.




    No see above, he does not mention there is no blood on her back, just none on her skirts, Thain said to the waist, not below.



    steve
    So...? Lets see here, what are you arguing? Ah, yes - we should absolutely not say that the pool was 15 centimers in diameter. I mean, it WAS, and you recognize that - but we should NOT say it.

    And when we have two reports, one where it is included that the collar and the upper part of the dress at the shoulders only was bloodied, and where this information is left out in the next, that points to an equal chance that it was ALL bloodied.

    I see.

    Next!

    Leave a comment:


  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
    Then you DO have limited gifts of understanding, and I really should not mock you for that. It would be like mocking somebody for a large nose or an obese disposition, and that is so not fair.
    What I do know is that by asking why Mizen did not use the word "oozing" you must be doubting that the blood WAS oozing.

    I note that you have not offered any alternative explanation.

    Leave a comment:


  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
    You donīt know if Neil did use the word profusely, Iīm afraid. The articles indicate that he may well have.
    No, the articles don't indicate anything of the sort. Neil is not quoted at all, nor is anything in the article sourced to Neil.

    Neil could have used any word in the English language, of course, but he is never quoted at any time ever as using the word "profusely" whereas we know for a fact that at the inquest he used the word "oozing", so why don't you accept it?

    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
    So you can gauge "oozing"? Then tell me the exact volume of blood per second that it refers to with a woman with a cut neck. What is too much, what is too little? You CAN gauge it, remember.
    Don't be silly Fisherman. What we know about oozing is that it means that there was a gentle flow of blood, a trickle. That is all we need to gauge. Because we know from Dr Biggs that such oozing can easily last for 20 minutes.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
    Oh my goodness!

    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.
    Then you DO have limited gifts of understanding, and I really should not mock you for that. It would be like mocking somebody for a large nose or an obese disposition, and that is so not fair.

    Sorry.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
    But there is not necessarily any difference.

    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.
    I speak Swedish, mainly. And Danish, German, French and English, plus I get by with some little Italian and Spanish. If that is not enough for you, I really do apologize.

    I know that oozing can be running, but I also know that it need not be. It can refer to a minimal leakage that is so small that it does not even run, but stays on the surface.

    Do YOU realize that the blood will have run more freely as Neil looked than it did when Mizen did? Do YOU realize that there may have been a steady stream of blood running from the wound, and that this may have been enough for Neil to say that it ran rather profusely?

    Or is it too hard for you, David? I mean, if yiu set out to hint at lacking gifts of understanding on my behalf, then surely you wonīt object to me doing the same for you?

    Can you answer in Swedish please? Or are your language gifts too limited for that?

    Leave a comment:


  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
    I have already answered it. It needed qualifying, and if I want to qualify an answer, I do so.
    You didn't qualify my question you changed it.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
    He didn't use the word "profusely" so we don't need to trouble ourselves with that.

    "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.
    You donīt know if Neil did use the word profusely, Iīm afraid. The articles indicate that he may well have.

    So you can gauge "oozing"? Then tell me the exact volume of blood per second that it refers to with a woman with a cut neck. What is too much, what is too little? You CAN gauge it, remember.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
    A reminder to Fisherman that this question, in the form I asked it, remains unanswered. So for, I think, the fourth time of asking:

    "Given that PC Neil said in his sworn testimony that he saw blood oozing from the throat wound of Nichols could she quite easily, and very possibly, have been murdered 20 minutes before the time he saw this oozing?"
    I have already answered it. It needed qualifying, and if I want to qualify an answer, I do so.

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
    A reminder to Fisherman that this question, in the form I asked it, remains unanswered. So for, I think, the fourth time of asking:

    "Given that PC Neil said in his sworn testimony that he saw blood oozing from the throat wound of Nichols could she quite easily, and very possibly, have been murdered 20 minutes before the time he saw this oozing?"
    If oozing was resultative, she could.

    It is like a painting in your living room. It hangs there and shows a murdered woman with blood oozing from the throat. But there is no blood on your floor.

    That is the original issue of this thread.

    So it doesnīt matter what Fisherman says.

    Leave a comment:


  • David Orsam
    replied
    A reminder to Fisherman that this question, in the form I asked it, remains unanswered. So for, I think, the fourth time of asking:

    "Given that PC Neil said in his sworn testimony that he saw blood oozing from the throat wound of Nichols could she quite easily, and very possibly, have been murdered 20 minutes before the time he saw this oozing?"

    Leave a comment:


  • John G
    replied
    To recap, Dr Biggs points out that "vessel spasm" and "rapid clotting" can staunch the flow of blood even from catastrophic injuries. Collapsing vessels and valve effects can prevent passive flow and, of course, there are lots of corners for blood to negotiate: see Marriott, 2013. As a consequence, a lot less blood may be present at the crime scene than you might expect.

    Leave a comment:


  • kjab3112
    replied
    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
    If you translate that into common language, does that tell us that if the heart had indeed stopped before Nichols was cut, there would be no bloodspray? I believe I have read somewhere that there can be spraying in such cases too for some short time, due to a remaining pressure in the vessels.

    I have also read that the heart can go on beating for an astonishing amount of time even after decapitation; can you comment on that?

    On the whole, I think a case can be made for all the other C5 murders involving possible bloodspray, with Nichols as the only exception; it was there in Chapmans case (on the fence), in Kellyīs case (on the wall), it may have been covered by the extensive pools of blood around the neck of Eddowes (who had the neck cut BEFORE the abdominal cutting and hey presto - look what happened!) and in Strideīs case, her left side of the neck was resting over the blood running out of her, and that was the damaged side, so it may be that the killer cut her in the position she was lying in, and the bloodspray was directed to the ground and thereafter hidden by the oncoming bloodflow.
    Only in the Nichols case can we say with some certainty that there was never any bloodspray.
    Hi Fisherman

    Blood spray is variable based both on the pressure in the vessel and the size of the hole. In cases of decapitation in execution blood spray is barely remarked upon. As for postmortem spray that can certainly occur, but tends to be venous not arterial from my reading.

    For heart beating post decapitation, yes the heart can continue, so too can the brain. In the execution of Anne Boleyn, witnesses reported her continuing her prayer and her eyes moving. In experiments, full decapitation can maintain measures of consciousness for around ten seconds. The heart though requires just oxygenated blood flow to beat and is effectively independent from the brain on most actions. It's death results in insufficient blood to maintain the beating muscle, and typically occurs after approximately half of blood volume has been lost.

    Although fatal haemorrhage can (and does) occur from abdominal wounds, it typically requires severance of major arteries, not the superficial vessels of the abdominal wall. The rate of exsanguination from vessels is dependent on the flow through them and the preservation of flow during shock. The carotid (especially internal) and coronary vessels have significant protective mechanisms, the vessels to the gut tend to be less resilient to reduced blood volume.

    Hope answers your questions

    Regards

    Paul

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    Originally posted by Elamarna View Post

    With all due respect I do not think you have understood that paper, it talks about venous pressure in the liver, not system wide arterial pressure.

    It also makes it clear that there must be a time gap after asphyxiation without any blood letting for this to occur.

    This is of course as far as we know not the case with Nichols.

    Venous pressure not arterial as Paul points out.

    Steve
    Bravo, Steve.

    Pierre

    Leave a comment:

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