Originally posted by JeffHamm
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Hi RD,
One thing to keep in mind is that Nichols is the first of the mutilation murders. Serial Killers learn from their experiences, and build upon them, doing more of what they find satisfying and doing less of what they don't. While it is very likely that JtR had fantasized about murder, and destroying his victim via mutilations, if this is his first time then he also is engaging in these fantasies for real for the first time. How extensive those mutilations would need to be to satisfy him, combined with his fear of engaging in an activity that could get him hung if caught, is going to limit his activities. As he becomes more confident (because he gets away with it), and as he clearly found abdominal mutilations satisfying, we see him engaging in more and more of that activity in subsequent murders.
In short, the "pressure" for him to remain and mutilate more will be counter-balanced by the "pressure" for him to get away from the crime scene before he's spotted. So he may very well have reached the point where he "finished" with Nichols even though we see greater mutilations at later crime scenes. The order, and therefore experience level, of the offender needs to be considered.
The more his confidence grows, the weaker that 2nd pressure becomes, resulting in him spending more time at the crime scenes and therefore can do more extensive mutilations. And because he learns from previous experiences, if Chapman was murdered around the times Cadosche is going to and fro to the loo, then JtR is going to have learned two important things at least. First, people can emerge from nearby buildings unexpectedly even in the short time he's committing his murder (while that's obviously something he would always have "known" logically, to have it happened would increase his sense of it's probability - his ego and confidence in his invulnerability would have made him underestimate that probability in the Chapman case) and Second, h that he needs to have multiple exits and ensure that if anyone emerges he can't easily be seen).
If Stride is a JtR victim, and she might not be, but let's go with it for now. Then we know the area is quite dark, so that would fit the "I can't be easily seen here", but the location also only has one exit available to him (back onto Berner Street), and the singing and noise from the club also tells him there are lots of people in this building, and moreover, they are awake and doing things. This could be why she fits his criterion for murder, but at the same time, he finds it too risky to spend any additional time mutilating her. So he may have left for no other reason than that (doesn't require an external interruption, the interruption may be internally generated by his risk assessment, which would have been modified by his Chapman experience).
Eddowes, however, is in a quiet location, dark, and there are multiple exits for him to choose from should anyone emerge from the buildings facing the yard. Hence, he remains at the scene longer, engaging in even more extensive mutilations. However, now he's potentially interrupted by PC Harvey during his patrol of Church Passage. Due to the light at the end of Church Passage though, PC Harvey cannot see into Mitre Square, but JtR can see him clearly. PC Harvey turns around to leave, JtR flees, increasing again his sense of invulnerability but also increasing his awareness of just how probable it is for someone to come along, even during the few minutes he's engaging in his fantasies.
Which may explain why his next victim, Mary Kelly, is the only one indoors. He's adjusting his behaviors based upon the events of the previous murders, but still focused on his murder/mutilation obsessions.
I think it is easiest to understand how the mutilations increase over the sequence due to that "learning from experience" when we consider the cases in the order they occurred. But once we've done that, we can now understand the progression in the reverse order, making sense of the decreasing level of mutilations. And just like Mary Kelly ends up being the most extensively mutilated victim, it may not be surprising that Nichols is the least other than, of course Stride. So again, either she's not a JtR victim, so no further explanation required, or she is and perhaps something like what I suggest above accounts for her lack of an abdominal attack.
In short, I would be careful about us deciding what JtR considered to be "finished." I would suspect "finished" for him in the ideal sense would change over time, moving the goal post further into more and more extensive mutilations, but at the same time "finished" for him during an individual crime would be a complex decision between reaching that ideal goal while mitigating his concerns about getting caught. The latter of those will be influenced by what he's learned from the previous murders.
- Jeff
One thing to keep in mind is that Nichols is the first of the mutilation murders. Serial Killers learn from their experiences, and build upon them, doing more of what they find satisfying and doing less of what they don't. While it is very likely that JtR had fantasized about murder, and destroying his victim via mutilations, if this is his first time then he also is engaging in these fantasies for real for the first time. How extensive those mutilations would need to be to satisfy him, combined with his fear of engaging in an activity that could get him hung if caught, is going to limit his activities. As he becomes more confident (because he gets away with it), and as he clearly found abdominal mutilations satisfying, we see him engaging in more and more of that activity in subsequent murders.
In short, the "pressure" for him to remain and mutilate more will be counter-balanced by the "pressure" for him to get away from the crime scene before he's spotted. So he may very well have reached the point where he "finished" with Nichols even though we see greater mutilations at later crime scenes. The order, and therefore experience level, of the offender needs to be considered.
The more his confidence grows, the weaker that 2nd pressure becomes, resulting in him spending more time at the crime scenes and therefore can do more extensive mutilations. And because he learns from previous experiences, if Chapman was murdered around the times Cadosche is going to and fro to the loo, then JtR is going to have learned two important things at least. First, people can emerge from nearby buildings unexpectedly even in the short time he's committing his murder (while that's obviously something he would always have "known" logically, to have it happened would increase his sense of it's probability - his ego and confidence in his invulnerability would have made him underestimate that probability in the Chapman case) and Second, h that he needs to have multiple exits and ensure that if anyone emerges he can't easily be seen).
If Stride is a JtR victim, and she might not be, but let's go with it for now. Then we know the area is quite dark, so that would fit the "I can't be easily seen here", but the location also only has one exit available to him (back onto Berner Street), and the singing and noise from the club also tells him there are lots of people in this building, and moreover, they are awake and doing things. This could be why she fits his criterion for murder, but at the same time, he finds it too risky to spend any additional time mutilating her. So he may have left for no other reason than that (doesn't require an external interruption, the interruption may be internally generated by his risk assessment, which would have been modified by his Chapman experience).
Eddowes, however, is in a quiet location, dark, and there are multiple exits for him to choose from should anyone emerge from the buildings facing the yard. Hence, he remains at the scene longer, engaging in even more extensive mutilations. However, now he's potentially interrupted by PC Harvey during his patrol of Church Passage. Due to the light at the end of Church Passage though, PC Harvey cannot see into Mitre Square, but JtR can see him clearly. PC Harvey turns around to leave, JtR flees, increasing again his sense of invulnerability but also increasing his awareness of just how probable it is for someone to come along, even during the few minutes he's engaging in his fantasies.
Which may explain why his next victim, Mary Kelly, is the only one indoors. He's adjusting his behaviors based upon the events of the previous murders, but still focused on his murder/mutilation obsessions.
I think it is easiest to understand how the mutilations increase over the sequence due to that "learning from experience" when we consider the cases in the order they occurred. But once we've done that, we can now understand the progression in the reverse order, making sense of the decreasing level of mutilations. And just like Mary Kelly ends up being the most extensively mutilated victim, it may not be surprising that Nichols is the least other than, of course Stride. So again, either she's not a JtR victim, so no further explanation required, or she is and perhaps something like what I suggest above accounts for her lack of an abdominal attack.
In short, I would be careful about us deciding what JtR considered to be "finished." I would suspect "finished" for him in the ideal sense would change over time, moving the goal post further into more and more extensive mutilations, but at the same time "finished" for him during an individual crime would be a complex decision between reaching that ideal goal while mitigating his concerns about getting caught. The latter of those will be influenced by what he's learned from the previous murders.
- Jeff
Jeff - that's one of the best and most accomplished posts I've ever read.
Well presented, considered and balanced.
I admire your views immensely and that post was testament to the reasons why.
I know it's a great post when it makes me rethink on my own previous assumptions on the case.
Hats off to you sir!
A fabulous read from start to finish
RD
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