Originally posted by caz
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
thanks lewis ill need to look into this deeming stuff a bit more, i was under the impression the consensus is still that its highly likely that he was in prison or out of country at the time of the ripper murders. we know bury, chapman and kelly were and druitt close enough.
but yeah deeming is promising, its just close proximity and a high likelihood of it are important to me when assessing suspect validity.
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Originally posted by Fiver View Post
While there are similarities, there are several notable deviations from the Rippers signature.
Half of East London probably fit the FBI Ripper profile.
We have no idea who wrote the chalk messages.
While the hangman suspected Bury, the hangman also made it clear that Bury did not confess.
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Originally posted by Fiver View Post
While there are similarities, there are several notable deviations from the Rippers signature.
Half of East London probably fit the FBI Ripper profile.
We have no idea who wrote the chalk messages.
While the hangman suspected Bury, the hangman also made it clear that Bury did not confess.
do we know why the hangman suspected bury? it really seems odd to me that berry, who wrote a book including all the famous criminals he'd hung, didnt include bury more with the ripper connection. you would think he would have jumped at the chance to write about how he had hung the ripper!
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Originally posted by John Wheat View PostSo we have a suspect with the same SIG as the Ripper.
Originally posted by John Wheat View PostThat fits the FBI profile.
Originally posted by John Wheat View PostHas made chalk messages saying he's the Ripper.
Originally posted by John Wheat View PostAdmitted to his hangman as being the Ripper.
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Originally posted by caz View Post
Hi Lewis,
I take your point, although I think it might have been irresponsible, and a little illogical not to investigate Bury further if there was any reason to think that they may have been hanging the ripper. The police were being heavily criticised - albeit rather unfairly - for their continued failure to catch the killer and make the women of Whitechapel safe again. It would have been a huge relief to everyone concerned had they been able to find evidence that Bury was their man, but instead they eliminated him, sending a signal that the ripper was still around and could strike again at any time.
Conversely, if they had tried to reassure the public, without the evidence to back it up, that the ripper murders had ended with Bury's execution, it would have come back to haunt them if and when another similar murder was committed - as was indeed the case. I'm not sure they could have won either way, but I'd like to think they'd have taken it a tad more seriously than to drop Bury from their inquiries after his long drop and hope for the best.
Love,
Caz
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Originally posted by GBinOz View PostAccording to Bury he awoke after a drunken binge to find his wife had hung herself from a door knob. Not at all ripper-like. No signature throat cut. Does he go to the police claiming that she suicided? No. He makes a cut in her abdomen which, when he proceeded to stuff her body in a packing case, resulted in some of her intestines protruding. No disembowelment by him. Still not ripper-like considering the escalation in violence up to Kelly. He and his friends then spent several days playing cards on said packing case. He then reports to police that his wife had committed suicide days before, and that he had cut her abdomen so that he WOULDN'T be suspected of being the ripper. Whaaat?? Why didn't he just dispose of the crate containing the body and disappear? Wouldn't the ripper have known what to do after having murdered five plus victims with increasing violence?
JtR murdered multiple victims with a stealth that enabled him to be unseen, and unheard, and unknown after more than 100 years. Bury was nothing more than a drunken idiot that longed to see his memory preserved in history.
But in Bury's case, had he committed the previous murders and the notoriety had mattered enough to him, he could simply have given a credible confession, since he would be executed anyway for offing 'er indoors.
On balance, it would seem that the man was just another wife killer and poor liar, who could never have hoped to get away with that one murder, let alone a whole series.
Love,
Caz
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Originally posted by Lewis C View PostI wonder about Bury whether his conviction and death sentence made the police less motivated to take a close look at him. Whether the Ripper or not, he wasn't going to kill anyone else, so the public safety didn't demand that they go the last mile in investigating him, especially when the initial take of a couple of policemen was that he probably wasn't the Ripper.
I take your point, although I think it might have been irresponsible, and a little illogical not to investigate Bury further if there was any reason to think that they may have been hanging the ripper. The police were being heavily criticised - albeit rather unfairly - for their continued failure to catch the killer and make the women of Whitechapel safe again. It would have been a huge relief to everyone concerned had they been able to find evidence that Bury was their man, but instead they eliminated him, sending a signal that the ripper was still around and could strike again at any time.
Conversely, if they had tried to reassure the public, without the evidence to back it up, that the ripper murders had ended with Bury's execution, it would have come back to haunt them if and when another similar murder was committed - as was indeed the case. I'm not sure they could have won either way, but I'd like to think they'd have taken it a tad more seriously than to drop Bury from their inquiries after his long drop and hope for the best.
Love,
Caz
XLast edited by caz; 11-27-2024, 05:33 PM.
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Originally posted by Sunny Delight View Post
That's an interesting take. Anyone who disagrees with you hasn't a clue what they are talking about and are illogical. You don't seem to be able to tell the difference between being a good suspect insofar as comparing to other suspects. However, I am still waiting on the answer to my question previously posed- what exactly do we have on Bury that makes him a strong suspect when actually taken on its own merits?
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Originally posted by GBinOz View Post
much appreciated, ill check it out.
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Originally posted by Lewis C View Post
Hi Abby,
I agree that the report that George cited about Deeming being in WC at the time is inconclusive. However, In Paul Begg's review of Roger Millington's book about Deeming in Ripperologist 142, Begg said that Robin Napper showed that Deeming was in Britain at the time of the murders, after having said that he wasn't in prison. I think that would put Deeming in a similar situation to James Kelly and Druitt: all 3 were in Britain at the time of the murders, none of them can be proven to have been in London at that time, but all 3 of them could have been.
but yeah deeming is promising, its just close proximity and a high likelihood of it are important to me when assessing suspect validity.
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
Thanks george
that report is way too tenuous for me RE deeming being in WC at the time. Hopefully more turns up.
and yes I have seen the movie it is excellent. Have you seen the Raven? Excellent time piece thriller about a serial killer in Baltimore while Poe was there murdering people the same way as they die in his stories . One of my favorites.
I agree that the report that George cited about Deeming being in WC at the time is inconclusive. However, In Paul Begg's review of Roger Millington's book about Deeming in Ripperologist 142, Begg said that Robin Napper showed that Deeming was in Britain at the time of the murders, after having said that he wasn't in prison. I think that would put Deeming in a similar situation to James Kelly and Druitt: all 3 were in Britain at the time of the murders, none of them can be proven to have been in London at that time, but all 3 of them could have been.
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Originally posted by GBinOz View Post
Hi Lewis C,
Aren't you overlooking Deeming?
With both Bury and Deeming we see the certain murder of family members along with the suspicion of the serial killing of strangers. Bury used strangulation. Deeming used strangulation and throat cutting, the latter being more similar to the ripper technique. Both attempted to hid the body(ies) of family members to escape the consequences. Bury subsequently revealed the body, whereas Deeming never did - neither did JtR. Both fitted the FBI profile. Both were disposing of people who had out served their purpose. Bury chose to advertise with the chalk graffiti, Deeming did not, and JtR's possible chalk graffiti was obscure at best, and certainly not self implicating.
The divergent aspect being relied upon for Bury is the abdominal attack. While I can see a killer using similar techniques with family and strangers to achieve the actual deaths, I am not persuaded that the killer would have felt the urge to perpetrate the eviscerations on family members that drove him to visit such injuries on the strangers.
I see the abdominal attack by Bury as inconsistent with the differentiation between family and stranger, but perfectly consistent with his fantasy of attempting to be perceived as a person of notoriety rather than an insignificant drunken parasite.
Cheers, George
I agree that if the Ripper had killed family members, he wouldn't necessarily have done it in the same way that he killed strangers. After all, I think George Chapman is one of the better suspects, and he killed in a completely different manner from the Ripper. The way I look at it is that differences don't necessarily mean that a suspect wasn't the Ripper, but if there are similarities, that makes me more inclined to suspect that person. You make a good point about Deeming being similar to the Ripper in that he both strangled and cut throats, while Bury just strangled, but I see mutilation as being such an unusual thing to do that that outweighs Deeming's similarity of both throat cutting and strangling. I still think Deeming is one of the best suspects, but not ahead of Bury.
I do think that Bury seeking notoriety is a definite possibility, but in a case where all of the suspects are weak, that being merely a definite possibility isn't enough to keep Bury from being a better suspect than all of the others.
Cheers, Lewis C
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