Originally posted by John G
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Did the Seaside Home ID happen?
Collapse
X
-
-
Originally posted by Wyatt Earp View PostThere seems to be some confusion about the use of the word “blitz” in this thread … Blitz was defined as an immediate physical attack, without any verbal interaction.
Comment
-
I think that attempts to categories serial killers as organized or disorganized are of limited value: "Challenges to this approach [organized/disorganized], especially as it is applied to human behaviour have been legion over the past century. Indeed, whole areas of statistics and psychometrics have evolved to offer alternative approaches to classification that find more empirical support. In general, these start from the premise that human beings rarely fall into distinct types and therefore any approach that seeks to use such a template for defining the characteristics of a distinct type is not likely to find much empirical support. The general weakness of the topological approach adds further significance to reviewing the organized/disorganized dichotomy in order to establish if it is any more valid than other analogous typologies...that now have merely historical significance." See: Canter, Alison, Alison and Wentink (2004)
And this view is clearly shared by the FBI: "Due to these limitations, applying the organized/disorganized dichotomy to active serial murder cases has limited utility in serial investigations. Further, the NCAVC has not embraced the organized/disorganized dichotomy for over 10 years..." This is partly on the basis that, "Although BSU's earlier research into serial murder was ground breaking in its attempts to provide characteristics of serial murderers, there are serious shortcomings with the research construction." (FBI:Serial Murder, Pathways For Investigations).Last edited by John G; 05-30-2015, 05:24 AM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Garry Wroe View PostSo you think I’m confused as to what constitutes a blitz attack, Jeff?
The way I've always used it and I presume how Bill Beadle is defining it, is that the women were caught suddenly by surprise when they reached the place they planned to have intercourse having no idea what there client would do. They were jumped. Some being taken from the front some from behind.
I call that a blitz attack even if the killer had used a 'Ruse' as someone else put it, its fairly obvious that this takes no planning what so ever.
I don't plan to get bogged down in some silly semantic debate.
Originally posted by Garry Wroe View PostA photograph of Kelly’s injuries does nothing to inform us whether she suffered a blitz attack or was systematically tortured over several hours before being killed.
Originally posted by Garry Wroe View PostThat’s one way of looking at it. The alternative is that the killer deliberately killed in the small hours to reduce the risk of being disturbed or seen by potential eyewitnesses. Equally, the lack of human and vehicular traffic at this hour would have enabled him to hear the approach of patrolling policemen.
It was simple opportunity
Originally posted by Garry Wroe View PostSome might conclude, therefore, that far from being high-risk, this was a decidedly low-risk strategy.
Originally posted by Garry Wroe View PostAs for outdoor crimes, Sutcliffe and Bundy are but two organized serialists who committed the majority of their crimes outdoors. Did it ever occur to you that the Ripper might have had no option but to kill outdoors?
Originally posted by Garry Wroe View PostSome years ago I was in regular contact with a prominent British psychologist who told me that Roy Hazelwood had informed him that serialists never kill whilst under the influence of drink or drugs. I presented the psychologist concerned with a fairly lengthy list of offenders who confounded that dictum. I even cited the defence case of Jeffrey Dahmer which stated that Dahmer only ever killed whilst intoxicated.
No-one is infallible, Jeff. Not even those you cite as being ‘experts’.
However if Hazelwood stated this i would have no hesitation disagreeing with him. Most of the expert advise I received suggested that if the killer were schizophrenic you could expect that a catalyst would be involved.
However I was quoting Hazelwood from the recent 'Scotland Yard Prime Suspect' where he writes the forward and there is nothing in that book where i find myself in strong disagreement with what he says
Originally posted by Garry Wroe View Post
I’ll say it again: Jack the Ripper remained unidentified.
KOZMINSKI WAS THE SUSPECT
Originally posted by Garry Wroe View PostIf you believe otherwise show me the official documentation relating to the identification. You might be convinced by Anderson’s ‘definitely ascertained fact’, but the reality that no other senior policeman came out in support of the Kosminski-as-Ripper scenario is significant. That Macnaghten thought the case against Druitt more plausible than the Kosminski ‘identification’ is telling. The fact that Smith and Abberline dismissed the identification claim out of hand is damning.
Originally posted by Garry Wroe View PostAnderson himself tells us that the identification was all he had against Kosminski. Swanson confirms this as having been so. This is why Anderson spoke in terms of his ‘moral certainty’ on the issue. Without the identificational evidence of Anderson’s witness the case against Kosminski collapsed. We also know that Major Smith mounted a round-the-clock surveillance operation on Kosminski. Given the police strategies of the period we may be certain that Lawende was called in to have a look at Kosminski. Despite all of this, however, Smith later stated that there was no evidence to connect any Jew to the murders. Palpably, therefore, the surveillance operation coupled with Lawende’s presumed input came to nothing.
Originally posted by Garry Wroe View PostInterestingly enough, if Lawende failed to identify on behalf of Major Smith, he is hardly likely to have been the witness who fingered Kosminski unhesitatingly at the Seaside Home – which leaves us with Schwartz. And if Schwartz was Anderson’s witness, Kosminski must have been identified as the broad shouldered character who manhandled Stride shortly before her death. If so, the Seaside Home identification was almost certainly an irrelevance since there is nothing about the Stride murder that is consistent with the Ripper’s established method of operation. The throat wound was different in character to those inflicted upon Nichols, Chapman, Eddowes and Kelly. Unlike the other victims Stride’s death was not instantaneous. There was no abdominal mutilation, no lifting of the skirts, and Stride was found on her side rather than on her back as was the case with each and every known Ripper victim.
Originally posted by Garry Wroe View PostNowadays no competent crime analyst would attribute this killing to the overall series. So the irony of the Seaside Home identification is that it may have linked Kosminski to the one canonical murder not actually committed by Jack the Ripper.
And this I say with absolute confidence based upon Anderson’s principle of ‘moral certainty’.
Yours JeffLast edited by Jeff Leahy; 05-30-2015, 06:40 AM.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Garry Wroe View PostNot if the killer concerned was schizophrenic, Natasha. Read up on the catastrophic cognitive effects of schizophrenia and you’ll understand why.
I don't think he was schizophrenic, that is what I meant when I said that doesn't fit either.
I do think he was disorganised with organised traits though.
Comment
-
When we look at the biological and psychiatric models of information organization in the brain (which is a dead boring field of study I must point out), it become pretty clear where the Swanson marginalia would have gone off the rails. And by that I mean veered from memory to conflation.
Which doesn't mean it did. Swanson may have written it exactly as it happened, but if he didn't, we can look at his statement and see where that likely was. The first statement is always going to be the most important, and therefor the most likely to be true. The last statement is the most likely to be false. And because we organize out thoughts in terms of emotional importance and not chronologically or temporally, conflations are most likely to occur with two events where a person experienced the same kind of emotions.
Just because someone screws it up once doesn't mean they do it all the time. He may have conflated once and never done it again. He also may not have ever read the yawnfest that is Anderson's biography again, and so never his his notes again to correct them. There's a lot of ways this story might be wrong, ways we all get it wrong from time to time.
It may all be correct. But it would not at all be surprising if it was wrong either.The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.
Comment
-
The thing that I can't get my head round is if Kosminski was such a sure bet why didn't we hear anything about him till sir Melvilles memo surfaced decades later and it appears he was just left to rot in an asylum till his death makes no sense if he was such a good suspect.Three things in life that don't stay hidden for to long ones the sun ones the moon and the other is the truth
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jeff Leahy View PostHi Monty
Given MacNuaghtens comments about a man seen leaving Mitre Court (Sq) on the night of the murder. Do you think it possible the police might have seen something and kept it under there hats without revealing to the press.
And off the top of my head, weren't there also some press reports that hinted at this?
Yours Jeff
I find it hard to believe such a sighting would have been left out of the Eddowes file, and inquest.
Monty
Monty
https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...t/evilgrin.gif
Author of Capturing Jack the Ripper.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1445621622
Comment
-
Originally posted by Harry D View PostHello, Monty.
Thanks for that. In which case, do we think this was something particularly scandalous, hence wanting to keep it off the record?
One question, which I think is pertinent, is if such a scenario occurred, why didn't Harvey cash is on a newspaper expose in later life?
Harvey mentions no sighting at inquest. Such a sighting would be deemed relevant (see PC Smith and Stride).
Monty
Monty
https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...t/evilgrin.gif
Author of Capturing Jack the Ripper.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1445621622
Comment
-
Originally posted by pinkmoon View PostThe thing that I can't get my head round is if Kosminski was such a sure bet why didn't we hear anything about him till sir Melvilles memo surfaced decades later and it appears he was just left to rot in an asylum till his death makes no sense if he was such a good suspect.
He then was consistent updating and expanding ion that story until 1910 when he published his book… He told you the story and simply said it would serve no purpose to reveal the name…so it was not
It was only by complete accident that the name was discovered many years later in an Marganalia probable written around that time.
McNughtens memo was written in 1894 and he did not know about Andersons and Swansons ID… That explains everything
Yours Jeff
Comment
-
Originally posted by Monty View PostOne question, which I think is pertinent, is if such a scenario occurred, why didn't Harvey cash is on a newspaper expose in later life?
Harvey mentions no sighting at inquest. Such a sighting would be deemed relevant (see PC Smith and Stride).
Monty
Yours Jeff
Comment
-
Originally posted by Monty View PostMy experience with such records is that its rarely kept off the record. We have Hutt dismissed for assaulting a prisoner whilst in the dock of Moor Lane court, little is known about that, yet it is there on his record, and the hearing is mentioned in Police Orders.
One question, which I think is pertinent, is if such a scenario occurred, why didn't Harvey cash is on a newspaper expose in later life?
Harvey mentions no sighting at inquest. Such a sighting would be deemed relevant (see PC Smith and Stride).
Monty
If it was something related to the Ripper case, would it have conceivably taken until July the next year for him to be dismissed?
But Macnaghten was getting the "P.C near Mitre Square" sighting from some source. It's one thing to speculate that a copper should've seen him, but he quite expressly states that the PC got a look at the killer.
As for why PC Harvey didn't sell his story to the press, would you like the world to know that it was your blunder that let the most notorious killer in England get away?
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jeff Leahy View PostYes you can see why Swanson or Anderson wanted to be cautious because they had pensions at stake.. But I presume low ranking or dismissed policemen had no pension to consider?
Yours Jeff
Monty
Monty
https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...t/evilgrin.gif
Author of Capturing Jack the Ripper.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1445621622
Comment
Comment