Henry Flower: Never mind 'such a street', I tried it at about 3.00am with a friend in the very street, which has not changed a great deal since the 88. What struck me was that even though I asked my friend to walk normally (in relatively hard-soled shoes) without attempting to be quiet, she was actually not obviously audible until quite close by. Now granted, I wasn't standing frozen still listening hard for her approach; I did shuffle about, went through my pockets, thought about things - because we know that Lechmere's attention, for one reason or another, was focused on something quite important, he was not stood listening for Paul's approach. Reconstructions can get us only so far. We can't know exactly what was audible that night, we don't know for sure what Paul wore on his feet, we don't know whether the act of cutting a throat, lying a body down, rifling through its clothes and ripping at its abdomen would've been sufficiently noisy to have masked the sound of either Lechmere's or (if Lech is our man) Paul's approach. Rest assured I have no intention of staging a more detailed reconstruction!
I have been to Bucks Row several times (or Durward Street, to be more exact). I have never, though, done any sound experiment in the street, mostly because it is never calm and quiet there - it is a street in a large metropolis, and the ambient soundlevel is always very apparent. The last years, there has been a lot of construction work going on too.
I donīt think it is possible to come anywhere close to the conditions of the murder night today - not in Durward Street.
But I live in the quaint town of Helsingborg, where there are a number of old accoustic tunnel streets, and I have tested them a good many times, in the dead of night when it is relatively silent. Not as silent as I imagine Bucks Row would have been, admittedly, but nevertheless relatively quiet.
I am normally quite amazed by how any sound seems to grow in such conditions - footfalls you would not notice in the busy daytime become very obvious at night.
This is my experience, but I bet that a thousand people may have a thousand views of it. The thing to do would be to simply record the soundlevels.
Nobody says the routes are conclusive, but I don't think we can dismiss this point (even though I nearly did earlier on this thread!). I find it impossible to believe that if a modern day police investigation into a series of murders found that a man who had discovered / been discovered with one of the just-killed victims had probable routes to and from work that coincided with other murders, that wouldn't be a huge red flag. Obviously it's not proof of anything, but it can't just be dismissed, surely. It is a link, and the fact that many others might share that same link doesn't negate the fact that it applies to Lechmere.
EXACTLY so, Henry. No matter who is found alone with a freshly killed body, that somebody WILL be checked out. The police will say that they need to clear the person, but it of course also applies that they are eager to find out if the person in question may be the killer. A high percentage of people found alone with freshly killed bodies will be killers, it is that simple and the police are quite aware of it.
So if there are a string of murders that seemingly have the same originator, then the person found with the body will be checked for this parameter; can he or she be shown to have been at the other murder sites at the relevant hours, or can it be shown that the person in question at least would have had a logical reason to be there?
There were thousands of streets in the East End. The odds that Lechmereīs logical work routes would have all of the sites corresponding timewise to his morning work trek pinned down must be very, very high. Why does not one single of these murders take place north, south, northeast, southwest, east or west of his logical working routes?
If it is a coincidence that they ALL match, then it is an almighty coincidence.
Likewise, if we work from the assumption that the killer was a Mr X about whom we know nothning, then the distribution of killing times for the six strikes could have been any way around.
But for some reason, the only two who do not die at a time that seems to be compatible with Lechmeres working trek, are the ones who were killed much earlier ON WHAT SEEMS TO HAVE BEEN HIS NIGHT OFF!
So in this way too, the killings fit what we know about the carman. The conclusion must be that either the six women were killed by Lechmere, or they were killed by somebody else who had a reason to walk these exact routes, or they were perpetrated by somebody who could just as well have killed in any other street at any other time, but who - for whatever reason - managed to do it in a way that seemingly fits exactly with the logical movements of the man who was found alone with one of the victims at a time that was very close to when she was cut.
If we apply that logic to the entire series then you are obliged to accept that at least one man seen with each victim was the killer.
Not really, no - it is a question of no matter who was seen alone with any victim at a time that corresponded roughly with the time of death, that person must be a better suggestion for the killerīs role than a phantom killer who was not seen or heard, and whose existence is a mere suggestion.
I think it is entirely possible that a man could very quickly cut a throat, lift some clothes, and rip away at the abdomen for 30 seconds or less and accomplish everything the killer accomplished before slipping away from the body onto Whitechapel High St entirely unseen.
So do I! I agree fully.
That doesn't make him a phantom or a phantasy, and neither does it mean that we must accept Lechmere as the only explanation grounded in facts.
Well, as long as we have no evidence at all of the existence of such a man, he remains a phantom in my eyes. We can call him an invention instead of course. Or conjectural. That is not to say that he cannot have existed, but instead to say that he is nothing but a phantasy with no underlying evidence at all. It is not until we can discard Lechmere as the killer, that this man becomes an apparent reality.
What Jason Payne-James has done is to provide the forensic backdrop. It tells us that if Payne-James is right, then another killer is on purely forensic grounds less likely than Lechmere. And the further we move him away timewise, the less likely he gets. So he will range from unlikely, over very unlikely to incredibly unlikely. Whereas Lechmere is a VERY likely killer, going on the timings and the bleeding only.
To apply your own favourite reasoning, Fish, if we assume Lechmere was innocent, then it is a fact that the killer was not seen.
Yes, that is completely true. Itīs either/or, no exceptions, no detractions, no addings.
But the way I see it, another killer can never be as good a suggestion, since there is not a trace of another killer around. And he would be slightly or massively at odds with the forensic evidence, if he ever existed.
It seems to be slightly disingenuous for you to be arguing that a serial murderer striking very quickly in a dimly-lit, likely empty street at 3.40am must have been seen, and that therefore Lech must be our man.
Thereīs that straw man argument again! I am not arguing such a thing at all. I am saying that even though it is at odds with what Payne-James says is the normal bleeding outcome, it still applies that Jason is a seasoned enough forensic specialist to know quite well that rules without exceptions are the rarest of things in the medical world. Which is why he says that Nichols MAY have bled for a longer time than five minutes. He also says that he has learnt from clever legal men that if he says that he finds seven minutes unexpected but possible, then they will ask if eight minutes is impossible. Or nine. Or ten. Or eleven. Or twelve.
And all the while, he can only say that it is very hard to write something off as totally impossible. All he can do is to offer what he THINKS is the reasonable time span. And in this case, he opts for three or five minutes sounding more plausibel than seven. Thatīs as far as he is willing to go, and I think that shows just how discerning he is.
So, Henry, in conclusion I think that a man may easily cut a woman quickly and lethally, and that he may then take off down a road that takes him out of dangers way.
Itīs just that Jason Payne-Jamesī estimation tells me that such a killer is less likely than Lechmere, going on the times and the bleeding only. Plus there are a lot of anomalies attaching to the carman, making him very worthy of a closer look - and that closer look tells us that his routes seems to be in perfect alignment with the killings. When we notice this, we should not ask ourselves how many other men may have walked these routes - we should ask ourselves how much of a chance there was for this alignment. Given the many streets there were to choose from, we may well be looking at a one in a hundred chance.
Accepting that, how can a suggested/phantom/phantasy/invented killer be as good a bid as Lechmere?
He cannot be ruled out, but in my universe he plays second fiddle until we can conclude that he ever existed.
I have been to Bucks Row several times (or Durward Street, to be more exact). I have never, though, done any sound experiment in the street, mostly because it is never calm and quiet there - it is a street in a large metropolis, and the ambient soundlevel is always very apparent. The last years, there has been a lot of construction work going on too.
I donīt think it is possible to come anywhere close to the conditions of the murder night today - not in Durward Street.
But I live in the quaint town of Helsingborg, where there are a number of old accoustic tunnel streets, and I have tested them a good many times, in the dead of night when it is relatively silent. Not as silent as I imagine Bucks Row would have been, admittedly, but nevertheless relatively quiet.
I am normally quite amazed by how any sound seems to grow in such conditions - footfalls you would not notice in the busy daytime become very obvious at night.
This is my experience, but I bet that a thousand people may have a thousand views of it. The thing to do would be to simply record the soundlevels.
Nobody says the routes are conclusive, but I don't think we can dismiss this point (even though I nearly did earlier on this thread!). I find it impossible to believe that if a modern day police investigation into a series of murders found that a man who had discovered / been discovered with one of the just-killed victims had probable routes to and from work that coincided with other murders, that wouldn't be a huge red flag. Obviously it's not proof of anything, but it can't just be dismissed, surely. It is a link, and the fact that many others might share that same link doesn't negate the fact that it applies to Lechmere.
EXACTLY so, Henry. No matter who is found alone with a freshly killed body, that somebody WILL be checked out. The police will say that they need to clear the person, but it of course also applies that they are eager to find out if the person in question may be the killer. A high percentage of people found alone with freshly killed bodies will be killers, it is that simple and the police are quite aware of it.
So if there are a string of murders that seemingly have the same originator, then the person found with the body will be checked for this parameter; can he or she be shown to have been at the other murder sites at the relevant hours, or can it be shown that the person in question at least would have had a logical reason to be there?
There were thousands of streets in the East End. The odds that Lechmereīs logical work routes would have all of the sites corresponding timewise to his morning work trek pinned down must be very, very high. Why does not one single of these murders take place north, south, northeast, southwest, east or west of his logical working routes?
If it is a coincidence that they ALL match, then it is an almighty coincidence.
Likewise, if we work from the assumption that the killer was a Mr X about whom we know nothning, then the distribution of killing times for the six strikes could have been any way around.
But for some reason, the only two who do not die at a time that seems to be compatible with Lechmeres working trek, are the ones who were killed much earlier ON WHAT SEEMS TO HAVE BEEN HIS NIGHT OFF!
So in this way too, the killings fit what we know about the carman. The conclusion must be that either the six women were killed by Lechmere, or they were killed by somebody else who had a reason to walk these exact routes, or they were perpetrated by somebody who could just as well have killed in any other street at any other time, but who - for whatever reason - managed to do it in a way that seemingly fits exactly with the logical movements of the man who was found alone with one of the victims at a time that was very close to when she was cut.
If we apply that logic to the entire series then you are obliged to accept that at least one man seen with each victim was the killer.
Not really, no - it is a question of no matter who was seen alone with any victim at a time that corresponded roughly with the time of death, that person must be a better suggestion for the killerīs role than a phantom killer who was not seen or heard, and whose existence is a mere suggestion.
I think it is entirely possible that a man could very quickly cut a throat, lift some clothes, and rip away at the abdomen for 30 seconds or less and accomplish everything the killer accomplished before slipping away from the body onto Whitechapel High St entirely unseen.
So do I! I agree fully.
That doesn't make him a phantom or a phantasy, and neither does it mean that we must accept Lechmere as the only explanation grounded in facts.
Well, as long as we have no evidence at all of the existence of such a man, he remains a phantom in my eyes. We can call him an invention instead of course. Or conjectural. That is not to say that he cannot have existed, but instead to say that he is nothing but a phantasy with no underlying evidence at all. It is not until we can discard Lechmere as the killer, that this man becomes an apparent reality.
What Jason Payne-James has done is to provide the forensic backdrop. It tells us that if Payne-James is right, then another killer is on purely forensic grounds less likely than Lechmere. And the further we move him away timewise, the less likely he gets. So he will range from unlikely, over very unlikely to incredibly unlikely. Whereas Lechmere is a VERY likely killer, going on the timings and the bleeding only.
To apply your own favourite reasoning, Fish, if we assume Lechmere was innocent, then it is a fact that the killer was not seen.
Yes, that is completely true. Itīs either/or, no exceptions, no detractions, no addings.
But the way I see it, another killer can never be as good a suggestion, since there is not a trace of another killer around. And he would be slightly or massively at odds with the forensic evidence, if he ever existed.
It seems to be slightly disingenuous for you to be arguing that a serial murderer striking very quickly in a dimly-lit, likely empty street at 3.40am must have been seen, and that therefore Lech must be our man.
Thereīs that straw man argument again! I am not arguing such a thing at all. I am saying that even though it is at odds with what Payne-James says is the normal bleeding outcome, it still applies that Jason is a seasoned enough forensic specialist to know quite well that rules without exceptions are the rarest of things in the medical world. Which is why he says that Nichols MAY have bled for a longer time than five minutes. He also says that he has learnt from clever legal men that if he says that he finds seven minutes unexpected but possible, then they will ask if eight minutes is impossible. Or nine. Or ten. Or eleven. Or twelve.
And all the while, he can only say that it is very hard to write something off as totally impossible. All he can do is to offer what he THINKS is the reasonable time span. And in this case, he opts for three or five minutes sounding more plausibel than seven. Thatīs as far as he is willing to go, and I think that shows just how discerning he is.
So, Henry, in conclusion I think that a man may easily cut a woman quickly and lethally, and that he may then take off down a road that takes him out of dangers way.
Itīs just that Jason Payne-Jamesī estimation tells me that such a killer is less likely than Lechmere, going on the times and the bleeding only. Plus there are a lot of anomalies attaching to the carman, making him very worthy of a closer look - and that closer look tells us that his routes seems to be in perfect alignment with the killings. When we notice this, we should not ask ourselves how many other men may have walked these routes - we should ask ourselves how much of a chance there was for this alignment. Given the many streets there were to choose from, we may well be looking at a one in a hundred chance.
Accepting that, how can a suggested/phantom/phantasy/invented killer be as good a bid as Lechmere?
He cannot be ruled out, but in my universe he plays second fiddle until we can conclude that he ever existed.
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