In this particular case, you might say the term DNA should stand for "Do Not Assume"
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Kosminski and Victim DNA Match on Shawl
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Originally posted by Jeff Leahy View Post
If I remember correctly he blocked the drains with body parts.ヽ༼ຈل͜ຈ༽ノ__̴ı̴̴̡̡̡ ̡͌l̡̡̡ ̡͌l̡*̡̡ ̴̡ı̴̴̡ ̡̡͡|̲̲̲͡͡͡ ̲▫̲͡ ̲̲̲͡͡π̲̲͡͡ ̲̲͡▫̲̲͡͡ ̲|̡̡̡ ̡ ̴̡ı̴̡̡ ̡͌l̡̡̡̡.___ლ(ಠ益ಠლ)
Dr Mabuse
"On a planet that increasingly resembles one huge Maximum Security prison, the only intelligent choice is to plan a jail break."
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Originally posted by RavenDarkendale View PostIn this particular case, you might say the term DNA should stand for "Do Not Assume"
Definitely. Not. AaronG U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
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Originally posted by GUT View PostI actually prefer the earlier one [by Pinkmoon I think, but sorry if wrong]
Definitely. Not. AaronG U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
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Originally posted by Mabuse View PostYou're thinking of Dennis Nilsen.
He chopped up the bodies in his bath so must have caused quite a smell.
but a little off topic
Yours Jeff
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Originally posted by GUT View PostThe biggest problem is he's a very good suspect, just a pity that this book is likely to see a lot of people turned off him because of all the apparent flaws.Last edited by Observer; 09-25-2014, 04:30 AM.
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Fantasio:
I'm yet another long-time-lurker, first-time poster and so on. I'm especially interested in dissertations, but I also like some forum debate.
Welcome to the boards, Fantasio!
So, what about the "shawl" provenance? I trust people who investigated the matter, and I believe it could not have been in Mitre Square. Also, I believe neither Simpson was. But it's quite obvious his story is made up: the thing about "asking for permission, permission was given" strongly reminds me of children caught in doing something wrong: "mummy gave me permission, so what?".
I concur - the shawl was most probably not in Mitre Square on the murder night, and the same goes for Amos Simpson.
What I think is the "shawl" was owned by Jack. Who - never forget that! - took away one of Eddowes' kidney. If he took the kidney home, and the "shawl" was there, a contact could have occurred (if the "shawl" was a table runner, for example, just putting the kidney on it for a moment). And that's more than enough to justify both Eddowes' DNA and Jack's DNA without theorizing strange ways to place the "shawl" in Mitre Square without everyone noticing. And there's no need to speculate on Jack's masturbation habits and if/when/where/how fast he did it.
Possible, I guess.
The Simpson story is a puzzle. There are tenths of possibilities.
At the very least, yes.
He could have bought/stolen/found/was given the "shawl" by a lot of people (fellow policemen, Jack/Cohen/Kosminsky's relatives, through his wife).
I guess that could happen - but things are beginning to stretch here, I fear.
He likely knew the "shawl" belonged to a suspect...
Wait a minute - didn´t you just say that the shawl belonged to Jack?
...and thought that in time could be worth a lot of money.
I´m not too sure about this. The hunt was ongoing, and there was every chance that the murderer would have been found, in which case the shawl would probably not have been worth much money. Simpson could not possibly foresee the interest that would rise in the Ripper case.
But could not link the object to a murder, despite the bloodstain.
Without DNA fingerprinting and even blood types, that was not possibile.
Well, if it had been listed, he would have had the provenance in black and white ...
So - perhaps - that's the reason he made up his story: only claiming to have found himself the "shawl" near the body of Eddowes a link was possible. At the time many people knew the story was untrue and nor he neither the "shawl" had been there. But would have been the same after 10-20 years or more? How could he know that even after 126 years (!) researchers would still be able to prove his story untrue?
I think it would be a stretch to speculate that Simpson sussed out that the killer would become the most infamous one in history. And it seems very far-fetched to me to accept that he speculated that the shawl could become valuable at a stage when those who could testify that it was never there had died out. It would predispose that he left it as some sort of future investment for his great-great grandchildren to potentially profit from.
I don't think well'ever know the truth about the "shawl", so further studied will be needed, but until dr. JariLou's work will have been peer reviewed, there's little we can do...
... and it now seems this may never happen, Fantasio!
All the best,
Fisherman
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostHe likely knew the "shawl" belonged to a suspect...
Wait a minute - didn´t you just say that the shawl belonged to Jack?
That depends, of course, on when the "shawl" came into Simpson's hands - sooner or later it did, after all! But that's one thing we don't know and likely never will. So there's nothing we can do apart from speculation. Unless some miracle from great Amanda not-Sumner... who knows?
I think it would be a stretch to speculate that Simpson sussed out that the killer would become the most infamous one in history.
And it seems very far-fetched to me to accept that he speculated that the shawl could become valuable at a stage when those who could testify that it was never there had died out.
Thanks for the greetings!
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Given Simpson's profession, it would seem likely that a shawl with a blood stain on it, especially if in a splatter pattern, came from a murder scene.
If not from Mitre Square, then someone needs to explain how Simpson randomly came into possession of an object that most likely has Eddowes' blood on it.
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@theagenes
I wanted to thank you for your careful take on the book. I just got done reading through some of those posts. When the number 7,200 possible people is used, has that been adjusted for coming from a male source? Are the figures really 1 of 7,200 people and 1 of 3,600 males? Or is it 1 in 7,200 males?
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Originally posted by Ghost View Post@theagenes
I wanted to thank you for your careful take on the book. I just got done reading through some of those posts. When the number 7,200 possible people is used, has that been adjusted for coming from a male source? Are the figures really 1 of 7,200 people and 1 of 3,600 males? Or is it 1 in 7,200 males?
Suffice to say it's certainly more common than what is being claimed for the Eddowes match.
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Good morning Ghost and welcome to the discussion group,
Originally posted by Ghost View PostIf not from Mitre Square, then someone needs to explain how Simpson randomly came into possession of an object that most likely has Eddowes' blood on it.
The shawl is a textbook case of 'do not analyse' item due to contamination.
RoySink the Bismark
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