DRoy: Fish,
If he was the killer I would say running would be the most logical choice to make.
If we accept him at his word, he heard Paul who is only 40 yards away so he had little time to react and decide what to do.
He would not be able to find the time to cover her up and stash the weapon in that time, DRoy - if he killed her, he obviously lied about the proximity of Paul. It would have been of the utmost importance to create a picture where he would not have had the time to kill her, and to my mind, the 19 October Swanson report shows that the police swallowed it, hook, line and sinker.
If Lech was the killer, I can't imagine him within that short period of time ignoring what most would find natural (run away) and somehow make a decision to stay and put himself in a position that could cause him to eventually jump through hoops to prove he was just an unlucky family man on his way to work.
Jumping through hoops like that beats running into the arms of a PC with an eviscerated woman laying in the street behind you, DRoy. Thatīs the whole point. As Iīve said a thousand times, do not apply yourself and your own thinking - imagine that you were a man that actually did not feel any fright at all, who was totally calm and who was able to turn what seemed a risk into an advantage; tagging along with Paul provided him with a safe way out, remember. You and I would have sweated and trembled (I know I would have, at least), while a full-blood psychopath would perhaps have enjoyed the show thoroughly.
If Lech was a serial killer, there is the point to make they don't always do what we might consider the most natural. However, I believe reliance on this would be a desperate solution with no evidence since we don't know who JTR was.
There is no desperation in what we suggest, I think. Itīs a rather easy and straightforward case, and it is to a great extent a jigsaw puzzle that will only fit in one way. This is why I and Lechmere (the poster) will sometimes look like siamese twins.
The psychopathy is one such matter - if he was the killer, then no normally functioning man would be able to pull off what he pulled off. It would have been a completely coldblooded affair, with remarkable solutions to difficult problems, and with very little time to spare. But the whole chain of events speaks the same language - there is not one instance where he wavered, if weīre on the money:
He was not phazed by Paulīs arrival, but was cool enough to judge the distance, stash the weapon, hide the wounds and con Paul into giving him an alibi.
Then, when he realized that Paul wanted to find a PC, he thought up the perfect ruse to avoid being stopped and held or brought back to the murder site.
And at the inquest, he coldbloodiedly served a story he would have known was contradicted by Mizen - knowing full well that it would be his word against the PC:s, and not thinking that Mizen was any match for him.
If he was the killer, then I think his "No, Sir - because there was no PC in Buckīs Row" is more than just a little bit gleeful.
And if was not the killer, then why did not one single killing take place in Selby Street, in Pelham Street, in Rutland Street - or in any other single street of all the hundreds and hundreds of East End streets where he had no reason to be present at the relevant hours? Why did each and every murder street tally with the roads he would arguably have had good reason to use?
Just how large is the chance that this would be the case - and that the timings would work too, with the Stride/Eddowes slayings being too early to fit with the working trek, but instead on a Saturday night?
What are the odds?
I've enjoyed reading your Lech theories, and I respect your knowledge and research skills. I also believe there could be more to Lech based on what you and Lechmere have put forward. That being said, I think there are holes that at this time can only be filled in with guess work and theories unprovable especially when they seem to go against rational thought and action (regardless if the argument is made that JTR was anything but rational and without rational thought).
Thatīs good to hear. Thank you for that! There are holes, and we must use conjecture at times, thatīs true. But it is less true of Lechmere than of any other named suspect, I think. While most other top suspects are suspects for reasons hidden to us, this is not so with Lechmere.
And as for what is rational thinking or not, itīs good we have Fleetwood Mac!
All the best,
Fisherman
If he was the killer I would say running would be the most logical choice to make.
If we accept him at his word, he heard Paul who is only 40 yards away so he had little time to react and decide what to do.
He would not be able to find the time to cover her up and stash the weapon in that time, DRoy - if he killed her, he obviously lied about the proximity of Paul. It would have been of the utmost importance to create a picture where he would not have had the time to kill her, and to my mind, the 19 October Swanson report shows that the police swallowed it, hook, line and sinker.
If Lech was the killer, I can't imagine him within that short period of time ignoring what most would find natural (run away) and somehow make a decision to stay and put himself in a position that could cause him to eventually jump through hoops to prove he was just an unlucky family man on his way to work.
Jumping through hoops like that beats running into the arms of a PC with an eviscerated woman laying in the street behind you, DRoy. Thatīs the whole point. As Iīve said a thousand times, do not apply yourself and your own thinking - imagine that you were a man that actually did not feel any fright at all, who was totally calm and who was able to turn what seemed a risk into an advantage; tagging along with Paul provided him with a safe way out, remember. You and I would have sweated and trembled (I know I would have, at least), while a full-blood psychopath would perhaps have enjoyed the show thoroughly.
If Lech was a serial killer, there is the point to make they don't always do what we might consider the most natural. However, I believe reliance on this would be a desperate solution with no evidence since we don't know who JTR was.
There is no desperation in what we suggest, I think. Itīs a rather easy and straightforward case, and it is to a great extent a jigsaw puzzle that will only fit in one way. This is why I and Lechmere (the poster) will sometimes look like siamese twins.
The psychopathy is one such matter - if he was the killer, then no normally functioning man would be able to pull off what he pulled off. It would have been a completely coldblooded affair, with remarkable solutions to difficult problems, and with very little time to spare. But the whole chain of events speaks the same language - there is not one instance where he wavered, if weīre on the money:
He was not phazed by Paulīs arrival, but was cool enough to judge the distance, stash the weapon, hide the wounds and con Paul into giving him an alibi.
Then, when he realized that Paul wanted to find a PC, he thought up the perfect ruse to avoid being stopped and held or brought back to the murder site.
And at the inquest, he coldbloodiedly served a story he would have known was contradicted by Mizen - knowing full well that it would be his word against the PC:s, and not thinking that Mizen was any match for him.
If he was the killer, then I think his "No, Sir - because there was no PC in Buckīs Row" is more than just a little bit gleeful.
And if was not the killer, then why did not one single killing take place in Selby Street, in Pelham Street, in Rutland Street - or in any other single street of all the hundreds and hundreds of East End streets where he had no reason to be present at the relevant hours? Why did each and every murder street tally with the roads he would arguably have had good reason to use?
Just how large is the chance that this would be the case - and that the timings would work too, with the Stride/Eddowes slayings being too early to fit with the working trek, but instead on a Saturday night?
What are the odds?
I've enjoyed reading your Lech theories, and I respect your knowledge and research skills. I also believe there could be more to Lech based on what you and Lechmere have put forward. That being said, I think there are holes that at this time can only be filled in with guess work and theories unprovable especially when they seem to go against rational thought and action (regardless if the argument is made that JTR was anything but rational and without rational thought).
Thatīs good to hear. Thank you for that! There are holes, and we must use conjecture at times, thatīs true. But it is less true of Lechmere than of any other named suspect, I think. While most other top suspects are suspects for reasons hidden to us, this is not so with Lechmere.
And as for what is rational thinking or not, itīs good we have Fleetwood Mac!
All the best,
Fisherman
Comment