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  • #91
    Originally posted by caz View Post
    Er, because in medical speak, 'superficial' almost certainly relates back to the Latin and just means 'across the surface' of the skin. The clues are right there in your own example, Errata. Likewise, the cut, or cuts, to Eddowes's throat could formally have been described as 'superficial' while still serious enough to cause death. I suggest it relates to the fact that the throat was sliced/slashed (ie across the surface) with the blade's edge, rather than stabbed/penetrated by the point of a knife. Similarly I assume your bread knife didn't go into your finger point first, but thought it was slicing through a fresh loaf.

    Love,

    Caz
    X
    It was an avocado. Don't use a bread knife on an avocado.

    And this is what I mean. Superficial doesn't tell me how deep the wound was. So when they say the second cut was superficial, I don't know if I'm supposed to picture a paper cut or my finger. A cut like my finger would show an intent of making a second cut. A paper cut like thing could just be a slip of the knife.
    The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

    Comment


    • #92
      Originally posted by Errata View Post
      Post hoc ergo propter hoc. Just because the theory is old doesn't mean in is logical. It is in fact fallacy. Serial killers retreat after failure far more often than they escalate.
      Hi Errata,

      Tell that to Ted Bundy - and Mark Dixie - and Leigh Thornhill - to name but three examples of repeat offenders in recent years who had genuine, fully documented double events, as a result of highly frustrating initial attacks that left them wanting more and doing far more damage to their next victim. So the theory regarding the ripper's frustration after Stride may be old, but it was rather astute considering what we know today about violent opportunists - or should know. If the theory was wrong in the ripper's case, it was certainly no fallacy and was perfectly logical.

      My mom's friend was shot in the head with a .44 coming home from work the same night as a Son of Sam murder. They were very excited because she lived and they thought she would identify the serial killer. She identified the man who shot her, but it wasn't Berkowitz. It was a dumb kid. Murders continue with or without a serial killer in the news.
      Yes, but we have a limited count of 39 recorded unsolved murders of adult women by knife in the whole of England between 1887 and 1889. So it might be an idea to find out more about these cases individually before assuming that Stride's murder was in any way the kind of commonplace event that can be filed with 'murders that continued' regardless.

      Sure, but lets say four of the murders were the work of a serial killer, and one was due to a failed blackmailing attempt. That's four extras because of the serial killer, and one that was in the 11 knife murders that statistically was already accounted for.
      But where is the evidence that any of these women were into blackmail? It sounds like something out of a spy novel. Even so, your figures don't add up because if you only allow the serial killer 4 victims, you have another 13 to account for, including your blackmailer, not just the 11 recorded in the previous and subsequent years. It's a small sample for nit-picking, I'll grant you, but that's the point: very few unsolvable murders, and even fewer of the nature we see in the fall of 88 in that very tiny spot of England.

      If there was stuff in these women's personal lives that put them at added risk for assault or murder, and there was... not even counting being prostitutes, then it's far more likely that someone much closer to home was the killer.
      But not when you take all the individual circumstances and the above murder statistics into account. Nobody thought any of the Suffolk Strangler's victims was killed and dumped by a one-off killer in a domestic incident. Same goes for the Yorkshire Ripper's victims.

      Love,

      Caz
      X
      "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


      Comment


      • #93
        Originally posted by Errata View Post
        It was an avocado. Don't use a bread knife on an avocado.

        And this is what I mean. Superficial doesn't tell me how deep the wound was. So when they say the second cut was superficial, I don't know if I'm supposed to picture a paper cut or my finger. A cut like my finger would show an intent of making a second cut. A paper cut like thing could just be a slip of the knife.
        But you didn't intend to cut your finger, did you, let alone that badly? Surely that was a slip of the knife?

        Love,

        Caz
        X
        "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


        Comment


        • #94
          Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
          Hello (again) Errata.

          I know the evidence says she was not killed standing up. But she HAD to be."

          If she were bolt upright, she'd have sprayed the building. What about in process of falling--leaning over?

          Cheers.
          LC
          This is what I mean by it not making sense. In fact none of the murders make sense.

          As human beings, we don't have instincts like animals do. But our reflexes are hard wired. There are things we do in certain circumstances, and only a ton of training (like say, in the army or over years of exposure) allows us to act in some other way. Some things are slightly optional. Fight or flight for example. For physical threat there are three options, for emotional there are five. Since we are dealing with the physical, we have fight, flight, or freeze. Somebody leaps out a you scaring the pants off of you, you do one of those three things. But it will always be one of those three. You will never react by say, bursting into song. Not unless your neurochemistry is just completely whacked out.

          None of these women reacted in any known fashion to what happened to them. They didn't react at all. That DOES NOT happen. Something blocks your airway, an arm, a scarf, an anaconda, whatever, every single human being reacts the same way. They try to free their throat. Maybe just for a few seconds, but homo sapiens brings their hands up to pull the constriction away. Hard wired reaction. Stride certainly didn't do this. She still had her bag of candy in her hand. Constriction of the throat = hands open, hands to constrictor. Every time. Every human.

          And here's what really doesn't make sense. ANY blockage of the airway causes this reaction. Choking on a hot dog, allergic reaction, choking on your own blood because your throat had been cut. Her hands should have been covered in blood, cachous on the ground at her feet. So she didn't put her hands to her throat because she couldn't. She was dead. Unconscious means she drops the the candy. Ischemia means she clutches it for a few seconds, but then drops it once blood pressure settles, which happens very quickly.

          So how the hell did she end up on the ground still clutching her candy? No one. Not no one lies down in the mud on a sidewalk on a public street in front of buildings with awake people in them for anything. I mean, maybe if there was a gun involved, but she certainly didn't do it willingly. IF she was soliciting, she would have taken him at least behind the gate. If she wasn't, the reasons for her to lie in the mud just dropped to zero. She was not hit on the head while standing, there's no bruise and she would have dropped the cachous. She could have been choked out, but the hard wired reflexes would have caused her to drop the cachous. She wasn't tripped, she wasn't forced down.

          The only way she ends up on the ground clutching the cachous is some vasovagal response that ended in death. But one that was so quick she didn't even register what happened to her. And of all the things that we know happened to her, the only thing that could cause that was the severance of the vagus nerve. Stopping her heart cold. She could not end up on the ground WITH her cachous any other way. The only thing that makes sense medically, physiologically, neurologically is that he cut her throat while she was still standing. Probably still standing and unaware of him.

          I've asked neurologists, I've asked physical therapists, I even asked the Chair of emergency medicine at the NIH to explain this death. They all agree she had to be dead before she hit the ground. And the only explanation for her still clutching the cachous is either a major neurological event like a stroke, nervous overload (like hitting the vagus nerve, which acts like the funny bone except on the spine and the heart), or cadaveric spasm (tightening of all muscles due to death. Usually sudden death).

          And she didn't have a stroke. Vagus overload causes death. Cadaveric spasm is caused BY death. She was clutching the candy because she was dead. There was no fight, no struggle, or she would drop the candy. She has the candy, therefore she is dead before hitting the ground, therefore she was upright when he killed her.

          And the only thing that would kill her quickly enough to cause either condition was the cut throat.

          AND WE KNOW THAT DIDN'T HAPPEN!!!!!

          I mean, I cant even remotely explain it. It's all wrong. The blood evidence, the scene evidence, the trace from the bodies HAS to be wrong, but there's no reason for me to think it is. And there is nothing in their systems that indicates they were either drugged or poisoned, which could alter the chemistry enough to cause someone to behave like some kind of sheep. There is literally no reason for the victims to behave the way they did, and every reason for them to have behaved differently. But nothing accounts for it. I mean, unless there was some other guy holding a gun on them. A knife does not pose a significant enough threat to command cooperation.

          It's so frustrating I could choke somebody.
          The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

          Comment


          • #95
            Originally posted by caz View Post
            But you didn't intend to cut your finger, did you, let alone that badly? Surely that was a slip of the knife?

            Love,

            Caz
            X
            No it was intentional, merely intended for the avocado. The knife did not slip. The avocado did. Little green bastards.

            I don't know if he was trying to make a second cut, or if he just drew the knife across the skin pulling the blade out of the wound. There is something compulsive about the way Jack treats the throat. Not present in Stride. But a purposeful second cut, even if shallow, would be more in line with say, Chapman, where a single purposeful cut and a little split skin would be more consistent with Stride. So it's trying to see if there is a link between the murders with knife skill.
            The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

            Comment


            • #96
              Originally posted by caz View Post
              Hi Errata,

              Tell that to Ted Bundy - and Mark Dixie - and Leigh Thornhill - to name but three examples of repeat offenders in recent years who had genuine, fully documented double events, as a result of highly frustrating initial attacks that left them wanting more and doing far more damage to their next victim. So the theory regarding the ripper's frustration after Stride may be old, but it was rather astute considering what we know today about violent opportunists - or should know. If the theory was wrong in the ripper's case, it was certainly no fallacy and was perfectly logical.

              Caz
              X
              Pardon me for shortening it, but I agree with everything you say. But it's all about the odds, and which ones we choose to pay attention to. Of course there are exceptions to any rule. Not knowing anything about Jack as a person, it makes sense to me to put him with the majority. Which makes me disinclined to count Stride as one of his. If she was not one of his then she was one of the others that would be killed by knife in England. Which puts her in the minority, Jack in the majority, and given that most people are killed by someone they know, her "real" killer in the majority as well. Can it be switched around? Absolutely.

              One of the irritating things about logical fallacies is they do not preclude the truth. A person can set up, say, a slippery slope argument (a logical fallacy) and then have everything he said come to pass. He was right, but he was not logical. Post hoc ergo propter hoc is the worst. As it happens, any number of things that follow an event are in fact caused by that event. But not always. It's not some cosmic rule that things work out that way. Which is why that argument is considered a logical fallacy.

              I read something once that said that Dr. John Dee came to the conclusion that the plague was caused by rats. Which in a real sense is true. But he said it was because plague came under the aspect of the moon, and so did rats, so avoiding creatures that came under the aspect of the moon would prevent plague. I swear to god I don't even know what that means. Right conclusion, wrong... everything else.

              Some day, it may prove to be true that the officers and others who came up with this theory were right. But they certainly didn't get there based on any evidence or logic. So without evidence and logic, it seems only fair to question the conclusion.
              The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

              Comment


              • #97
                Originally posted by Errata View Post
                It's so frustrating I could choke somebody.
                "No more beer for you."

                Comment


                • #98
                  cachous

                  Hello Errata. Thanks.

                  ". . . homo sapiens brings their hands up to pull the constriction away. Hard wired reaction. Stride certainly didn't do this. She still had her bag of candy in her hand."

                  I think she DID bring her hands up. But her left was clutching the cachous. And she never became unconscious--only dead.

                  Cheers.
                  LC

                  Comment


                  • #99
                    Regarding the cachous, the only other solution I can suggest is that Liz Strides hand was still wet from the rain that had fell earlier in the evening and the thin tissue paper in which the cachous were held adhered to her hand. Dr Blackwell might well have shone some light on this suggestion.

                    "The packet was lodged between the thumb and the first finger, and was partially hidden from view"

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Errata
                      Personally I assumed that Stride WAS a victim of the Ripper until I read more on her throat wound. Which is the quality of a professional hit. Something not seen in his other victims.
                      Ah! Okay. As long as you're being rational and objective about it.

                      Yours truly,

                      Tom Wescott

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
                        Hello Errata. Thanks.

                        ". . . homo sapiens brings their hands up to pull the constriction away. Hard wired reaction. Stride certainly didn't do this. She still had her bag of candy in her hand."

                        I think she DID bring her hands up. But her left was clutching the cachous. And she never became unconscious--only dead.

                        Cheers.
                        LC
                        Except that people open their hands to do this. I'm not entirely sure why, it is not inherently necessary (thought certainly helpful). Maybe it's a clawing thing? But there was a team in the 60s who worked for the US army who studied this stuff for like a decade in order to understand what they needed to train troops to stop doing. Like not contracting around pain, which we do, but actually lengthens the amount of time we are in pain. And somehow all of that went into building Krav Maga, which is a self defense system that works with natural reaction instead of fighting it. Also stuntmen learn this stuff so they can fake it for the camera.

                        It's like a whole science. Enough so that they know that most of these impulses start in the hindbrain in the autonomic function section, but it is not autonomic function. One of those wibbly-wobbly areas of the brain.
                        The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Post
                          Ah! Okay. As long as you're being rational and objective about it.

                          Yours truly,

                          Tom Wescott
                          Rational and objective people gave up this case long ago as unsolvable and unknowable. Since both are clearly true. What happened to Liz Stride that night is as unknowable to us as what occupies the nightstand of my seventh grade math teacher. And your guess on that is as good as mine.

                          It's not about being irrational. It's about what flavor of irrational are we, and are our flavors of crazy compatible.
                          The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Errata View Post
                            .
                            Her hands should have been covered in blood, .
                            Her right hand was open and bloodied.
                            In fact, globules of blood that could have been arterial spray from rasing her hand to he throat.

                            .
                            cachous on the ground at her feet. .
                            Cachous were on the ground, they were in the gutter and scattered over the yard.

                            Comment


                            • open

                              Hello Errata. Thanks.

                              But, given the pressure on the throat, why would the hand open?

                              Cheers.
                              LC

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Jon Guy View Post
                                Her right hand was open and bloodied. ... Cachous were on the ground, they were in the gutter and scattered over the yard.
                                Could she have spit them out during the attack? Was her mouth full of cachous and is that why he supposedly didn't strangle her?

                                Did he slice her standing up versus using the ground as a cutting board? Does that explain the shallow depth?

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