Anything that would identify him, leaving his wallet behind, leaving his knife behind, looking strait at a withess and running. Unorganized
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Frank,
You said finger, palm or footprints? I'm sure they wouldn't, as there was no fingerprinting or forensics.
The origin of finger-printing
By Sir William J Herschel
Finger-Printing has been around sense 1858
This was a known science for years before the
Killing in Whitechappel, however it was not used
Because it was not an excepted science at the time.
BW"A man should look for what is, and not for what he thinks should be.”
Albert Einstein
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Hi BW,
Thanks for info about the origin of finger-printing. For some years I know it existed in 1888 but wasn't in use yet, so I should have written down that quote differently, but that's beside the point.
All the best,
Frank"You can rob me, you can starve me and you can beat me and you can kill me. Just don't bore me."
Clint Eastwood as Gunny in "Heartbreak Ridge"
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Fingerprinting was widely known by 1888, and not adopted or used by London Police until 1903 in trials.
Whats really puzzling to me is why each crime scene wasnt photographed....that was certainly viable evidence at that point.
As far as their being able to analyze anything but blood, I dont think Scotland Yard even had a crime lab until the late twenties or thirties.
Cheers all.
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Hi Perrymason,
I think Mary Kelly's room with her body was the only one they photographed, all the rest were just drawings and gazette artworks etc, but they did photograph the bodies in the mortuaries. Still it is a bit of a mystery as to why they only photographed Mary Kelly in her room and no photos of the other victims in the streets. However, having said that i heard from a PC once that a lot of stuff regarding the Whitechapel murderer has been lost through people pilfering items along the way, wasn't there something about an item turning up at Scotland Yard or Metropolitain Police in the 1980's and i seem to connect it with the maybrick diary for some reason, along the lines of something written in the Maybrick Diary, then hey presto something turned up after it was thought lost to one of the police departments. It's all a bit vague my recall, but something sparks that.
Generally i always understood that the Whitechapel Murders attributed to JTR were classed as disorganised, as for the friday or weekend connection it could be stoppage of work, or when stress became high for the killer, such as heavy drinking from one or both parents and they let all thier stress out on the offspring ( offloading), violence in the family can be at weekends as well, also the winter period can be a stressful period for many, huddled up indoors, dark and depressing nights and some day-time when it's dark, possible for all contributary factors.
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Hi Shelley,
Mike or Michael.....The argument is that the access to Millers Court and the room offered that lock-down scenario the best...and she was the most savaged victim. To me that is negated by the fact that in Hanbury and Dutfields Yard they would have had the same opportunity.
Between London Blitz destroying some files, and the moving them about caused some to go missing, and that for many years almost any London policeman with some rank could browse through the materials... for decades....its remarkable that we have anything of the investigations aside from press clippings.
Occasionally items are found, some quite meaningful like the Littlechild letter....but I seriously doubt that anything physical evidence wise that ever made it to a private collection will resurface again soon.
Cheers Shelley.Last edited by Guest; 02-10-2009, 04:08 AM.
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Originally posted by Frank van Oploo View PostHi BW,
Yes, but what physical clue would actually identify him back in those days? I don't think his knife would, as there was no fingerprinting or forensics yet back then. His wallet maybe, if he even had one and didn't put it in a 'safe' place on his body. But I'm sure there were no ID or credit cards and stuff like that in it. Hairs, fibers, semen, finger, palm or footprints? I'm sure they wouldn't, as there was no fingerprinting or forensics. Personal items like gloves, a shawl, a paper clipping, a bag or whatever? I don't believe so. Maybe (some of) the stuff found around Eddowes' and Chapman's bodies was really his. The police did follow up on some of those items, but it didn't get them anywhere. They seem to have assumed the items were personal belongings of the victims.
So, the fact that he quite probably didn't leave any physical thing behind other than the bodies, in my view doesn't necessarily point to 'organizedness', because he could have left a lot of things behind without the police being any the wiser. Back in those days the police either had to catch him in the act, fleeing the scene or as a result of a confession. Like I said earlier, in my view the Ripper was organized in the sense that he saw to it that he left the scenes before anyone walked into him, that he probably wasn't all covered in blood and that he wasn't noticed between the crime scenes and his home.
All the best,
Frank
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Originally posted by perrymason View PostHi Shelley,
Mike or Michael.....The argument is that the access to Millers Court and the room offered that lock-down scenario the best...and she was the most savaged victim. To me that is negated by the fact that in Hanbury and Dutfields Yard they would have had the same opportunity.
Between London Blitz destroying some files, and the moving them about caused some to go missing, and that for many years almost any London policeman with some rank could browse through the materials... for decades....its remarkable that we have anything of the investigations aside from press clippings.
Occasionally items are found, some quite meaningful like the Littlechild letter....but I seriously doubt that anything physical evidence wise that ever made it to a private collection will resurface again soon.
Cheers Shelley.
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Michael,
During the Whitechapel crimes, there were no police photographers, just commercial photographers that were taking portrait photos for customers at the time, the police would have to hire one to take pictures, sense the crimes were in the middle of the night it was hard to find one available to take pictures.
BW"A man should look for what is, and not for what he thinks should be.”
Albert Einstein
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Originally posted by BLUE WIZZARD View PostMichael,
During the Whitechapel crimes, there were no police photographers, just commercial photographers that were taking portrait photos for customers at the time, the police would have to hire one to take pictures, sense the crimes were in the middle of the night it was hard to find one available to take pictures.
BW
On the above though BW, it is said that "the photographer(s)" were sent for to take pictures of Mary, and that implies to me that they likely did have some men on call. Maybe not "staff" as you say.
Cheers
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