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So what if the Ripper was Jewish?

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  • And I got to tell YOU, Errata, that you make more sense on this thread than a good number of other posters taken together.

    126 years have passed, and we have had all the time in the world to study psychotic and manic people. They make incredibly bad bids for the Ripperīs role, end of story.

    Thatīs not to say that they could not kill - clearly they can. It IS, however, to say that they could not approach a person, kill that person, eviscerate that person and leave the killing site cleanly, silently and efficiently and stay undetected. And the more killings of this type we have, the less credible it becomes that a manic or psychotic person have perpetrated them.

    The Victorian police bought into the idea that the killer could be raving mad, and thatīs excusable to some extent since they knew a lot less than we do.

    We should not fall into such a simple trap, though.

    All the best,
    Fisherman

    Seems a bit harsh Fish, the people who know Jacob on this thread are trying to point out that he was NOT a raving lunatic, he had a illness that effectively attacked his brain little by little over a space of 5 years, slowly driving him insane, while still leaving him able to function.

    In fact I studied syphilis and the effects of it quite in-depth to try and bring a fair argument to the case of Jacob. We didn't just pull his name out of a lucky bag. It is on the Jacob Levy thread.

    Tracy
    It's not about what you know....it's about what you can find out

    Comment


    • People just don't want to believe that the legendary 'Jack the Ripper' was a local nut who went bananas on a few whores and then got locked away in the loony bin. It completely shatters all the mystique and romance of the field.

      Comment


      • Originally posted by tji View Post
        Fisherman

        Seems a bit harsh Fish, the people who know Jacob on this thread are trying to point out that he was NOT a raving lunatic, he had a illness that effectively attacked his brain little by little over a space of 5 years, slowly driving him insane, while still leaving him able to function.

        In fact I studied syphilis and the effects of it quite in-depth to try and bring a fair argument to the case of Jacob. We didn't just pull his name out of a lucky bag. It is on the Jacob Levy thread.

        Tracy
        Tracy!

        I actually think that - apart from Lechmere - Levy is one of the better suspects to have emerged over the last few years.

        However, that does not mean that he is necessarily a good suspect. Most suspects that surface are poor ones in most respects.

        I have read up extensively on your work on Levy, so Iīm up to scratch in that respect. What I find odd, though, is that you seem to argue both that he was a nutter, and so a likely killer, but also that he killed in his lucid moments.

        It makes little sense to me.

        Jacob Levy had reoccuring spells of "insanity", and spent a year in Essex County asylum in 1886, whereupon his wife was left to care for him afterwards. Once we have that diagnosis on him, and once we realize how troubled he apparently was, he becomes a bad suspect in my eyes.

        I am totally with Errata on this - the axis 2 she mentions will be far, far more credible to have been the mechanism behind the Ripper killings as far as Iīm concerned.

        So in spite of Jacob Levyīs relatively sound status as a Ripper candidate, he does not tick my boxes.

        All the best,
        Fisherman

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Harry D View Post
          People just don't want to believe that the legendary 'Jack the Ripper' was a local nut who went bananas on a few whores and then got locked away in the loony bin. It completely shatters all the mystique and romance of the field.
          "People" - in this case me - will recognize that the diseases that had you put away in asylums in 1888, are not diseases that will easily translate into ripperism.

          I donīt think that it would "shatter the mystique and romance" otherwise - it tallies quite well with what high ranking people in the police said, and as such, the accusation had a little of both Dickens and Poe to it, so thereīs mystique and romance enough in it anyway.

          Half orangutang, half devious madman - it wonīt get much more mystical than that. Or mythical.

          The best,
          Fisherman

          Comment


          • Hi Christer



            I actually think that - apart from Lechmere - Levy is one of the better suspects to have emerged over the last few years.
            Lechmere before Jacob......

            However, that does not mean that he is necessarily a good suspect. Most suspects that surface are poor ones in most respects.
            I tend to think there are bad suspects, but others definitely have potential.

            I have read up extensively on your work on Levy, so Iīm up to scratch in that respect. What I find odd, though, is that you seem to argue both that he was a nutter, and so a likely killer, but also that he killed in his lucid moments.

            It makes little sense to me.

            Apologies if that is how my posts have come across, that was not my intention. I am trying to explain the idea that a few people have of a grunting, drooling basket case 24/7 is incorrect.

            He had episodes of mania, spells of insanity, hearing voices, feeling the need to do violence if not restrained, wanders the streets etc. However he also would have been lucid when these moments were over able to perform normal tasks (this would eventually become less over the years.)

            Although on that note, wouldn't it be interesting tot think he did commit them while he was lucid and not manic?!

            Jacob Levy had reoccuring spells of "insanity", and spent a year in Essex County asylum in 1886, whereupon his wife was left to care for him afterwards. Once we have that diagnosis on him, and once we realize how troubled he apparently was, he becomes a bad suspect in my eyes.
            He actually spent 8 months - not trying to be pendantic just pointing out. You say troubled but he spent 8 month in an asylum (which was firstly a sentence to a prison) and was not committed again until a few month before his death almost 5 year later.

            I am totally with Errata on this - the axis 2 she mentions will be far, far more credible to have been the mechanism behind the Ripper killings as far as Iīm concerned.

            So in spite of Jacob Levyīs relatively sound status as a Ripper candidate, he does not tick my boxes.
            Each to their own.......I mean Lechmere?!

            Tracy
            It's not about what you know....it's about what you can find out

            Comment


            • Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
              "People" - in this case me - will recognize that the diseases that had you put away in asylums in 1888, are not diseases that will easily translate into ripperism.

              I donīt think that it would "shatter the mystique and romance" otherwise - it tallies quite well with what high ranking people in the police said, and as such, the accusation had a little of both Dickens and Poe to it, so thereīs mystique and romance enough in it anyway.

              Half orangutang, half devious madman - it wonīt get much more mystical than that. Or mythical.

              The best,
              Fisherman
              Which is why your favourite suspect is a normal, innocuous carman by day and a vicious serial killer by night.

              Comment


              • tji:

                He had episodes of mania, spells of insanity, hearing voices, feeling the need to do violence if not restrained, wanders the streets etc. However he also would have been lucid when these moments were over able to perform normal tasks (this would eventually become less over the years.)

                Although on that note, wouldn't it be interesting tot think he did commit them while he was lucid and not manic?!


                As for me, that would be the most sensible explanation, Tracy - a manic or psychotic killer does not work. Not at all.
                Of all the mistakes that were made throughout the Ripper hunt, I think the conception that he would be a lunatic of sorts is one of - if not THE - worst.

                Each to their own.......I mean Lechmere?!

                Haha! Iīm perfectly fine with Lechmere!

                The best,
                Fisherman

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Harry D View Post
                  Which is why your favourite suspect is a normal, innocuous carman by day and a vicious serial killer by night.
                  No, that has nothing to do with it, actually. Nor do I think he was schizophrenic. But I do think he acknowledged that killing was facilitated by the darkness, the empty streets and him being alone, away from his family.

                  But rest assured, there is a measure of romance connected with the Lechmre family too. However, Charles was the kind of grey man with a reason to walk the streets that is represented by so many serial killers.

                  Fisherman

                  PS. Serial killers are ALL vicious when they kill. That does not mean they are good when they donīt. Some of them are family men with kids and a job nevertheless.

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by tji View Post
                    .

                    What two year freedom?



                    Have you read the info on him at all?

                    He wouldn't have been a 'raving lunatic' in 1886 or even 1888, he had neuro-syphilis which was slowly killing him, attacking his brain and eventually after 5 years of slow deterioration, killing him die from paralysis of the insane.
                    He didn't wake up in 1886 and start drooling at the mouth, unable to talk or function, it took 4 years for him to go from a functioning adult to being admitted to an asylum for good. Even then he was lucid at times.

                    A passage from his medical records states-

                    Dec 4 1890 -

                    Always bright and lively - no despondency since last note.


                    So while he does get 'episodes' Dr Sequira states on his intake record he feels unless restrained he will do violence to someone he does seem to be able to have lucid moments.

                    So for all the questions of how could a madman escape notice, this is how, he was slowly losing the fight with a disease of the brain, but could still control his thoughts and actions at times.
                    two-ish years. Maybe three. I didn't look up my dates. But if in 1886 he was institutionalized for a year, he gets out in 87, and goes back in by 90.

                    And I expect Levy was a raving lunatic from time to time because manics are raving lunatics from time to time. These are generally the people who talk really fast and say things that make you back away slowly. To the point that those diagnosed are taught in the hospital to watch for people backing away from them so they will know they are in fact manic. You can't always tell from the inside.

                    I have read the information you have generously made available. And while fascinating it still doesn't sound to me like the Ripper. Don't get me wrong, he had problems. I just don't think they were the right problems. And there are really only two kinds of serial killers. Those on the sliding scale of psychopathy, and those on the higher end of the sliding scale of madness. He wasn't mad enough, he wasn't the right kind of mad, and he was not a psychopath. So I don't see him being a serial killer. He might have an appropriate level of narcissism, but even that has to be paired with psychopathy or delusions. Theres no mention of fixed ideations, which is the glue that holds a serial killer together. Without the obsessive component a person does not become a serial killer. I'm not saying he was harmless, or that he couldn't kill someone. I'm saying he is a poor candidate for a serial killer.

                    He was however a great candidate for the guy that Anderson described. Levy and Kosminski are both textbook examples of what the police thought the killer had to be like. Kosminski even has the benefit of a history of fixation (thought way too crazy to get this job done). But if we accept that masturbation does not create serial killers, we have to consider that the rest of their reasoning may have equally as flawed. I think the guy we are looking for was a psychopath. And they generally tend to blend in, but if one was institutionalized, it would be clear in his records. Not only do they not play well with others, they generally are control freaks to an extent that cannot go unnoticed by doctors and orderlies. Essentially we are looking for the guy in the asylum that steals and never apologizes. And probably makes fun of the doctors.
                    The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Errata View Post
                      I'm not saying he was harmless, or that he couldn't kill someone. I'm saying he is a poor candidate for a serial killer.

                      He was however a great candidate for the guy that Anderson described. Levy and Kosminski are both textbook examples of what the police thought the killer had to be like.
                      The interesting thing is that there is material a plenty to statistically prove this right; serial killers come from the range of psychologically unsound people that suffer - if suffer is the word - from psychopathy, narcissism etcetera. There are hundreds of them, diagnosed as psychopaths.

                      They do not, however, derive from the lines of people who suffer psychotic episodes other than to an extremely small degree. One of the reasons for this is that psychotic killers, once they appear on the stage, are normally caught in combination with their first kill. They donīt hide what they have done, they donīt mind staying with the victim, they donīt try and escape. If they DO escape, it is not because they were clever enough to get out in the right manner and time, it is because there was nobody around to notice that they left in the wrong manner and time.

                      Generalized? Yes, to an extent, but this is a matter that we can and should generalize about. Otherwise, we may end up following Andersons lead.

                      The best,
                      Fisherman

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                        The interesting thing is that there is material a plenty to statistically prove this right; serial killers come from the range of psychologically unsound people that suffer - if suffer is the word - from psychopathy, narcissism etcetera. There are hundreds of them, diagnosed as psychopaths.

                        They do not, however, derive from the lines of people who suffer psychotic episodes other than to an extremely small degree. One of the reasons for this is that psychotic killers, once they appear on the stage, are normally caught in combination with their first kill. They donīt hide what they have done, they donīt mind staying with the victim, they donīt try and escape. If they DO escape, it is not because they were clever enough to get out in the right manner and time, it is because there was nobody around to notice that they left in the wrong manner and time.

                        Generalized? Yes, to an extent, but this is a matter that we can and should generalize about. Otherwise, we may end up following Andersons lead.

                        The best,
                        Fisherman
                        There is a truism, though certainly not a rule, that psychopathy and an Axis 1 diagnosis are mutually exclusive. Which in terms of neurology and structure may make perfect sense. People born with non functioning emotional centers of the brain are probably completely untroubled by any malfunction that works on the damaged areas. We know now that psychopathy often has a structural component. That a doctor can look at an MRI or a PET scan and see sociopathy. Of course there is still a large population with no physical signs, but even they tend not to display Axis 1 diagnoses, with the exception of schizophrenia which is structural and degenerative.

                        Now those with an autism spectrum disorder often display something very like sociopathy, but it isn't. An inability to bond is not the same as an inability to empathize. And while those with autism have many of the same traits as serial killers, to the best of my knowledge they never are serial killers. There was some question about Otis Toole being on the autism spectrum, but I don't think he was. He was never formally diagnosed either. But the serial killer mind is best compared to an autistic mind, or the mind of an addict. Fixation, repetition, obsession, behavioral compulsion, absorption, etc. As serial killer needs to kill the way an alcoholic needs a drink, and he cannot be swayed from that pursuit the way you cannot divert someone with autism from a mechanical task.

                        Psychotic killers can actually operate for some time, because psychotic killers tend to have little to no obvious pattern in either victim selection or MO. A psychotic killer might shoot a man, then strangle a child, etc. so trying to even establish that there is a serial killer can be difficult. And one of the ways that police often capture killers is predicting their next move, which is impossible with someone who is psychotic. Without knowing the motive, they cannot be predicted. So some psychotic killers do rack up a body count, but they are not accomplishing it by remaining quiet and unseen. They manage it by being unpredictable. However, psychotic killers tend not to operate well in cities. Psychotics on the run or in a large area can kill more than a psychotic in an inner city. There are very few places that someone who is not hiding can get away with murder. A psychotic may well stroll out of an alley covered in blood, or start yelling, or any number of other unsubtle things. It's not a good fit.

                        I think there are quite a few mental illnesses or disorders that could create these kinds of murders. I don't think delusion played a part in it, though there is a delusional component to a lot of disorders. Or something very like delusion. It is delusional for someone with OCD to think that if they don't wash their hands 72 times they will die. But people with OCD know that's not true. They feel that it is true. They feel dread, panic, physical pain even over something they know is not true. Because it feels true despite knowing it's not true, they wash their hands 72 times. It's terrible. I don't recommend it at all. I don't think the killer had OCD, I'm merely using it to illustrate the difference between delusion and compulsion.

                        But in the end, I don't think we can rule out the idea that the Ripper was not mentally ill, was not even psychotic. He may have just been a slightly compulsive dick. Which also happens. Bundy had a lot of problems, but he wasn't mentally ill. He chose to cope with his perfectly normal feelings by killing women. More than anything, he was just a dick. He wasn't delusional, he wasn't hallucination, he had no structural disorder, he was capable of empathy and bonding. He just chose to kill and rape women and have sex with their corpses. Which is not normal. But abnormal does mean there is a disorder. It means he was a dick. Just sayin.
                        The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

                        Comment


                        • Errata:

                          ...one of the ways that police often capture killers is predicting their next move, which is impossible with someone who is psychotic. Without knowing the motive, they cannot be predicted. So some psychotic killers do rack up a body count, but they are not accomplishing it by remaining quiet and unseen. They manage it by being unpredictable.

                          Yes. And more often than not, they will not care a iot about leaving evidence on the crime scenes.

                          A psychotic may well stroll out of an alley covered in blood, or start yelling, or any number of other unsubtle things. It's not a good fit.

                          Exactly so!

                          ... in the end, I don't think we can rule out the idea that the Ripper was not mentally ill, was not even psychotic. He may have just been a slightly compulsive dick. Which also happens. Bundy had a lot of problems, but he wasn't mentally ill.

                          True. But it is also true to say that a large proportion of the serial killers have been diagnosed as psychopaths. Weighing things together, the odds are that our killer was a representative of this very group.

                          The best,
                          Fisherman

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by tji View Post
                            Apologies if that is how my posts have come across, that was not my intention. I am trying to explain the idea that a few people have of a grunting, drooling basket case 24/7 is incorrect.

                            He had episodes of mania, spells of insanity, hearing voices, feeling the need to do violence if not restrained, wanders the streets etc. However he also would have been lucid when these moments were over able to perform normal tasks (this would eventually become less over the years.)

                            Although on that note, wouldn't it be interesting tot think he did commit them while he was lucid and not manic?!

                            Tracy
                            To me this seems more likely, and in general I could get behind that theory.

                            My problem with Levy then is that I cannot help but think that his behavior in the years after getting out of the asylum would be closely scrutinized by just about everyone. In my own personal experience every time I have a bad episode of whatever, I'm watched like a hawk for months which is both really irritating and unnecessary since I have never been dangerous or self harming. And I had bad episodes about four times a year. Given that I believe his removal to an asylum was over a lame suicide attempt, I think that means that he would not be trusted for a very long time indeed. Never mind the theft conviction which everyone knows about. If someone steals or tried to kill themselves, you watch them. All the time. You question their every move. His wife had to have been exhausted. I would imagine someone knew where he was at all times, and if they didn't that was a huge deal. If he disappeared to go kill prostitutes, someone would have noticed. By the time he might have earned trust back he was probably already symptomatic with neurosyphilis.

                            Take someone who had no theft conviction and no record of being in asylum with the same symptoms and story, then killing while not manic I can understand. The fact that he was manic would only come into play to explain why the Ripper disappeared. I could buy that. I don't know that I could declare him the Ripper, but it makes a good story (which sounds dismissive but really is important). But with Levy's record, I have a hard time believing that he wasn't watched until the day he died. Remember, he stole from his own community. That alone gets him watched til he drops dead.
                            The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by Fisherman View Post

                              True. But it is also true to say that a large proportion of the serial killers have been diagnosed as psychopaths. Weighing things together, the odds are that our killer was a representative of this very group.
                              I think he was, but a lot of serial killers are not actually diagnosed as psychopathic. They are declared that by the media or even law enforcement, but very few have had legitimate post trial therapists diagnose them. they typically aren't interested, which can be a sign of psychopathy, but not necessarily.

                              Many have been diagnosed schizophrenic pre trial, and in only three cases that I know of was it true. And we know that because these people not only responded to medication, but through imaging we know that their brain is actually collapsing, which is the hallmark of schizophrenia.

                              Kemper is a psychopath. He was diagnosed as a teenager, but you can't actually diagnose a teenager as a psychopath because the brain is still developing. No one has a fully functioning frontal lobe until their 20s. But he has also agreed to a host of testing, and he is genuinely a psychopath. Something he is very interested in. He and Joel Rifkin (I think. It's been a while.) have actually been very helpful, and have contributed a ton to our understand of psychopathy. Also the warrior gene, which Kemper also has. But the hallmark of Kemper as a serial killer study is that while he regrets what he did, and wishes he had not done it, he feels no shame. He's a psychopath. He cannot empathize. Of course he doesn't experience shame. He has said that he wishes he did feel shame, which is interesting. Kemper is a monster. Born and bred. But by seeing his psychopathy and how he experiences it, we know that his psychopathy did not make him violent. Which is why we know that there are a ton of non violent sociopaths out there. Doing quite well. Evidently as CEOs.

                              Most serial killers exhibit shame. They aren't psychopaths. They may be something, but they can empathize. Dahmer exhibited shame, Bundy did, and these are two guys who people think HAVE to be psychopaths. But they weren't. They were so focused on their own needs that everything else fell away. Which is pretty typical in serial killers. It's like a sort of violent selfishness. Compulsive wish fulfillment to the nth degree. But not psychopaths. Selfish, cruel, heartless, yes. Not mentally ill.

                              I think Jack was a psychopath. I don't think a non psychopath would have the guts to blaze the serial killer trail like that. But that being said, it's a crap shoot as to whether or not we could find him in asylum. He could have been completely outwardly normal. I would need to know the triggering event in order to determine the level of psychopathy or any other disorder that may come in to play. And we don't know it.
                              The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Errata View Post
                                I think Jack was a psychopath. I don't think a non psychopath would have the guts to blaze the serial killer trail like that. But that being said, it's a crap shoot as to whether or not we could find him in asylum. He could have been completely outwardly normal.
                                This is pretty much exactly how I see things too, Errata. And this is why I think Kosminski and Levy are not very viable contenders.

                                The best,
                                Fisherman

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