Originally posted by Graham
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our killer been local
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Three things in life that don't stay hidden for to long ones the sun ones the moon and the other is the truth
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Originally posted by Steve S View PostAn interesting point is the sobriety(or otherwise), of the victims at "Pick-up" time....Kate was sober by police standards.......Three things in life that don't stay hidden for to long ones the sun ones the moon and the other is the truth
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Originally posted by pinkmoon View PostIf a women is prepared to have sex in the street for money she must be desperate sober or not.There is a very strong possibility that the victims approached our killer themselves
Desperate yes but they would have been wary.
I agree with Graham when he says the murderer would 'have had even a small degree of outwards respectability about him'
He had to win them over. Now known local man could provide them with that confidence or someone with that outward respectability.
Best
Nick
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I must say, some of the reasoning here seems backwards. Can the mere fact that the killer got away with these murders really tell us anything about where he most likely lived or worked, or what he did for a living? The starting point is surely with the man himself and his urge to kill and mutilate vulnerable females. Are we to conclude that just because he did it several times in a very small area, and managed not to be seen in the act or identified, he was by pure coincidence already based in this ideal spot, and also in an ideal occupation, for acting out his rather specific fantasies?
When several of us go back time and again to the Monsoon in Brick Lane for a superb late afternoon curry on a Saturday, do people see us and say "Ah, they most probably live locally and have jobs here that fit round their meal time"? If they do they'd be completely wrong, given that we come from all over England (and one or two from abroad on occasion) and all have very different jobs and lifestyles.
The serial killer with his dark urges came first, before he worked out if, when and where he could indulge them. Yes, he may well have been fortunate enough to live and work right in among his unfortunate victims, but it ain't necessarily so.
Love,
Caz
X"Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov
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Originally posted by Nick Spring View PostHi Pinkmoon,
Desperate yes but they would have been wary.
I agree with Graham when he says the murderer would 'have had even a small degree of outwards respectability about him'
He had to win them over. Now known local man could provide them with that confidence or someone with that outward respectability.
Best
NickThree things in life that don't stay hidden for to long ones the sun ones the moon and the other is the truth
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Caz:
Are we to conclude that just because he did it several times in a very small area, and managed not to be seen in the act or identified, he was by pure coincidence already based in this ideal spot, and also in an ideal occupation, for acting out his rather specific fantasies?
No. We are just to acknowledge that it would help immensely.
When several of us go back time and again to the Monsoon in Brick Lane for a superb late afternoon curry on a Saturday, do people see us and say "Ah, they most probably live locally and have jobs here that fit round their meal time"?
I donīt think so. Why would they?
Then again, there WILL be a relation between living premises and restaurants, in the respect that people often eat locally. And the more often people turn to a specific establishment, the more credible it will be that they ARE locals. Letīs not try and deny that.
The best,
Fisherman
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urgent
Hello Caroline.
"Can the mere fact that the killer got away with these murders really tell us anything about where he most likely lived or worked, or what he did for a living?"
Not in my estimation.
"The starting point is surely with the man himself and his urge to kill and mutilate vulnerable females."
Or perhaps with the murders themselves? I'd hold off on the dark urges until a proper psychologist were consulted.
Cheers.
LC
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Originally posted by caz View PostI must say, some of the reasoning here seems backwards. Can the mere fact that the killer got away with these murders really tell us anything about where he most likely lived or worked, or what he did for a living? The starting point is surely with the man himself and his urge to kill and mutilate vulnerable females. Are we to conclude that just because he did it several times in a very small area, and managed not to be seen in the act or identified, he was by pure coincidence already based in this ideal spot, and also in an ideal occupation, for acting out his rather specific fantasies?
When several of us go back time and again to the Monsoon in Brick Lane for a superb late afternoon curry on a Saturday, do people see us and say "Ah, they most probably live locally and have jobs here that fit round their meal time"? If they do they'd be completely wrong, given that we come from all over England (and one or two from abroad on occasion) and all have very different jobs and lifestyles.
The serial killer with his dark urges came first, before he worked out if, when and where he could indulge them. Yes, he may well have been fortunate enough to live and work right in among his unfortunate victims, but it ain't necessarily so.
Love,
Caz
XLast edited by pinkmoon; 10-22-2013, 05:28 AM.Three things in life that don't stay hidden for to long ones the sun ones the moon and the other is the truth
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Originally posted by pinkmoon View PostI do think I have a valid point that if our killer lived in the centre of the murders then why wasn't there more .
Why did not Chikatilo kill every day? Why did not Gacy kill every day? Why did not Berkowitz kill every day? Why did not Shawcross kill every day? Why did not ...
Why was there not more in these cases?
Because what they did was sufficient to quench their respective thirsts, thatīs why. Or because they felt that the risk was too large at some occasions.
The best,
Fisherman
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostI donīt think you have a valid point at all.
Why did not Chikatilo kill every day? Why did not Gacy kill every day? Why did not Berkowitz kill every day? Why did not Shawcross kill every day? Why did not ...
Why was there not more in these cases?
Because what they did was sufficient to quench their respective thirsts, thatīs why. Or because they felt that the risk was too large at some occasions.
The best,
FishermanThree things in life that don't stay hidden for to long ones the sun ones the moon and the other is the truth
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostCaz:
Are we to conclude that just because he did it several times in a very small area, and managed not to be seen in the act or identified, he was by pure coincidence already based in this ideal spot, and also in an ideal occupation, for acting out his rather specific fantasies?
No. We are just to acknowledge that it would help immensely.
For instance, if he had happened to live within a short walking distance of where Spitalfields unfortunates could typically be found and tempted with a few pence, but not actually on the same streets, do you imagine he would have said to himself "Hmmm, I don't think I dare risk it. If only I lived or worked right on top of all that easy prey I could safely act out my most violent fantasies"?
I suspect the risk would have been much the same, possibly even less, if he was simply able to vanish from those streets as soon as he had finished his bloody business there. No policemen were likely to be stopping and searching men on the main roads within the first minute or two of a murder being committed and after that he would be long gone. But if home had been very close to a murder, there was a good chance of a knock on the door while the killer was sleeping off the night's excesses.
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostWhen several of us go back time and again to the Monsoon in Brick Lane for a superb late afternoon curry on a Saturday, do people see us and say "Ah, they most probably live locally and have jobs here that fit round their meal time"?
I donīt think so. Why would they?
Originally posted by Fisherman View PostThen again, there WILL be a relation between living premises and restaurants, in the respect that people often eat locally. And the more often people turn to a specific establishment, the more credible it will be that they ARE locals. Letīs not try and deny that.
Love,
Caz
XLast edited by caz; 10-22-2013, 07:31 AM."Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov
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Originally posted by lynn cates View PostHello Caroline.
"Can the mere fact that the killer got away with these murders really tell us anything about where he most likely lived or worked, or what he did for a living?"
Not in my estimation.
Originally posted by lynn cates View Post"The starting point is surely with the man himself and his urge to kill and mutilate vulnerable females."
Or perhaps with the murders themselves? I'd hold off on the dark urges until a proper psychologist were consulted.
Love,
Caz
X"Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov
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Originally posted by caz View PostBut Fishy, that's what I meant by backward reasoning. Yes, it might have helped, but it would be by pure luck in that case, and not planned that way by the killer.
For instance, if he had happened to live within a short walking distance of where Spitalfields unfortunates could typically be found and tempted with a few pence, but not actually on the same streets, do you imagine he would have said to himself "Hmmm, I don't think I dare risk it. If only I lived or worked right on top of all that easy prey I could safely act out my most violent fantasies"?
I suspect the risk would have been much the same, possibly even less, if he was simply able to vanish from those streets as soon as he had finished his bloody business there. No policemen were likely to be stopping and searching men on the main roads within the first minute or two of a murder being committed and after that he would be long gone. But if home had been very close to a murder, there was a good chance of a knock on the door while the killer was sleeping off the night's excesses.
Exactly. So why do people looking at these very rare mutilation murders say "Ah, the individual who did this most probably happened to live locally and to have a certain job, because this would have helped immensely to get away with it"? It's backward reasoning. If his home or workplace was conveniently surrounded by plentiful prey, he might have considered it a bonus, but then one could argue that he planned where to live or work around his murderous ambitions. I think that would be just as likely as being there by pure chance when his destructive urge first came upon him.
I'm not - but's that's to suit everyday people who are not in the process of satisfying their more exotic tastes. If you have 'special' requirements that involve going the extra mile (eg travelling to the East End for the Whitechapel meetings, so you take advantage of one of the best curry restaurants you will ever eat in), you will do so. Jack's requirements were nothing if not extraordinary - and therefore he would have been extraordinarily lucky to be based by chance where those requirements could most easily be satisfied: teeming, anonymous Whitechapel.
Love,
Caz
X"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
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Hi Caz,
But if home had been very close to a murder, there was a good chance of a knock on the door while the killer was sleeping off the night's excesses.
And Jack came very close to being caught in the act.
I'm only hypothesising, as we all are, really.
GrahamWe are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze
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