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  • MsWeatherwax
    replied
    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post

    Actually, I think that the killer tried to avoid blood if he could; the neck-cutting was seemingly there to bleed the victims. And in the torso series, it would seem that the 1873 victim was hung up and drained of blood totally. Of course, in a sense this man must have been a "maniac" - but not a drooling, disorganized idiot. Instead he seems to have been very aware of what he did, quick, efficient, careful and systematic.
    Hi Fisherman.

    I'm not suggesting that he was 'mad' in the cartoon sense of the word. It's entirely possible for an individual to have acute psychotic episodes but appear outwardly 'sane' the rest of the time. If I had time, I could point you towards (admittedly modern) examples of people who have convinced experienced medical personnel that they are perfectly safe, only to go on and commit brutal violence and/or murders.

    I feel like too much weight is placed on him needing to be 'sane' to be organised and methodical.

    The only reason I place any emphasis on his mental state is that if a decent suspect is identified through research or new discoveries, they could possibly be given weight by identifying risk factors for mental illnesses that have resulted in similar crimes.

    I know you have a favoured suspect, Fish - I'm not attempting to discount or lend weight to him (I don't know enough about him, for a start). I'm simply trying to suggest that we know so much more about mental illness now that it could be a useful tool to support a good hypothesis.

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  • Abby Normal
    replied
    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
    Is any murder the work of a sane person? How do we define sanity in this context? Is the killer who cuts more times less sane than the one who cuts less times? Can you cut a throat and be sane but not cut an abdomen open and be sane?

    These are impossible questions to answer, the way I see it. My own take on things is that the killer of Mary Kelly was methodical and worked to an agenda. To me, it is not a deed with random cutting and annihilation, the way it is often described.
    agree. The ripper was not overtly insane. he knew what he wanted to do and what turned him on and he was methodical in his plan to get the victims where he wanted them. I would say he was fascinated with what his knife could do to the female body with specific interest in the internal organs to take away to relive/prolong his sick fantasy.

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by Geddy2112 View Post
    Is this the work of a sane person?

    Is any murder the work of a sane person? How do we define sanity in this context? Is the killer who cuts more times less sane than the one who cuts less times? Can you cut a throat and be sane but not cut an abdomen open and be sane?

    These are impossible questions to answer, the way I see it. My own take on things is that the killer of Mary Kelly was methodical and worked to an agenda. To me, it is not a deed with random cutting and annihilation, the way it is often described.

    Andersons´words spring to mind here, of course: "It is impossible to believe they were acts of a sane man they were those of a maniac revelling in blood."

    Actually, I think that the killer tried to avoid blood if he could; the neck-cutting was seemingly there to bleed the victims. And in the torso series, it would seem that the 1873 victim was hung up and drained of blood totally. Of course, in a sense this man must have been a "maniac" - but not a drooling, disorganized idiot. Instead he seems to have been very aware of what he did, quick, efficient, careful and systematic.
    Last edited by Fisherman; 06-14-2016, 06:51 AM.

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  • MsWeatherwax
    replied
    Originally posted by Geddy2112 View Post
    Is this the work of a sane person?

    For the sake of objectivity Geddy, I'll say it's possible that whoever murdered MJK was attempting to obscure her identity and that's the reason for the apparent overkill.

    While I'm open to the possibility, I (personally) think it's more likely that whoever committed the murder was experiencing a psychotic episode.

    Saying this does not rule out any particular suspect - we're bad enough at identifying mental illness now, we were understandably terrible back then. There are certainly documented cases of apparently stable people who go on to commit incredibly violent crimes after suffering sudden onset acute mental illness.

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  • Geddy2112
    replied
    Originally posted by Pierre View Post
    But the problem is that there is no evidence for a "mental illness scenario".
    Is this the work of a sane person?

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  • MsWeatherwax
    replied
    Originally posted by Pierre View Post
    Hi,

    But the problem is that there is no evidence for a "mental illness scenario". That scenario is a theoretical construction based either on hypotheses about some persons having been placed in asylums and therefore hypothesized as having been Jack the Ripper - a tautological theory, which per se is no problem, sometimes events in the past can be tautological - or on a general idea that a serial killer must be mad.

    Even if some persons were living in asylums, there was never any evidence for those persons having been at any of the murder sites.

    And even if serial murderers today sometimes get a psychiatric diagnosis, there is no evidence of such a person having been at any of the murder sites in 1888-1889.

    And whether one scenario is likely or not is something that you as a subject feel, probably on the basis of the above. But the feeling of subjects is no evidence for someone being a serial killer.

    I am not merely trying to contradict you, just trying to make things clear from a historical point of view.

    Kind regards, Pierre
    Of course there is. Of course there is.

    There are decades and decades of research, and medical imaging, and Police evidence, and inquests, and public inquiries, and endless anecdotal evidence from family, friends and neighbours of killers and violent offenders.

    Protocols from medical professionals that have been written for dealing with mentally unstable people with violent tendencies, protocols that have been written after years and years of experience of dealing with psychologically disordered patients.

    Websites created just to host publicly accessible documentation showing long term engagement between violent offenders and the mental health services.

    I do not give two hoots about who was placed in an asylum in 1888. I care about the fact that everything that I know about violent offenders comes from what we have learned in the years since 1888. What the combined knowledge of all of those professionals, over all those years, tells me is that there is a very high possibility that JtR was suffering from some kind of mental illness. It may have been permanent, it may have been temporary. He may have been as sane as the next man. he may have been in an asylum, he may have been in a prison, he may have been in neither.

    You can't tell me that there is no evidence that there was a person who would have received 'such a diagnosis' in 2016, at the SOC in 1888. You don't know that. You do not have access to their medical history, you do not have access to their social history. Most of it has been lost. We are effectively starting at zero.

    I can say that he was statistically likely to have suffered from mental illness at some point, however. Personally, I find that considerably more probable than some convoluted Police conspiracy.

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    [QUOTE=DJA;384524]
    Originally posted by Pierre View Post

    Apart from police,who frequented Mitre Square around 1.30am on a Sunday morning?

    Kindly supply sources!
    DJA, I will, in the future.

    Regards, Pierre

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    Originally posted by Henry Flower View Post
    "It is not an agenda, since I can not get rid of sources I would like to get rid of. I try but there is no way. And I do not understand what you mean by fishing expeditions."

    Ah the classic Pierre playbook: (1) announce that you think you have found him but your ethics prohibit you from from naming him until your research is conclusively concluded. (2) remind everyone constantly that you are a robot of pure logic and ethics, that you are a completely objective processor of source material and data. (3) Instead of stating anything testable, limit yourself to asking generic questions, then telling others that their answers to those questions fail the test of your computer-like adherence to data.

    No offence but the whole schtick is getting a little tiresome.
    Hi Henry,

    I understand how you think. And I agree with you on some of it, but I am not objective, no one is. Even mathematics is highly objectivated by objectivating subject, so objectivity is really difficult from many perspectives. One must always perform a reflexive self analysis.

    Regards, Pierre

    Leave a comment:


  • Henry Flower
    replied
    "It is not an agenda, since I can not get rid of sources I would like to get rid of. I try but there is no way. And I do not understand what you mean by fishing expeditions."

    Ah the classic Pierre playbook: (1) announce that you think you have found him but your ethics prohibit you from from naming him until your research is conclusively concluded. (2) remind everyone constantly that you are a robot of pure logic and ethics, that you are a completely objective processor of source material and data. (3) Instead of stating anything testable, limit yourself to asking generic questions, then telling others that their answers to those questions fail the test of your computer-like adherence to data.

    No offence but the whole schtick is getting a little tiresome.

    Leave a comment:


  • DJA
    replied
    [QUOTE=Pierre;384517]
    Originally posted by Sleuth1888 View Post

    Hi,

    Yes, I basically agree with you on all of the above.

    Regards, Pierre
    Apart from police,who frequented Mitre Square around 1.30am on a Sunday morning?

    Kindly supply sources!

    Leave a comment:


  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by Pierre View Post
    It is not an agenda, since I can not get rid of sources I would like to get rid of. I try but there is no way.
    You actually seem to be confirming the point that Henry made, namely that, when you post, you have in mind "sources" that you never mention, which are shaping your views in one direction (albeit that you pretend that your views are formed scientifically without any bias) so that it is fair to say that you have a hidden agenda.

    Leave a comment:


  • Henry Flower
    replied
    "So what could the reasons have been for him to take such a high risk?"

    Er... he didn't. You seem to have misunderstood.

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    [QUOTE=Sleuth1888;384498]
    Personally I believe that after the first murder he likely didn't care about getting caught.

    The reasons for my opinion are below;

    1. He wasn't caugh/recognised after the first murder and he grew in confidence.

    2. He killed in high risk areas which were well frequented until early in the morning, e.g. Berners Street, off Commercial Road. Com. Road was busy until the very early hours of the 30th September.

    3. He knew that he was 'above' the police and that he was ubiquitous and could strike anywhere. He had confidence in his ability to evade capture going forward in his spree as he knew the challenge the police were up against. He had the upper hand most if not all of the time and could strike literally when and where he pleased.
    Hi,

    Yes, I basically agree with you on all of the above.

    Regards, Pierre

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    Originally posted by Henry Flower View Post
    Wow, Sleuth! You really think that going to his own home/hideout with victims, and then single-handedly lugging out, transporting, and dumping their corpses would've demonstrated a greater concern not to be recognised or apprehended?

    Sure, because effectively quadrupling the amount of time he spends with the victims would carry no risk. And spending time manhandling and transporting butchered corpses would've been almost risk-free, sure.

    I would guess that killing at his bolt hole and then transporting the corpses would increase his chances of capture at least five-fold.
    So what could the reasons have been for him to take such a high risk?

    Regards, Pierre

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    Originally posted by Henry Flower View Post
    I always love the way Pierre seeks to give the impression of being the most rigorously logical analyst of 'data', and yet, as Ms Weatherwax's comment demonstrates, there always seems to be some agenda bobbing beneath the surface of his fishing expeditions.
    Hi,

    It is not an agenda, since I can not get rid of sources I would like to get rid of. I try but there is no way. And I do not understand what you mean by fishing expeditions.

    But I think the question of recognition must have been a reality to the killer and I am interested in trying to exclude possible scenarios rather than to invent new ones.

    Regards, Pierre

    Leave a comment:

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