Originally posted by Wickerman
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I can see how things could have gone as you suggest, and in many ways we're not suggesting a great deal of difference. In fact, the main point of difference is whether or not B.S. and Parcel-man are the same person or two different people really. I think in both cases, the incident Schwartz reports would be viewed as c.d. describes, a less intense struggle where Stride falls or trips over more than was violently thrown down, then a short period passes before the fatal assault. In your description, with B.S. moving on and Parcel-man going on to kill her, then perhaps that is more consistent with Parcel-man being JtR. While not impossible in what I describe, I think if B.S. and Parcel-man are the same person, then putting all of Stride's activities together, it feels more like she was killed by someone who knows her and she went out that night to meet them (she was on a date, rather than soliciting). Perhaps he was JtR, and whatever set him off resulting in Stride's death explains the increased furry shown in the Eddowes' case? If he was concerned that Stride may have told people who she was meeting up with that night, he may have left town for a while, only returning after it became clear in the press that wasn't the case? I suppose that could fit either of our suggestions since they aren't really all that different in the broad sense (she's with Parcel-man for an extended time, and Parcel-man kills her; whether or not B.S. is Parcel-man is a detail that, on the whole, doesn't change the bigger picture). As always, there are interesting implications that arise when one starts to consider a given scenario which in an active case suggest further lines of investigation. Most go nowhere of course, like the Lipski search, but sooner or later a lead or idea starts to pay off. Unfortunately, in the JtR case, the ability to follow those leads is long gone and we can only build speculation upon speculation. Maybe that's why it is an interesting case to examine though?
- Jeff
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