Let's narrow down some Ripper 'facts'

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  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by DVV View Post
    ........Do you realize you're telling us that Bond established the TOD on the basis of Mary having taken her meal in the Britannia between 10 and 10:30 ?
    10:00 pm to 11:30, or thereabouts.
    The time is implied by his conclusion, you know that.

    What you appear to be suggesting is that Bond did not have a 'meal-time' to use as a reference point. In which case, simple math demands he cannot provide a conclusion, yet he does. Therefore common sense demands he was given one.

    Why is that very basic deduction lost on you?

    These people were not fools, ...or is that what you are implying?

    You seriously wish to argue that four highly educated men (all aware of the report), The Under Secretary of State, Commissioner Warren, Robert Anderson and ultimately Dr. Bond himself are not in command of the very basic math required to make this simple deduction?

    If you permit yourself to admit they were suitably educated then you are bound to accept the very simple and obvious conclusion that Bond 'was' indeed given a reference point with which to start.

    The fact no police files have survived which tell us exactly what the police opinion was on this, on the 10th, does not in any way diminish the conclusion provided by Dr. Bond.

    I do not appreciate forum members suggesting the police & medical officials were stupid. If that is the premiss of the argument then the argument is invalid.

    Regards, Jon S.
    Last edited by Wickerman; 02-18-2012, 11:20 PM.

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  • Garry Wroe
    replied
    Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
    No, Bond does not need the 'time' of her last meal. I know what you mean, being all CSI-type precise, but that is not looking at this from their point of view.
    It doesn’t matter whose point of view you choose to take, Jon. Bond attempted to determine Kelly’s time of death by establishing how long her final meal had lain in her stomach – an interval which he estimated to have been three or four hours. Thus the only possible way in which he could have ascertained the time of death via the digestive rate would have been to add three or four hours to the time at which this meal was consumed. In the absence of such information any time of death estimation has to be considered unreliable.

    And what do we find?

    The time at which Kelly consumed her final meal remained an unknown quantity.

    In other words, the time of death postulated by Bond was pure supposition, based as it was upon an assumption that Kelly took her last meal at approximately 10:00pm.

    Bond can work under the assumption from the police that Kelly ate anywhere around 11:00-11:30, as a rule of thumb. This, coupled with other unverified stories of Kelly being in the Britannia from 10:00-10:30 pm is consistent. This is all Bond needs in order to establish a rough time of death, and a rough time of death is what he provided.

    Except that investigators turned up no-one, absolutely no-one, who could provide concrete information as to Kelly’s whereabouts in the hours immediately preceding her 11:45pm encounter with Mrs Cox. And nor did Bond formulate his time of death estimation based upon a final meal taken at between 11:00 and 11:30pm. It was 10:00pm.

    Thus, Jon, you are clearly making it up as you go along, advancing any number of scenarios as fact when they are no more than wishful thinking, and all in an attempt to sustain your contention of a truthful but misunderstood Hutchinson. One day the penny might drop and you’ll recognize that investigators refocused their efforts on Blotchy not because of Bond’s medical misdirection, but because they discovered Hutchinson to be a less than credible witness.

    But I rather suspect that Hell will freeze over first.
    Last edited by Garry Wroe; 02-18-2012, 04:35 PM.

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  • Ben
    replied
    Agreed all round, Harry and Dave!

    Hi Jon,

    Your Star is Wrong!
    IT IS NOT WRONG.

    The Star accurately reported the detail that the police supported a later time of death than that proffered by Dr. Bond. For what possible reason would they invent something so inconsequential to the reputation of the police? The police evidently believed the cry of "murder" to have been uttered by the victim shortly before her death.

    The fact that the Star specified "shortly after 3.00 o'clock" is irrelevant. It demonstrates at the very least that they did NOT support the 1.00am-2.00am suggested by Bond. Anyway, "shortly after 3.00 o'clock" isn't remotely inconsistent with Cox's evidence. She passed the house at 3.00am before returning home, at which point she was in no position to determine whether or not a murder was being committed "shortly" thereafter. The fact that she didn't hear a cry is only evidence that it wasn't loud enough to travel further than her nearest neighbours above (Prater) and Lewis (opposite). Cox lived at the opposite end of the court.

    "Mary Ann Cox, who lives in the house where the dreadful deed was done,.."
    Indeed she did. If a house is a building comprised of rooms and all belonging to one unit, then Cox and Kelly lived in the same house, "yes". They were neither saying nor implying that the two women lived in the same room.

    There is not a scrap of evidence that the police supported Bond's time of death, and strong indications against it. The fact that a doctor supplied a report doesn't mean that the police are duty-bound to accept it, especially when it argues against mutually supportive eyewitness evidence. The huge irony here is that you too reject Bond's time of death, and yet here you are wrongly insisting that the police subscribed to it.

    Regards,
    Ben
    Last edited by Ben; 02-18-2012, 04:48 PM.

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  • Malcolm X
    replied
    Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
    .
    The principal flaw in this to my mind is Hutchinson coming forward. Anyone seriously intending to place an invented suspect in the hands of the police to distract from himself is not going to make him look so different from any of the previous killer descriptions given by Lawende, Schwartz, etc.

    I mean, if you are late for work one morning, do you say you slept in, or that you spent the night with Miss World?
    Anyone who expects to be taken seriously, especially if his freedom depends on it, is going to make every effort to be realistic.
    Realistically, if Hutchinson had been the killer, he would have gone to ground, not to Commercial St.

    Regards, Jon S.
    he will make the suspect look different, if he's trying to blame a ``Dell boy Jew``on purpose, which is the next stage on from the Ghoulston st graffiti.

    JTR has no need to go to the police, or even to dive for cover, so if GH isn't JTR, then he was 2 days too late, so therefore he's either after a reward or a time wasting hoaxer!

    the weakest scenario is that he saw LA DE DA

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  • harry
    replied
    Jon,
    W hy could not the midnight companion be a later intruder?.Seems to me if he could spend time with Kelly untill after midnight,his personnel life,whatever it was.placed no great restrictions on his behaviour or whereabouts.One could state the same of Hutchinson.No restrictions there.I doubt anyone worried on his behalf,if he was out all night.Of course a different description would require a different appraisal,but we are faced with what was reported.As we are faced with Kelly being found in room 13.Found anywhere else and we might think differently.Not that the description is the total of disbelief.It is only one item.Others have been argued repeatedly.
    Regards.

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  • DVV
    replied
    Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
    No, Bond does not need the 'time' of her last meal. I know what you mean, being all CSI-type precise, but that is not looking at this from their point of view.

    At the time of the autopsy the police had Blotchy as a suspect, via Cox.
    When a medical man finds food in the stomach he asks the police to find out when she might have ate.

    - Cox told the police she followed Blotchy & Kelly down Dorset St. from the direction of Commercial St., the Britannia is behind them.
    - Cox said Kelly had been drinking.
    - Cox tells us Blotchy carries a pot of ale.

    The police therefore can assist Bond in so far as they suspect Kelly & her client have just "recently", meaning within minutes, stepped out of a local pub or tavern. Right or wrong this is the working assumption on Saturday.
    Either establishment provides both food and drink.

    Bond can work under the assumption from the police that Kelly ate anywhere around 11:00-11:30, as a rule of thumb. This, coupled with other unverified stories of Kelly being in the Britannia from 10:00-10:30 pm is consistent.
    This is all Bond needs in order to establish a rough time of death, and a rough time of death is what he provided.

    Such a direction from police is all that is required for Bond to use digestion as an estimate.
    Thus the sequence of logic is established.
    Bond makes his estimate based on the police suspicion of Kelly's liason with Blotchy, without a specific time but a rudimentary time window, 10:00-11:30 pm.

    Regards, Jon S.
    Jon, you may think you're on something here, but really you are not.
    Do you realize you're telling us that Bond established the TOD on the basis of Mary having taken her meal in the Britannia between 10 and 10:30 ?
    Who told you the police believed she was there and ate at such a time ?
    And that would be the reason why they dismissed both Hutch and Prater ?
    Oh my God. No wonder they did not catch the man.
    Try to write a dissertation about this theory and you'll see how flawed it is.
    The good part of it is that you won't waste time with footnotes, for there is nothing to back it up.

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  • Wickerman
    replied
    Hi Harry.
    Originally posted by harry View Post
    Jon,
    The most likely person to know that she would be in her room,alone,under the influence of drink,in the early hours of that morning,was her midnight companion.
    Quite true, its the safest bet, better than an intruder.

    Or the man reported by Hutchinson.
    I don't think there would be as much interest in labelling Hutchinson as the killer if the man he had described had been a rough looking local.
    Which tells me it isn't that there is anything suspicious about Hutchinson himself, it is more a reaction against the detailed description he gave.
    However,...

    It is because of my doubts that this person existed,that I tend to to the opinion that Hutchinson lied,was himself the midnight visitor,and was her killer.
    If Hutchinson had not come forward we would not know anything about about Astrachan. All we would have is Sarah Lewis seeing a man outside in the street looking up the court. The fact she also claimed to then see this man stand outside Kelly's door would make for a very suspicious sighting.
    Depending on Kelly's time of death, whoever this character was would certainly be high on the suspect list.

    The principal flaw in this to my mind is Hutchinson coming forward. Anyone seriously intending to place an invented suspect in the hands of the police to distract from himself is not going to make him look so different from any of the previous killer descriptions given by Lawende, Schwartz, etc.

    I mean, if you are late for work one morning, do you say you slept in, or that you spent the night with Miss World?
    Anyone who expects to be taken seriously, especially if his freedom depends on it, is going to make every effort to be realistic.
    Realistically, if Hutchinson had been the killer, he would have gone to ground, not to Commercial St.

    Regards, Jon S.
    Last edited by Wickerman; 02-18-2012, 07:54 AM.

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  • harry
    replied
    Jon,
    No doubt there were a large number of bed sitters,as there are today,but unless there was personnel knowledge as to occupancy,one would not know what situation would be encountered on entering.As to 13 Millers Court,because of it's situation,and because it had been untill very recent lived in by a couple,one would also have to have been aware of the split,which had left only the female in residence. Would this knowledge be widespread? The court residents would know,but would a casual passer by on Dorset Street know.The most likely person to know that she would be in her room,alone,under the influence of drink,in the early hours of that morning,was her midnight companion.Or the man reported by Hutchinson.It is because of my doubts that this person existed,that I tend to to the opinion that Hutchinson lied,was himself the midnight visitor,and was her killer.

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  • Wickerman
    replied
    Hi Ben.

    Originally posted by Ben View Post
    They definitely, definitely reported the police opinion that the murder occurred later than the TOD offered by Bond, and accurately at that. They didn't just make it up for some bizarre, illogical reason.
    Yes, I remember an earlier quote from you on this subject. Apparently your Star "flatly refutes" Bonds ToD, in your opinion..
    Dr. Phillips's evidence, together with that of Mary Ann Cox, Elizabeth Prater, and others, proves that the murder was committed SHORTLY AFTER THREE O'CLOCK- a fact which brings into startling relief the murderer's coolness, caution, and tenacity of purpose."
    Ok, just quote from Dr. Phillips testimony at the Inquest precisely what he say's about "Time of Death" - Nothing!

    Your Star is Wrong!

    Now, Mary Ann Cox, what does she say?, that at 3:00 am all was quiet in Kelly's room?
    Is that because she was already dead?
    She heard no screams so obviously either Cox is mistaken as to the time, or the Star has also got this wrong. Cox's contributes Nothing!, to contest Dr. Bond.

    By the way, The Star also wrote:
    "Mary Ann Cox, who lives in the house where the dreadful deed was done,.."

    She does?
    Is this another example of your reliable Star?

    Then Prater, who plainly said she heard a scream "probably after 4:00 am", is certainly "after" 3:00 am, but hardly "shortly after", so where are they getting all this useless information from, you say its the police?

    You have criticized both the Morning Advertiser and the Daily News for being unreliable yet you continue to quote this drivel from the Star.

    I cannot take your persistent use of this untrustworthy, unreliable newspaper as a serious source of information.

    If this is all you can drag up against Dr. Bond's estimated ToD, then you have nothing, just the usual smoke & mirrors.

    The truth, the police had no sense of direction following the conclusion of the Inquest. No determinable Time of Death, Dr. Bond's report provided that direction.

    Regards, Jon S.

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  • Garry Wroe
    replied
    Originally posted by caz View Post
    Again, Garry, I was asking for specifics in Hutch's case, not generalities.
    Specifics that none of us could possibly know, Caz, hence the need to refer to the general behavioural patterns of known offenders.

    Well since your theory is that he did enter the room, to slaughter the woman alone inside …
    I have never at any time stated it as my belief that Hutchinson killed anyone.

    … you must have gone through the whole Hutch scenario in your head, and not simply relied on our common burglar and what he might or might not do when trying to commit a far less serious type of crime in premises that may be entirely unfamiliar to him, along with the occupants.

    There is no significant distinction, Caz, between the psychology of a burglar and a man intent on entering a room for the purpose of murder. The cognitive processes are the same in either case, which is why I referred to the principle of risk and reward in my previous post. It was established decades ago, for example, that shopping behaviour and the trawling activities employed by serial killers draw upon identical cognitive mapping processes. Thus I maintain that the burglary analogy holds true.

    We don't know that Hutch 'neglected to disclose such detail to Abberline' since we have no details of the interrogation …
    Hutchinson never mentioned spending several minutes directly outside Kelly’s room whilst detailing his witness statement, and Abberline made no reference to it in his accompanying memo. Since the incident was too important not to have been remarked upon by Abberline, it may be inferred that it was never discussed during the interrogation or the interview proper.

    … But if he did, do you suppose Abberline would not have picked up on any additional or contradictory claims made subsequently and assessed them accordingly?
    One would assume so. But then if, as certainly appears to have been the case, Hutchinson had been dismissed as a time-waster by the time his newspaper claims entered the public domain, it is entirely possible that the several minutes he allegedly spent outside Kelly’s room were deemed to have been Packeresque flights of fancy and were thus disregarded. On the other hand, none of the Ripper-related books I read in the mid-Eighties made any reference to this incident. I only learned of it whilst conducting my own research at the Colindale newspaper archive. So if it was missed by the authors who preceded me, it may be the case that it slipped beneath Abberline’s radar too. He was rather busy at the time, after all.
    Last edited by Garry Wroe; 02-18-2012, 05:16 AM.

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  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by caz View Post
    There's no place for common sense like that here, Jon.

    The awful thing is, it could well have been the ripper waiting 45 minutes for Hutch to push off before he could finally turn his attention to Mary Kelly's throat shortly after 3am.
    Hi Caz.
    It makes you wonder though how he could have known whether Hutch was still there or not, you cannot see Dorset St. from Kelly's room without poking your head out the door, something Hutch could have seen, which would surely highten his suspicion

    According to Hutch though, he walked up the passage and stood there by her door. Why couldn't he hear anything, no talking, laughing, no firelight, no sign of occupancy?
    Maybe the attack was swift, as soon as the door closed?
    If Jack was anything he was not a timewaster

    Regards, Jon S.

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  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by harry View Post
    Jon
    I apologise if it appears I misread you,but the similarity I was alluding to w as that each was following a seemingly intoxicated individual,and how close each was to observe events at a crucial time.
    Hi Harry.
    Misunderstandings are par for the course I'm afraid, I began to wonder if I had misunderstood you

    In general I discount specific details as given by most witnesses,and I am persuaded that BS had no part in murder.
    If I feel it necessary to discount something in conflicting statements then I feel obliged to provide a reason. Though a witness with poor eyesight may be more common than we care to think.
    I think, for example, that this might have been a contributing factor with Mathew Packer, he was afterall 57. He could have been nearsighted which might account for being unsure of what he saw, and how bad it was raining.

    I tend to believe witnesses were basically honest, whether they talked to the press or police.
    Like you though, I'm not a believer that BS killed Stride, but equally neither do I think Blotchy killed Kelly.
    Always bearing in mind though, nothing is certain, which you've probably noticed I feel necessary to remind 'some' people.

    As to knowledge of Kelly's living arrangements,I make this observation.To a person not faimilier with the court,room 13 would appear the rear room of the building fronting Dorset street.(which it was)As a rule lower rooms were not used as sleeping accomodation. Alterations which had made room 13 a bed sitter would not have been general knowledge.As there was another room above 13,to the unknowing this probably would be taken as the bedroom.So unless the intruder that night was a burglar expecting an unoccupied room,and panicking when he found it not so,someone was aware of what it was being used for,and who was using it.
    Thats an interesting observation, single rooms were very common though, as census records show.
    I'm sure there was a contemporary source somewhere which mentioned, or suggested, that these 'furnished' rooms were intended to be left unlocked when the lodger was out, and the lock only used while the room was occupied.
    No-one worried about possessions being stolen, they owned nothing worth stealing. The locks were for protection against burglars or intruders.
    The houses throughout Millers Court were divided up into upstairs/dowstairs tenements, 1, 3 & 5 were downstairs while 2, 4 & 6 upstairs. This too may have been more common.
    I just feel Jack did not change to being a burglar. And if it wasn't Jack, then it was someone she knew, a past client or lover?

    Back to Cox's information.It might seem extremely unlikely that a person bent on murder would start out that evening carrying a beer pail.of what use would it be.especially so if he was a stranger from outside the area.
    Quite true, the pot of ale suggests a casual visit, out of context with what we have pursuaded ourselves Jack was like.
    If Blotchy killed her, he wasn't Jack, if he didn't kill her, most likely in my opinion, she went out again and made an appointment with destiny.

    Regards, Jon S.

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  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by DVV View Post
    And this, the police knew full well, including Anderson. Nobody could seriously take Bond's "2 o'clock" for the Gospel truth, first of all Bond himself, for he was aware, as an expert, that determing ToD, especially under certain circumstances like that of Miller's Court (body found hours after the murder, in a room that could have been cold - broken window - but hot as well - fire in the grate), was beyond his expertise.
    I'm concerned with not losing the point of this disagreement.
    All we are concerned with here is establishing Bond's flow of logic to substantiate his estimate for a ToD between 1:00 - 2:00 am. Which in consequence, shifted the thrust of the investigation from Hutchinson back to Cox.

    We are not insisting Bond was correct, no police official could judge, neither any other doctor could contest him.

    The police needed direction on the 12th and they have it in Bonds report.

    Regards, Jon S.

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  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by DVV View Post
    Of course Bond could use digestion as a determining factor, albeit not a precise one, if only he had known the time of Mary's last meal.
    No, Bond does not need the 'time' of her last meal. I know what you mean, being all CSI-type precise, but that is not looking at this from their point of view.

    At the time of the autopsy the police had Blotchy as a suspect, via Cox.
    When a medical man finds food in the stomach he asks the police to find out when she might have ate.

    - Cox told the police she followed Blotchy & Kelly down Dorset St. from the direction of Commercial St., the Britannia is behind them.
    - Cox said Kelly had been drinking.
    - Cox tells us Blotchy carries a pot of ale.

    The police therefore can assist Bond in so far as they suspect Kelly & her client have just "recently", meaning within minutes, stepped out of a local pub or tavern. Right or wrong this is the working assumption on Saturday.
    Either establishment provides both food and drink.

    Bond can work under the assumption from the police that Kelly ate anywhere around 11:00-11:30, as a rule of thumb. This, coupled with other unverified stories of Kelly being in the Britannia from 10:00-10:30 pm is consistent.
    This is all Bond needs in order to establish a rough time of death, and a rough time of death is what he provided.

    Such a direction from police is all that is required for Bond to use digestion as an estimate.
    Thus the sequence of logic is established.
    Bond makes his estimate based on the police suspicion of Kelly's liason with Blotchy, without a specific time but a rudimentary time window, 10:00-11:30 pm.

    Regards, Jon S.
    Last edited by Wickerman; 02-18-2012, 01:08 AM.

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  • Malcolm X
    replied
    Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
    Hello Caroline.

    "The awful thing is, it could well have been the ripper waiting 45 minutes for Hutch to push off before he could finally turn his attention to Mary Kelly's throat shortly after 3am."

    Now here's a novel thought. Whilst Hutch is looking up the court waiting for knowledge of A-Man, A-Man is peering back at Hutch wondering when he will ever leave.

    Interesting.

    Cheers.
    LC
    yes very interesting, because if true LA DE DA would definitely be worried about the bloke outside, the trouble is he cant spy back without GH instantly spotting him..... but he can leave millers court soon after GH leaves and then retun later himself at 4am, mind you, Blotchy can return too

    no..... it looks like there was no LA DE DA, GH was waiting for Blotchy to leave, because he heard MJK singing earlier on

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