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  • #16
    Originally posted by Elamarna View Post
    Abby

    I tend to agree on that, but not as confident as you I think.
    Also I like Wilson for an earlier attack.

    Steve
    hi el
    whos Wilson?
    "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

    Comment


    • #17
      Jack the ripper didn't kill anybody,

      Kosminski did that

      and he killed more than 5, he was going to kill his own sister too

      Two men saw him one night, a jew witness and a city P.C.

      Comment


      • #18
        Originally posted by Elamarna View Post
        Hi and welcome to the forum.

        You have now of course realized that the possible numbers vary depending on who you speak to.

        I would start with tabram as a possible victim, but do not rule out earlier non fatal attacks.
        I would include the C5, with a little questioning of Stride. And would stop at Mackenzie.

        If one stops at Kelly, almost all the proposed killers could have done the deed.

        Now if we accept say Mackenzie, the number of viable suspects drops by several notable ones ( Druitt and Tumblety).

        The same is true if we accept the idea that the Torso murders were by the same hand.

        If Coles is accepted than we lose Aaron Kosminski.

        And finally there are those who say there was no serial killer at all.

        The point I am trying to make, maybe poorly is that some people will include or exclude victims, because of a preferred suspect.

        I hope you enjoy it here

        Steve
        Hi Steve,

        What could explain the age difference between the victims killed outdoors and indoors (Kelly and include Whitehall, Jackson and Pinchin Street)?

        Any thoughts?

        Regards, Pierre

        Comment


        • #19
          Originally posted by Pierre View Post
          Hi Steve,

          What could explain the age difference between the victims killed outdoors and indoors (Kelly and include Whitehall, Jackson and Pinchin Street)?

          Any thoughts?

          Regards, Pierre
          Why don't you tell us yours first, Pierre?

          Comment


          • #20
            Originally posted by Pierre View Post
            Hi Steve,

            What could explain the age difference between the victims killed outdoors and indoors (Kelly and include Whitehall, Jackson and Pinchin Street)?

            Any thoughts?

            Regards, Pierre


            Not really considered it I have to admit.

            of course i don't at this point think that the last 3 are linked to the Whitechapel killings.

            do you have any suggestions?


            Steve

            Comment


            • #21
              Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
              hi el
              whos Wilson?
              Hi Abby,

              looking at what i wrote it could be misleading, Wilson is not a possible attacker but Ada Wilson attacked March 88.


              steve

              Comment


              • #22
                The "codification" of the "autumn of terror" and the five victims only derives from Melville Macnaghten, and his belief, right or wrong, in Montague Druitt as the killer. He made this cognotion about Druitt retrospective not for himself -- bhe was not on the Force until mid-1889 -- but to improve the reputation of CID. Thus he wanted to give the impression, to the public from 1898, that the police were aware at the time about the drowned man as the likeliest suspect, that they wereclsoing on him, and that once they found him deceased they pretty much knew that Mary Jane Kelly was the final victim.

                Much of this was quite untrue.

                Working from the so-called draft version of the Chief Constable's report a rather sceptical Major Arthur Griffiths, a Macnaghten crony, provided the first salvo in this revision of what happened and what was known between 1888 and 1891. This is the pertinent excerpt from "Mysteries of Police and Crime" that caused a big stir in the press because its claims were so unprecedented and such a reworking of the original timeline (a protracted investigation leading to a dead end):

                "The outside public may think that the identity of that later miscreant, "Jack the Ripper," was never revealed. So far as actual knowledge goes, this is undoubtedly true. But the police, after the last murder, had brought their investigations to the point of strongly suspecting several persons, all of them known to be homicidal lunatics, and against three of these they held very plausible and reasonable grounds of suspicion. Concerning two of them the case was weak, although it was based on certain colourable facts. One was a Polish Jew, a known lunatic, who was at large in the district of Whitechapel at the time of the murder, and who, having afterwards developed homicidal tendencies, was confined to an asylum. This man was said to resemble the murderer by the one person who got a glimpse of him - the police-constable in Mitre Court. The second possible criminal was a Russian doctor, also insane, who had been a convict both in England and Siberia. This man was in the habit of carrying about surgical knives and instruments in his pockets; his antecedents were of the very worst, and at the time of the Whitechapel murders he was in hiding, or, at least, his whereabouts were never exactly known. The third person was of the same type, but the suspicion in his case was stronger, and there was every reason to believe that his own friends entertained grave doubts about him. He was also a doctor in the prime of life, was believed to be insane or on the borderland of insanity, and he disappeared immediately after the last murder, that in Miller's Court, on the 9th November, 1888. On the last day of that year, seven weeks later, his body was found floating in the Thames, and was said to have been in the water a month. The theory in this case was that after his last exploit, which was the most fiendish of all, his brain entirely gave way, and he became furiously insane and committed suicide. It is at least a strong presumption that "Jack the Ripper" died or was put under restraint after the Miller's Court affair, which ended this series of crimes. It would be interesting to know whether in this third case the man was left-handed or ambidextrous, both suggestions having been advanced by medical experts after viewing the victims. Certainly other doctors disagreed this point, which may be said to add another to the many instances in which medical evidence has been conflicting, not to say confusing."

                That established Kelly as the final victim, rather than Coles over two years later. In 1907 Macnaghten contacted another crony and close chum, the mega-famous George R. Sims, to further consolidate what the police chief believed were Druitt's five -- and five only -- victims. Interestingly Macnaghten feels no need to advice his friend, in writing, about his suspects' section for his article; the implication being that that subject was so well discussed between them, verbally, that no further communication was required:


                Dear Sims,

                Yet another "light" in dark, & not
                generally known, metropolitan spots has
                flashed across my mind:-

                Eyre Street Hill - Clerkenwell - where
                there is a large colony of Italians who
                are mostly ice-cream vendors by day,
                &, not infrequently, stabbers & shootists
                by night.

                It may also save you the trouble of
                research if I give you the times &
                places of Jack ye Ripper's pleasantries.

                (1) 31st. Aug. '88. Mary Ann Nichols, found
                at Bucks Row with her throat cut &
                slight mutilation of stomach.

                (2) 8th. Sepr. '88. Annie Chapman found in a
                back yard at Hanbury St. throat cut & bad
                mutilation as to stomach & private parts.

                (3) 30th Sepr. '88. Elizabeth Stride, throat
                cut only (no mutilations) in Berners*
                St. near Anarchist Club.

                (4) 30th Sepr '88. Catherine Eddowes, found
                in Mitre Square, throat cut, bad mutilation
                of face, stomach & private parts

                (5) 9th Novr '88. Mary Jeanette Kelly, found
                in a room in Miller's Court, Dorset St.
                with throat cut, and the whole face &
                body fiendishly mutilated.

                Don't forget "Dowt" - which her name
                is Devereux - & don't trouble to reply
                to this.

                Yours always

                M.L.Macnaghten

                In Sims' subsequent and largest piece ever on the Ripper, for "Lloyds Weekly News" in September 1907, he codified for his massive readership the C-5 victims:

                "A good many murders with which he had absolutely nothing to do have in this country been popularly attributed to the Whitechapel monster.

                I have seen six, seven, and eight East-end murders of women debited to the Ripper, but, as a matter of fact, his murders were five in all, and no more. The other murders of women committed about the same time were in a totally different "handwriting."

                The crimes that brought him into public discussion were all committed in a limited area, and within a limited period. They were as follows:-

                1. Mary Anne Nichols, forty-seven, her throat cut and body mutilated, in Buck's-row, Whitechapel, Aug.31, 1888.

                2. Annie Chapman, forty-seven, her throat cut and body mutilated in Hanbury-street, Spitalfields, Sept. 8, 1888.

                3. Elizabeth Stride, throat cut, in Berner-street, on Sept.30, 1888.

                4. Catherine Eddowes, alias Conway, mutilated, in Mitre-square, Aldgate, also on Sept.30, 1888.

                5. Marie Jeanette Kelly, fiendishly mutilated, in Miller's-court, Whitechapel, Nov. 9, 1888. ...

                It would be impossible for the author of the Miller's-court horror to have lived a life of apparent sanity one single day after that maniacal deed. He was a raving madman them and a raving madman when he flung himself in the Thames. ... But no one who saw that awful scene, or its reproduction in the photographic exhibits prepared for the coroner's jury, could possibly believe that the perpetrator of the horror could return to the quiet enjoyment of the rights of citizenship, or even change the methods of his consuming madness and become a Deeming, a Neil Cream, or a Chapman."

                The entirely false impression is given that the un-named Druitt killed himself immediately after the Kelly atrocity. And the entirely false impression is given that the police need only look at the horrifically mutilated remains of the poor woman, and then discover a month later (that timing is yet another deflective deception) that their prime suspect, the mad doctor, had drowned himself. Well of course he had, goes the logic, because nobody who did that could go on living even for a "single day" (in his memoirs, Macnaghten extends the gap between murder and self-murder to a day, a night, perhaps another day, perhaps another night ...)

                As I have written before the so-called canonical victims are mostly the opinion of Macnaghten because of his belief in Druitt's guilt -- an opinion rejected by just about everybody interested in this subject in the modern era. Once you realise the chief is backdating his private realisation, about Druitt, then there is no need to keep with five victims only.

                As an aside, I subscribe to the theory that Ada Wilson was Druitt's first attempt at murder, and that Annie Farmer was his last, also failed attempt.

                Comment


                • #23
                  Originally posted by Elamarna View Post
                  Hi Abby,

                  looking at what i wrote it could be misleading, Wilson is not a possible attacker but Ada Wilson attacked March 88.


                  steve

                  Thanks. Forgot about her. Yes I think it's possible she was an early victim of the ripper and also Millwood.
                  "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

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post
                    Don't forget "Dowt" - which her name
                    is Devereux - & don't trouble to reply
                    to this.
                    Who's Macnaghten referring to here? Sarah Elizabeth Devereux? She was one of George Chapman's victims.

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      [QUOTE=Elamarna;397746]

                      Not really considered it I have to admit.

                      of course i don't at this point think that the last 3 are linked to the Whitechapel killings.

                      do you have any suggestions?

                      Steve
                      Hi Steve,

                      There are differences between the MO for the victims who were found killed outdoors and those (if we hypothesize Kelly, Whitehall, Jackson and Pinchin St) who were not found killed indoors.

                      Letīs call the first group of victims VO and the second group of victims VI.

                      So what differences do we think we can postulate?

                      VO - older victims / VI - younger victims

                      VO - weaker victims? / VI - stronger victims?

                      (An hypothetical question based on age differences)

                      VO - quickly found / VI - found after a longer time period

                      VO - higher risk profile / VI - lower risk profile?

                      but

                      VO - one risk taken / VI - more than one risk taken when distributing body parts

                      VO - killed in the East End and the City / VI - also killed in the West End (drawing this from the distribution)

                      VO - less heavy work / VI - heavier work with mutilations and carrying body parts

                      VO - short murder and mutilation time periods / VI - longer murder and mutilation time periods

                      VO- murders start in August 1888 / VI - murders start in July/August 1888

                      VO - murders end in November 1888 / VI - murders end in September 1889

                      Conclusion: We can construct a set of hypotheses saying it was the same killer if we want to.

                      This set of hypotheses (SH) could look like this:

                      SH for the same killer =


                      1. The younger victims were stronger and harder to kill outdoors than the older victims.
                      2. The older victims could not be dismembered since they were killed outdoors.
                      3. West End was partly the place for killing the younger victims.
                      4. East End (and the City) was the place for killing the older victims.
                      5. The time period is the same - August 1888 to September 1889 - and therefore we can not use a perspective where the Whitechapel murders was the "most typical" set or murders.
                      6. The risk profile is high for all the cases where bodies and body parts were distributed outdoors.
                      7. The VO murders are external in their character: killed outside, mutilated outside, but found outside.
                      8. The VI murders are both internal and external: killed inside, mutilated inside, found outside.
                      9. The reason for the difference in external/internal elements has partly to do with age.
                      10. This means that the killer could not do anything he wanted to do anywhere.
                      11. Kelly is the most interesting case: It is totally internal. Killed inside, mutilated inside, found inside.
                      12. There must be a very specific motive for this particular change in MO.

                      Conclusion: The finding of bodies and body parts should be studied and analyzed from a risk perspective.

                      The questions we can ask are:


                      A) How is risk construced for every case?
                      B) What are the similarities and differences?
                      C) Is it possible to construct one single risk profile for all the cases here discussed?
                      D) What is the risk profile in the case of Kelly compared to the other cases?
                      E) If it is different, what are the hypothetical explanations?

                      Regards, Pierre
                      Last edited by Pierre; 10-27-2016, 04:40 AM.

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        [QUOTE=Pierre;397818]
                        Originally posted by Elamarna View Post



                        Hi Steve,

                        There are differences between the MO for the victims who were found killed outdoors and those (if we hypothesize Kelly, Whitehall, Jackson and Pinchin St) who were not found killed indoors.

                        Letīs call the first group of victims VO and the second group of victims VI.

                        So what differences do we think we can postulate?

                        VO - older victims / VI - younger victims

                        VO - weaker victims? / VI - stronger victims?

                        (An hypothetical question based on age differences)

                        VO - quickly found / VI - found after a longer time period

                        VO - higher risk profile / VI - lower risk profile?

                        but

                        VO - one risk taken / VI - more than one risk taken when distributing body parts

                        VO - killed in the East End and the City / VI - also killed in the West End (drawing this from the distribution)

                        VO - less heavy work / VI - heavier work with mutilations and carrying body parts

                        VO - short murder and mutilation time periods / VI - longer murder and mutilation time periods

                        VO- murders start in August 1888 / VI - murders start in July/August 1888

                        VO - murders end in November 1888 / VI - murders end in September 1889

                        Conclusion: We can construct a set of hypotheses saying it was the same killer if we want to.

                        This set of hypotheses (SH) could look like this:

                        SH for the same killer =


                        1. The younger victims were stronger and harder to kill outdoors than the older victims.
                        2. The older victims could not be dismembered since they were killed outdoors.
                        3. West End was partly the place for killing the younger victims.
                        4. East End (and the City) was the place for killing the older victims.
                        5. The time period is the same - August 1888 to September 1889 - and therefore we can not use a perspective where the Whitechapel murders was the "most typical" set or murders.
                        6. The risk profile is high for all the cases where bodies and body parts were distributed outdoors.
                        7. The VO murders are external in their character: killed outside, mutilated outside, but found outside.
                        8. The VI murders are both internal and external: killed inside, mutilated inside, found outside.
                        9. The reason for the difference in external/internal elements has partly to do with age.
                        10. This means that the killer could not do anything he wanted to do anywhere.
                        11. Kelly is the most interesting case: It is totally internal. Killed inside, mutilated inside, found inside.
                        12. There must be a very specific motive for this particular change in MO.

                        Conclusion: The finding of bodies and body parts should be studied and analyzed from a risk perspective.

                        The questions we can ask are:


                        A) How is risk construced for every case?
                        B) What are the similarities and differences?
                        C) Is it possible to construct one single risk profile for all the cases here discussed?
                        D) What is the risk profile in the case of Kelly compared to the other cases?
                        E) If it is different, what are the hypothetical explanations?

                        Regards, Pierre
                        Wow. 'VO'.... 'VI'.... 'SH'....

                        BS!

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          The Ripper killed in the small hours when the streets were largely deserted of human and vehicular traffic. As a consequence it was the older and less desirable women who were still wandering the streets in search of their doss money. Hence the killer was not specifically targeting older women, he was attacking those who became victims of opportunity. Peter Sutcliffe's victims encompassed a broad age range, not least because he was prepared to target just about any woman when the opportunity presented itself. My guess is that the Whitechapel Murderer was no different.

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Hi,

                            I think he killed only four, although Stride is possibly not one of his.
                            Kelly in my mind now was not a Ripper murder but something completely different.
                            I'm working on a theory about this that will conclude that there never was a Kelly murder.

                            Keep tuned.

                            Regards.

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Originally posted by spyglass View Post
                              Hi,

                              I think he killed only four, although Stride is possibly not one of his.
                              Kelly in my mind now was not a Ripper murder but something completely different.
                              I'm working on a theory about this that will conclude that there never was a Kelly murder.

                              Keep tuned.

                              Regards.
                              I love when people work on a theory when they've already decided the conclusion they'll reach.
                              G U T

                              There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                Originally posted by GUT View Post
                                I love when people work on a theory when they've already decided the conclusion they'll reach.
                                But when every other angle has been covered, and there is only one avenue left to go down.
                                mind you, it will be complete speculation with not one ounce proof to back it it up.

                                Comment

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