If we restrict ourselves to that just which we can prove conclusively or persuasively, we've got:
* some women were murdered
* there was some variance as to the mutilations found on those women
* the individuals who discovered the bodies are known to have been at the murder scene
That's really about it. We don't know cause of death conclusively. We don't know if any of the witnesses are credible, in part because we don't have time of death nailed down. And we also don't know the extent to which the variance matters, because we don't have real insight into how much variation we should expect from a single killer. The latter is where some kind of big data analysis could change the game, but it hasn't yet.
* some women were murdered
* there was some variance as to the mutilations found on those women
* the individuals who discovered the bodies are known to have been at the murder scene
That's really about it. We don't know cause of death conclusively. We don't know if any of the witnesses are credible, in part because we don't have time of death nailed down. And we also don't know the extent to which the variance matters, because we don't have real insight into how much variation we should expect from a single killer. The latter is where some kind of big data analysis could change the game, but it hasn't yet.
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