Originally posted by JeffHamm
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1. For a minute of bleeding to exist after the opening minute of bleeding (bleeding minute number one, as it were, the first 60 seconds after the cut is opened up), it takes that the preceding minute must also have been a bleeding minute. If she bled in minute four, then she must also have bled in minute three and all the preceding minutes. If she bled in minute ten, then she also bled in minute nine and all the preceding minutes.
I hope we agree on that.
2. Since we can work from the factual knowledge that the bleeding will stop at some stage, we can also say that IF we are to detract time from the bleeding process, then it must be detracted from the last minute/s of the process. Meaning that if somebody suggests a bleeding time of ten minutes and we think that is too much, instead suggesting eight minutes as the probable maximum, then it is minutes nine and ten we want to take away from the process. Not minute one and two.
I hope we agree on that too.
3. This means that the minutes of bleeding that may be discussed or be under contention as having existed, are the last minutes of the process.
I once again hope we agree?
4. The outcome of these facts (which I hope you agree ARE facts) is that when we suggest adding a minute to a bleeding process, then the later in that process that minute is, the lesser the likelihood is that it really existed. Example: If you say that Nichols could have bled for twelve minutes, and I say thirteen, and Gary Barnett says fourteen, and Simon Wood says fifteen and so on, then generally speaking, Simon is the person least likely to be correct. His suggestion stretches things the most and is therefore less likely than the other suggestions, at elast as long as we accept that the standard curve, so to speak, is in line with what the pathologists said in the Nichols case: that the likeliest end of the bleeding process would occur at around 3-5 minutes.
Let me know if you agree with this too.
Here comes the last point, Jeff:
5. If we insert an alternative killer into the Nichols case, then we add to the total tally of minutes of bleeding, at least if we make the presumption that this alternative killer cut Nicholsīs throat before Lechmere arrived.
We can then of course say that the alternative killer was the one who provided the number one minute of bleeding and that there is nothing stranga about Nichols bleeding at that stage at all.
But what we must note with such a killer is that he will reinterpret the last minutes of the bleeding. What was minute number nine with Lechmere as the cutter at 3.45, suddenly becomes minute number ten - if Mr Alternative did HIS cutting a minute before Lechmere only. If, as most people out here say, the throat came BEFORE the abdominal cuts and if he covered the cuts before he left the site, then we should perhaps add two minutes, making what was previously number nine of bleeding numer eleven instead. And if the pathologists were correct, then every minute that is added beyond minute number five of bleeding must be regarded as an unexpected one. Consequentially, to suggest another killer adds to the tally of improbable bleeding minutes.
Of course, Lechmeres suggested cutting is also placed at an improbable remove in time - but LESS improbable anyway.
The outcome of all of this is that we cannot say that there was probably another killer, based on the bleeding process only. The fact is that what we must say is that it was probably NOT another killer - although such a person is not impossible per se.
The existing man of flesh and blood, who we KNOW was there must always be a red hot bid if the pathologists were correct. The alteernative killer, who is a theoretical construction only, could have been the killer, but he cannot match Lechmere in terms of overall credibility, based on the bleeding process.
Itīs a good thing there is not a lot of empirical material to compare from, though ...
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