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Robert Mann - A 'New' Suspect

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  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    Fisherman,

    I have real trouble believing that every man walking through the workhouse doors was handed a long coat and billycock hat. Perhaps I should get the book. It's not fair to badger you with questions.

    Regarding the location of James Brown's couple, you'd be amazed at how many people think he witnessed them just outside the club gates, or that he somehow got his streets mixed up. As you said, it actually took place on the Fairclough side of the board school.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Same thing as always; old age lets you down!

    Fisherman

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  • Scott Nelson
    replied
    Yes, it was a hard choice for Mr. Trow to make, but in the end Mann won out over the elder Hatfield. The latter was very fortuitous because his age likely prevented him from becoming the Ripper.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Dixon9 asks: "why do you think Meir Trow picked out Robert Mann and not the other mortuary attendent James Hatfield?"

    Hatfield was, if I remember correctly, 64 years of age. And though Trow buys 52-53 as a possible age for a serialist, he seems to find 64 too much of a chunk to bite off.

    The best,
    Fisherman

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    "That's extremely strange", writes Chris on the Tabram issue. But here is the text:

    "Stumbling out of the near-darkness towards him, clutching her chest, was thirty-nine-year-old Martha Tabram. Her dark hair was swept up in a bun, but rather dishevelled now and for all her plumpness, she looked a lot older than she was. She wore a black bonnet and a long black jacket, the colour of mourning, the colour of death. What riveted Mann however was the blood trickling over her fingers from a gaping wound in her sternum. Perhaps she called out to him, shocked, losing blood, dying. If so, she was calling to the wrong man."

    I have two things to say:

    1. That was almost painful to copy, and
    2. The last three words of it encompass it all fairly nicely. We are dealing with the wrong man in two cases here: author AND suspect.

    As for your question about how many decades Mann was an inmate of the Whitechapel workhouse, I´m sure there´s a suggestion in the book. But after the above stuff you may not be all too inclined to lend it an ear...?

    On your information about Londons escape, I fear there is a chance that the assertion that nobody gave chase could rest heavily on the fact that there is no mentioning of it. Makes for disastrous research, such things. Thanks for the addition!

    The best, Chris!
    Fisherman
    Last edited by Fisherman; 10-19-2009, 10:06 PM.

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Tom W writes:

    "I also doubt Trow dealt with the fact that the man James Brown saw hardly looked like an inmate escapee. "

    Well, Tom, Trow actually states that the pauper inmate uniform was made up by a longish coat and a billycock hat, and Trow seems to think the match clothingwise would have been a good one.

    The best,
    Fisherman

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  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    Hi Fisherman, thanks for that review. I'm not surprised to see such mistakes. I also doubt Trow dealt with the fact that the man James Brown saw hardly looked like an inmate escapee. Nor did the man Mrs. Long saw, or Lawende, you name it. Why? Because poor Mann was no murderer, of course.

    Pimp,

    I don't have a 'theory' per se on the organs, other than that the killer took them. Why did he take a kidney? Why not.

    Trevor,

    Many of your posts on this thread seem to be more 'head in ass' than 'tongue in cheek'.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

    Leave a comment:


  • scarletpimpernel
    replied
    Originally posted by Radical Joe View Post

    As to the OP, you are, of course, entitled to your cynicism, and I can hardly blame you for it. Even as a mere layman, who perhaps dosen't know any better, I've often been turned off from the whole subject due to ill-founded and unsubstantiated claims, along with the petty professional rivalry that, IMO, hinders progress on the case. Indeed, I said as much in a post yesterday. In the same post, however, I also remarked that I was currently in my 'give em a chance' phase - a phrase I see you've kindly 'adopted' in your OP. As such, I am prepared to wait for the theory to be put forward before I cast judgement on its claims and findings. I am not expecting to be convinced that Mann was the Ripper (indeed, I don't know if Trow is making that claim), although I am hoping that he will offer a credible theory as to why Mann should be considered a viable suspect. I am also, as someone interested in the case, hoping to be entertained.

    I notice you have doubts that the argument will provide facts/evidence to support any claim as to Mann's right to be caled JTR. I have to ask (because I genuinley don't know), has a lack of tangible, empirical evidence linking a suspect to the crimes ever prevented the publication of a book or transmission of a documentary before?

    Something else that comes to mind is the strangeness in discussing/condeming/supporting a theory which hasn't even been put forward yet! Here we are, arguing 'what if he does' and 'if he dosen't'...when the bald truth is that we don't know what Trow is proposing. A good example of this comes from the other thread on the topic, in which (keeping in mind none of us know what arguements Trow will use to support his claims - whatever they may be) some posters argued that Mann's candicacy should be ruled out on the basis that he, as a workhouse inmate, would have been under strict supervision. A fair point, I thought, and one Trow would have to address. Then another poster (perhaps the poster I replied to) countered that, in fact, in some workhouses, inmates were allowed to come and go freely (I should stress that he also argued against his candicay, but on different grounds). Surely the debate is getting somewhat ahead of itself here, no?

    I feel I must take issue with your objection to the suggestion put forward here (that, if nothing else, the documentary could serve to forward investigation into other, peripheral, aspects of the case) on two grounds: Firstly, you argue that this implies that current reseachers are somehow incompetent. I would argue that, whilst not lacking in competence (I personally believe you, SPE, to hold impeccable research qualifications - slurp, slurp, although I don't agree with all your conclusions - puts tongue back), many researchers are, as I've noted, very much wrapped up in their own theories, and thus, deliberatley or otherwise, ignore avenues that may detract from them. Also, I would argue (reasonaby I think) that the current batch of researchers won't live forever, and if programmes such as this bring in fresh blood, willing to look at the case with new eyes, and minus the prejudices and cynicism that many 'old hands' invariably have, then I'm all for it. I wonder, for example, how many of the current breed were inspired to research the case on the basis of a documentary/book whose arguments they may not have agreed with.

    Oh and one last thing (as the great detective himself would say), you've put the word new, when referring to Mann's suspect status, in inverted commas, which seems to imply some doubt as to his 'new' status. Has Mann been proposed as a suspect before?

    I like Joe's approach to the whole controversy before anyone even knows the arguments.

    Leave a comment:


  • Chris
    replied
    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
    For example, the much debated opportunity to get out of the workhouse, is taken care of thusly:
    "For Mann, the first problem would be actually getting out of the workhouse with its locked gates and gate-keepers. This was in fact surprisingly easy. As an inmate told Jack London in 1902, the Whitechapel Infirmary was ´the easiest spike going´, ans when London ran for it through the open gates, no one tried to stop him or gave chase."
    Actually the edition of People of the Abyss that I'm looking at now doesn't say anything about no one trying to stop him or giving chase. It just says "dodging out the gate, I sped down the street." But I suppose that's just a matter of detail:


    Other details are that Jack London was in the casual ward rather than being an inmate of the workhouse proper, that a fellow inmate warned him he would be liable to 14 days' imprisonment if he were caught and that others pointed out if he left without permission he would never be able to return to the workhouse.

    How many decades was Robert Mann an inmate of the workhouse?

    Leave a comment:


  • Chris
    replied
    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
    ... Tabram receives the blow to the heart FIRST (!), and, regardless of the fact that we know that this blow would have killed her flat out, Trow has her running into Manns arms with the blood flowing from her chest, only to be finished of clasp-knifewise by Robert Mann, ...
    That's extremely strange, considering that in the TV documentary he "reconstructed" the crime as follows:
    "I believe that Robert Mann is out on the town that night as well, and he turns down George Yard Buildings and he comes across the body of Martha Tabram. He can see that she's dead, but this is his opportunity. He's carrying in his pocket a clasp knife and he takes it out. He rips up Martha's skirt, and he goes to work. He stabs and cuts in a frenzied manner 38 times."
    [my emphasis]

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  • dixon9
    replied
    cheers chris

    i await your report on the book,as lynn said maybe it was due to the fact Robert Mann prone to having fits

    dixon9
    still learning

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  • scarletpimpernel
    replied
    Originally posted by dixon9 View Post
    Scarlet,why do you think Meir Trow picked out Robert Mann and not the other mortuary attendent James Hatfield?
    Just seems to me if Mann was a viable supect then surely Hatfield was,or am i missing something?

    Dixon9
    still learning
    Search me, I don't know. It might be that Meir found more interesting things about Robert Mann than James Hatfield. Perhaps when I read his book, I will be able to gleen more, what made Mann a more viable suspect than Hatfield.

    Chris,

    Ok.
    Last edited by scarletpimpernel; 10-19-2009, 07:01 PM.

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Well, it is not only about the tv show, is it? The book is out, and I for one have read it.
    Was it any good? Nope, it was not. It has a chapter that I like much though, devoted to describing a stroll through the East end of 1888, and that chapter gives a very vivid picture of the crammed conditions we are dealing with, and the small area where Jack worked. It´s all very much Ralph McTell-ish; you know, the guy who sang "Streets of London" back in the seventies: "Let me take you by the hand and lead you through the streets of London..." - and so far it is all well. But then the tune goes on "...I´ll show you something to make you change your mind", and that is something Trow never comes close to doing.
    For example, the much debated opportunity to get out of the workhouse, is taken care of thusly:
    "For Mann, the first problem would be actually getting out of the workhouse with its locked gates and gate-keepers. This was in fact surprisingly easy. As an inmate told Jack London in 1902, the Whitechapel Infirmary was ´the easiest spike going´, ans when London ran for it through the open gates, no one tried to stop him or gave chase."
    Now, how convenient was that?

    As for the rest, in particular the passage on Liz Stride goes a long way to show that we are dealing with an author that has not done his research properly, resulting in quite a hash: Trow suggests Mann as the guy Stride turned down - "Not tonight, some other night..." - a turning down that Mann disliked, moving on to push her inside the gates and kill her. The small matter that Mann would have had to push Stride all the way from Fairclough Street does obviously not deter Trow - for Fairclough Street was where James Brown overheard this conversation. Then again, Trow has Marshalls couple walking NORTH instead of south, so maybe one should not be surprised...?

    There is a whole lot more like this. The book is tragically pumped full of factual mistakes. Eddowes is killed a quarter of an hour after leaving her cell, Tabram receives the blow to the heart FIRST (!), and, regardless of the fact that we know that this blow would have killed her flat out, Trow has her running into Manns arms with the blood flowing from her chest, only to be finished of clasp-knifewise by Robert Mann, it is established that there can be little doubt that Berner Street was Liz Stride´s regular working path, etcetera. And on the cover, it is boldly stated that the book PROVES that the Ripper killed seven women - whereas the inside of the book, of course, offers no such proof at all.

    It would be interesting to hear other posters wiews on Trows book! I find it a huge disappointment myself.

    The best, all!
    Fisherman

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  • Chris
    replied
    scarletpimpernel

    The program I am talking about is the Discovery Channel documentary that was broadcast in the UK last Sunday. The one on Mei Trow's theory, as I said. The one we have been discussing on this thread.

    The geographical profiling shown had nothing to do with the FBI - it was carried out by Spencer Chainey of University College, London.

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  • dixon9
    replied
    hi lynn,i see your point, Wynne Baxter did allude to that fact,while Hatfield only had a bad memory.lol

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