Originally Posted by Fisherman
Distributing parcels is bold, absolutely. then again, if you carry the part you aim to dump in a bag, you can make sure that you are alone before you take action.
Surely. But the police would look for men carrying big bags. So there was clearly a risk of being stopped and questioned. So therefore this must therefore have been what he wanted.
The problem is that it is not easy to check everybody who carried a bag - it was a common enough practice. And the scare of the torso killer stretched for a decade and a half.
Killing and eviscerating in the open streets surpasses that by a country mile. There can be little doubt about that.
Not by a whole country mile, if you knew the beats of the PC:s.
Yes, by a whole country mile and more. There were other people in the streets to, and windows overlooking them. We wil have to disagree on that one.
So bold - and then even bolder. A development that suits a serial killers development very well in many a case.
Here I would like to write something and I canīt . It is frustrating to say the least. But I can tell you he had a very clear reason for what he did in Whitechapel.
I think all serialists have had a very clear reason for what they did, generally speaking. Not clear to us, necessarily - but to them.
And no, people in general did not have access to a horse and cart. Many did, but not people in general, not even nearly. Go through the actors in the Ripper drama and see how many of them had that access.
OK. No problem. The person I think was the killer could afford going by horse and cart.
Your policeman, Pierre - can you give an approximation as to when he was born? A span of five years will do, and it will leave him incognito.
Distributing parcels is bold, absolutely. then again, if you carry the part you aim to dump in a bag, you can make sure that you are alone before you take action.
Surely. But the police would look for men carrying big bags. So there was clearly a risk of being stopped and questioned. So therefore this must therefore have been what he wanted.
The problem is that it is not easy to check everybody who carried a bag - it was a common enough practice. And the scare of the torso killer stretched for a decade and a half.
Killing and eviscerating in the open streets surpasses that by a country mile. There can be little doubt about that.
Not by a whole country mile, if you knew the beats of the PC:s.
Yes, by a whole country mile and more. There were other people in the streets to, and windows overlooking them. We wil have to disagree on that one.
So bold - and then even bolder. A development that suits a serial killers development very well in many a case.
Here I would like to write something and I canīt . It is frustrating to say the least. But I can tell you he had a very clear reason for what he did in Whitechapel.
I think all serialists have had a very clear reason for what they did, generally speaking. Not clear to us, necessarily - but to them.
And no, people in general did not have access to a horse and cart. Many did, but not people in general, not even nearly. Go through the actors in the Ripper drama and see how many of them had that access.
OK. No problem. The person I think was the killer could afford going by horse and cart.
Your policeman, Pierre - can you give an approximation as to when he was born? A span of five years will do, and it will leave him incognito.
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