Originally posted by MrBarnett
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Why is the possibility of Lechmere interrupting the ripper so often discarded?
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Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post
Hi Abby,
Why cover the wounds when someone suddenly appears who will be at the body in a minute or two? The same reason you might not run off immediately: to forestall a hue and cry. It would have been an instinctive action that took a second or so.
For me Nichols was CAL’s first murder, so all talk about a signature or how criminals typically behave is of little value.
Gary
Why cover the wounds when someone suddenly appears who will be at the body in a minute or two? The same reason you might not run off immediately: to forestall a hue and cry. It would have been an instinctive action that took a second or so.
For me Nichols was CAL’s first murder, so all talk about a signature or how criminals typically behave is of little value.
and if you lend any credence to the torsoripper (as I do), then even more so.
"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 Doctored Whatsit View Post
Cal said that had anyone left the body after he got into Buck's Row he must have heard him.
M.Last edited by Mark J D; 02-16-2022, 03:35 PM.(Image of Charles Allen Lechmere is by artist Ashton Guilbeaux. Used by permission. Original art-work for sale.)
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Originally posted by Aethelwulf View Post
Yes, I can just 'see' him groping around asking Martha to holds still while he 'gets his eye in'!
A punch or a whack over the head and the victim is floored and at her attacker’s mercy. Don’t forget, by the way, that the GYB landing was unlit, so being sighted wouldn’t have been much of an advantage.
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Originally posted by Doctored Whatsit View Post
Cal said that had anyone left the body after he got into Buck's Row he must have heard him.
This is an innocent question. My grasp of the distances involved is a bit hazy these days.
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Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post
So Lechmere must have been already stationary by the body when Paul turned into Buck’s Row?
This is an innocent question. My grasp of the distances involved is a bit hazy these days.
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Originally posted by FrankO View PostThe thing that still has me wondering is that he told the inquest that he would have heard somebody moving away, had there been anybody, and that this statement involved the risk of provoking a question like: "Why, then, didn't you hear Paul?". However, instead saying that he actually did hear someone moving away would have involved the risk of the very same question being asked.
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Originally posted by Doctored Whatsit View Post
Is there evidence that CAL said he didn't hear Paul?
"You can rob me, you can starve me and you can beat me and you can kill me. Just don't bore me."
Clint Eastwood as Gunny in "Heartbreak Ridge"
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Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post
As you should, because unless the press reports were fictional, it happened to another woman on 8th September.
A punch or a whack over the head and the victim is floored and at her attacker’s mercy. Don’t forget, by the way, that the GYB landing was unlit, so being sighted wouldn’t have been much of an advantage.
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Originally posted by FrankO View PostNo, there isn't, DW. But it seems he didn't hear him before he stopped walking, at which point Paul was about 40 yards away from him, according to the evidence.
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>>I was and still am genuinely interested in knowing if there are any unsurmountable reasons for Lechmere not to have said such a thing, but so far I haven't seen anything that convinced me.<<
For a guilty Lechmere to have said he thought he saw or heard someone further down the street ahead of him was a win/win scenario.
It planted the suggestion that someone was there before him.
If someone came forward and said they had been in the street, all attention then turned to them.
He would have gone to the inquest knowing Paul had already thrown Mizen under the bus, labelling the PC as disinterested.
There is no version of this scenario I can think of that has a downside for a guilty Lechmere. It is a telling indication of likely innocence.dustymiller
aka drstrange
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There are significant differences between Mrs Tabram murder and Mrs Nichols.
Knocked unconscious.
No neck cut.
Clothing ripped up.
Stab wounds not slashes.
Not killed in the street.
Different weapon.
It's a big leap to claim there is a pattern before Chapman. Even then, the only similar attack is Cathrine Eddowes. Two doesn't make a pattern.
Because she was the only victim wearing stays, Mrs Nichols killer had to mutilate one handed, the other hand holding the stays and the clothing up. There is no real evidence that anything was hidden by anything other than simply dropping the stays and clothing.
To "display" the cuts, the stays would have to be removed or cut away, this would have to be done before any wounding to the body.
I think we can pretty much rule out any intention to "display" the wounds as it is incompatible with the available evidence.dustymiller
aka drstrange
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Originally posted by drstrange169 View Post... Because she was the only victim wearing stays, Mrs Nichols killer had to mutilate one handed, the other hand holding the stays and the clothing up. There is no real evidence that anything was hidden by anything other than simply dropping the stays and clothing. To "display" the cuts, the stays would have to be removed or cut away, this would have to be done before any wounding to the body.
M.(Image of Charles Allen Lechmere is by artist Ashton Guilbeaux. Used by permission. Original art-work for sale.)
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