Originally posted by Sam Flynn
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When did investigators start watching Kozminski?
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Originally posted by Batman View PostIt wouldn't be if that consideration didn't also involve sidelining lots of evidence as coincidence.Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostFrom what I've seen, it's more often those who have a favourite suspect who end up sidelining evidence and declaring that X or Y can't be attributed to coincidence, when it clearly can.
A coincidence defacto sidelines evidence as irrelevant, random, chance, not connected.
Rejecting coincidences, means rejecting that it's random, which means accepting them as connected, which means accepting the evidence, both bits, and not just one of them or rejecting both.
I would need to see an example of what you mean.Last edited by Batman; 10-10-2018, 06:04 AM.Bona fide canonical and then some.
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Originally posted by Harry D View PostLike Abby said, there's too many coincidences when it comes to the Ripper/Torso pattern. In common Ripper lore, Mary Kelly was the final victim. Half a year later another prostitute washes up dead, her uterus extracted with the abdominal flaps (a la Chapman & Kelly). The following month another prostitute dies in Whitechapel, her throat cut and her abdomen mutilated. A couple months later, an unidentified torso is dumped in Whitechapel with a long abdominal gash. What are the odds that after a period of inactivity, Ripper-esque and Torso murders overlap within a few months? The same thing, of course, that happened during the Autumn of Terror & the Whitehall Mystery. We can argue the minutiae of what constitutes a Ripper murder, or whether these Torso victims were indeed murdered, but we're at risk of missing the big picture here when it's staring us in the face."Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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Originally posted by Batman View PostHow can they be sidelining evidence if they are saying the evidence is not a coincidence?Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostBecause they typically dismiss differences in such things as geography, demographics, the nature of the wounds, the cadence of the murders, etc etc. That's sidelining on a grand scale.
They accept the same geography and demographics. Those are facts of the case. Nature of the wounds and cadence still ends up with a murderer ripping up women. So that isn't being dismissed. As I said, rejecting a coincidence, means accepting the evidence, both bits, and not just one of them or rejecting both.
It's easy to demonstrate.
1)JtR drew anti-semitic graffiti on Goulston St.
or
2)Just a coincidence
One accepts the geography and demographics still as much as 2. 2 has just dropped evidence because of it.
Another example of dropping evidence would be Stride. The coincidence claims drop her as evidence because of the wounds but rejecting the coincidence retains her as evidence while accepting the same wounds.
Facts remain the same. Coincidence is the move that side-lines evidence. It must by its nature. Multiple coincidences just chop out pieces of the evidence altogether. A real McDonald's have "it your way" meal. A customized Whitechapel murder set of facts... with some missing.
One could say coincidence claims end up 'ripping' parts out of case.Last edited by Batman; 10-10-2018, 06:25 AM.Bona fide canonical and then some.
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostNot being one to refuse an opportunity to help out...Roedd yr un dyn yn gyfrifol am lofruddiaethau'r Rhwygwr a'r llofruddiaethau torso.
Fflapiau.Na, dau ddyn gwahanol oeddynt.
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Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post'Fflapiau'? That's just just taking an English word and topping and tailing it.You'll be telling us the Welsh for frog is ffrogaeiou nextKind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostCorrect... like English does with words like "bureau" (The "ff" is classed as one letter in the Welsh alphabet, BTW. A single "f" is the equivalent of the English letter "v")
Brogaod (for the croaky amphibians), or Ffrancwyr (for the people wot eats them).
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostThe 1873 victim was killed by the same hand that killed Mary Kelly, as far as I´m concerned. Won´t tell you exactly why, though.
Kosminski was a child at the time, and not even in Britain.
He can therefore not be the killer.
So the question is "Why bring Kosminski up on these boards?"
A less troublesome answer to your question is "I commented on the discussion initiated by others out here, and Trevor claimed that there was no physical evidence of murder in the torso cases".
The reason for beliveing its the same hand, is obviously because one wishes to name one individual as the killer.
If there is evidence which catagorically links 73 with Kelly what could it be?
There were no forensics, no confession we are aware of,
If such real evidence exists i for one am eager to hear or see it.
I wonder if this mysterious link will ever be revealed? And if it is, will be just more assumptions and suppositions? I guess only time will tell.
Steve
Steve
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Originally posted by Elamarna View PostThe reason for beliveing its the same hand, is obviously because one wishes to name one individual as the killer.
If there is evidence which catagorically links 73 with Kelly what could it be?
There were no forensics, no confession we are aware of,
If such real evidence exists i for one am eager to hear or see it.
I wonder if this mysterious link will ever be revealed? And if it is, will be just more assumptions and suppositions? I guess only time will tell.
Steve
Steve
That does not apply out here, I know - but in that parallel universe called the real world, it does.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostIf the police have two murders on their hands, in the same area and at the same time, and if they both involve odd and very unusual similarities, then they will assume and suppose that they are dealing with the same killer.
That does not apply out here, I know - but in that parallel universe called the real world, it does.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostIf the police have two murders on their hands, in the same area and at the same time, and if they both involve odd and very unusual similarities, then they will assume and suppose that they are dealing with the same killer.
That does not apply out here, I know - but in that parallel universe called the real world, it does.
Steve
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