Havent read this book, curious though....is it marked clearly as Fiction?
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Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
Fortunately, or rather, unfortunately, there are dozens and dozens of multiple murderers—mostly late 20th Century American examples, but this doesn’t seem to bother anyone—who, in turn, exhibit all sorts of conflicting behaviors, so one merely needs to find one to fit the current argument. New argument? new serial killer.
But here’s a thought. Isn’t this Torso Man largely a modern concept? Outside a small number of internal documents—Macnaghten and Hebbert—that noted similarities in three or four ‘torso’ cases, was there any real widespread conviction among the police or the public that there was such a person? It’s not like it was being flaunted in the press the way the Ripper was.
So, to me, the idea that someone wanted to ‘prove’ a link between the two series puts the cart before the horse. Wouldn’t the killer be more concerned with first showing that the torso cases were linked to begin with? It’s all rather muddled.
How clear could Lechmere have made his message linking two series, if the torsos were not even clearly linked to each other?
Love,
Caz
X"Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov
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The Torsorippers (if they were the same of course)reason for pinchin is only known to him, and made perfect sense to his twisted mind-whatever it was. I think it more has to with it was his final hurrah so combined everything from both series, and upping the shock factor by now leaving a torso totally out in the open. It could be a message-who knows? but seems a fitting climax to a combined killer (in his own warped mind)whos made his last kill."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 caz View Post
Eh? How is that a response to my post which you quoted, where I acknowledged that Lechmere could have sent an anonymous message to say which crimes were connected, without ever needing to 'turn himself in'?
My example - Colin Ireland - didn't turn himself in. He telephoned the police anonymously to give them information to link his victims.
Love,
Caz
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There´s a response for you, Caz.
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Originally posted by caz View Post
It wasn't me who brought the GSG into this! Mark commented on what Abby wrote about it, and compared the lack of communication skill shown by the author with the fact that the police also failed to get any 'clear' message to link the torso and ripper crimes.
The anomaly for me is all about how on earth Lechmere could have been such a dismal failure at getting his torso message across, when his 'innocent witness' message had come through loud and clear at the scene of a ripper murder, and again at the inquest. Forget the GSG - that wasn't part of my argument.
He couldn't have been that frustrated about both series not being recognised as one man's handiwork, or he'd have made the message a lot clearer.
Love,
Caz
X
"Den som gräver en grop ĺt andra faller ofta själv däri."
In English? Of course! "He who digs a hole in the ground for others has a tendency to end up in it himself."
In order not to be a sexist, I will of course allow for changing "he" and "himself" for "she" and "herself".
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View PostThe Torsorippers (if they were the same of course)reason for pinchin is only known to him, and made perfect sense to his twisted mind-whatever it was. I think it more has to with it was his final hurrah so combined everything from both series, and upping the shock factor by now leaving a torso totally out in the open. It could be a message-who knows? but seems a fitting climax to a combined killer (in his own warped mind)whos made his last kill.
Either way, I feel there is more going on here with the Torsos. The fact there are three separate reports of the dumping sites being predicted before they were found is startling. Once would be a fluke, twice would be coincidence, but three times is a trend. But who was feeding this information and why? Was it some form of mindgames or thrill-seeking? Was John Cleary just a stooge or was he involved on some level?
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Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
Fortunately, or rather, unfortunately, there are dozens and dozens of multiple murderers—mostly late 20th Century American examples, but this doesn’t seem to bother anyone—who, in turn, exhibit all sorts of conflicting behaviors, so one merely needs to find one to fit the current argument. New argument? new serial killer.
But here’s a thought. Isn’t this Torso Man largely a modern concept? Outside a small number of internal documents—Macnaghten and Hebbert—that noted similarities in three or four ‘torso’ cases, was there any real widespread conviction among the police or the public that there was such a person? It’s not like it was being flaunted in the press the way the Ripper was.
So, to me, the idea that someone wanted to ‘prove’ a link between the two series puts the cart before the horse. Wouldn’t the killer be more concerned with first showing that the torso cases were linked to begin with? It’s all rather muddled.
Besides, the problem you are experiencing was likely not there; I seem to remember reading on more than one occasion how the police dispelled the idea that the Torso murders were the Rippers work by stating that they were more likely to be the work of the man responsible for the Rainham/Whitehall/ Jackson deeds. Which in itself would perhaps be enough to make our single killer - for a single killer it was - tick.
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Originally posted by caz View Post
Indeed RJ, which brings me again to Colin Ireland, known as 'The Gay Slayer'. His frustration was with the failure of the police to recognise that any of his victims were linked to a serial predator. They were treating the deaths as independent cases of 'sex games gone wrong', or murder by an abusive partner.
How clear could Lechmere have made his message linking two series, if the torsos were not even clearly linked to each other?
Love,
Caz
X
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Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post
‘…as far as we know [she] was entirely faithful to them.’ We don’t know anything much at all about her life, so that’s a meaningless statement.
You seem willing to imagine the worst about her, but certainly don’t seem to like it if someone suggests she may have been a perfectly normal and decent woman.
She married Cross and stayed with him until his death. I consider that evidence that she loved him. What is your evidence that she didn’t?
Meanwhile, the tragedy of slums isn’t that bad people live there, but that so many decent people live there. The fifteen percent or less that are committing all the crimes destroy the reputation of everyone else.
There are obvious reasons and advantages pointing to why a police constable would chose to live in the district he serves. Just as there are obvious reasons why a priest would. It doesn’t mean they are among the criminals!
What’s wrong with the idea of Maria and Thomas Cross being decent people, bringing a small measure of light into this dark district?
The son they raised certainly seems to have turned out perfectly normal.
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Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
This coming from the guy who claims Maria was a strong-minded woman who taught her son to hate prostitutes? Based on what??
You seem willing to imagine the worst about her, but certainly don’t seem to like it if someone suggests she may have been a perfectly normal and decent woman.
She married Cross and stayed with him until his death. I consider that evidence that she loved him. What is your evidence that she didn’t?
Meanwhile, the tragedy of slums isn’t that bad people live there, but that so many decent people live there. The fifteen percent or less that are committing all the crimes destroy the reputation of everyone else.
There are obvious reasons and advantages pointing to why a police constable would chose to live in the district he serves. Just as there are obvious reasons why a priest would. It doesn’t mean they are among the criminals!
What’s wrong with the idea of Maria and Thomas Cross being decent people, bringing a small measure of light into this dark district?
The son they raised certainly seems to have turned out perfectly normal.
Based on the facts, RJ. I don’t recall every saying she taught her son to hate prostitutes - that’s your twisting of what I said.
Maria came from a very respectable background and found herself living in a notorious red light district full of vicious prostitutes and pimps. The contrast between the country estate where she grew up and Tiger Bay couldn’t have been more extreme. Her much younger husband probably came into contact with these people on a daily basis.
Do you really imagine Maria wouldn’t have warned her children about the dangers lurking outside their front door? Would you? I know I would.
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This is Whitfield, the country house of Edward Bolton Clive. The Clives were one of the most prominent families in Herefordshire. Maria’s father, Thomas Roulson, was EBC’s butler and she was born and brought up in a lodge on the estate. When EBC died he left Thomas Roulson a generous legacy, which within a few years, it seems, came to Maria and her sisters in the form of a regular income.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostThe really odd thing in the Pinchin Street case is the long abdominal cut that was not carried through. It would not take longer to cut deeper, would it? This is what makes me think that this cut may have had a different purpose than the other abdominal cuts in these series.
"The full picture always needs to be given. When this does not happen, we are left to make decisions on insufficient information." - Christer Holmgren
"Unfortunately, when one becomes obsessed by a theory, truth and logic rarely matter." - Steven Blomer
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostJackson had her uterus carved out by her killer.
"The flaps of skin and subcutaneous tissue consisted of two long, irregular slips taken from the abdominal walls. The left piece included the umbilicus, the greater part of the mons veneris the left labium majus, and labium minus. The right piece included the rest of the mons veneris, the right labium majus and minus, and part of the skin of the right buttock. These flaps accurately fitted together in the mid-line, and laterally corresponded to the incisions in the lower pieces of the trunk. The skin was fair, and the mons veneris was covered with light sandy hair. The upper part of the vagina was attached to the uterus; both ovaries and broad ligaments were present, and the posterior wall of the bladder. The uterus had been opened on the left side by a vertical cut, six inches long, through the left wall. The organ was much dilated the vessels on the inner surface large and open and the mucus membrane swollen and softened. The uterus measured 10in. long by 7.5 in. wide. The circumference of the os externum was 4in…"
"The full picture always needs to be given. When this does not happen, we are left to make decisions on insufficient information." - Christer Holmgren
"Unfortunately, when one becomes obsessed by a theory, truth and logic rarely matter." - Steven Blomer
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