FrankO:
The point I was trying to make, Christer, is that I find it odd that Lechmere, the killer who’s able to come up with relatively complex & risky solutions, apparently wasn’t able to come up with a simple, important & efficient idea to lose the knife. I find that a striking oddity and for me another weakness, however small in your view, in the scenario you and Edward support.
I know thatīs the point you were trying to make, Frank. But is it a good point? Would not a knife found under the body of a victim where there was a solitary bystander point a finger straight at him?
A killer that had time to get away could surely have A/ Displayed the victim the way the others were displayed (and I know that we canīt bank on them actually beeing displayed, but the cushion Kelly was served with makes me think...), and B/ Taken the murder weapon along with him.
It wouldn’t matter why it was left there, Fish. Simply because, once it left the hand of whoever killed Nichols, the police would never ever be able to prove which person had held it in his hand.
The only one who ran the risk of being caught red (or knife-) handed was Lechmere, Frank. Another killer - if there ever was such an evasive character - would not have run that risk other than if he was stopped and searched. It can equally be said that the knife could have been of a character that would have led the police to the killer. What if it was engraved "Lechmere"? Ridiculous? Perhaps so, but there could have been many pointers to the owner nevertheless, we just canīt tell.
Leaving the knife behind would also mean an economical loss in an age where many people struggled, plus he would need to replace it. And people walking into stores asking for the sharpest knife they had, with a long enough blade to ... eh ... fillet rabbits, would have been looked upon with suspicion.
No, I donīt think the suggestion is a very good one, Iīm afraid, and I am much inclined to think that a psychopath would feel certain that he could easily trick anybody if the problem arose.
We differ, as we sometimes do.
Why would that be? He could very easily have directed Paul to one side of the body – the way he saw to it that he would be the one to do the talking to Mizen and that Paul was out of earshot at that point - and hid it on the side he would be on. Why would it be difficult to kill Paul with it?
It would perhaps not be difficult as such. But risky. His ordinary prey were defenceless, drunken and sickly women, Frank. A fit carman is another proposition. If he did not want Paul to cry out, for example, he needed to choke him first - the risks involved would be huge.
Yes, I am, Fish.
Sorry, Frank. I disagree.
Me too Fish, just as I would be interested to hear if there are examples of murderers who killed with the knife before the 1890s, who had almost been caught in the act and who didn’t lose the knife while they had taken other precautions to minimize getting caught after all.
That sounds like a tough research enterprise to me. I donīt think you will find yourself a statistically viable measure of examples. Plus the parameters will vary from deed to deed.
But if you ever take the task on, Iīd be interested to hear the outcome.
With what you wrote it seemed that you acknowledged that it wasn’t too smart not to lose the knife, but at the same time I suspected that it would turn out not to be the case. Which you have shown now…
Ah! Well that explains what you wrote - it had me slightly baffled. No, I didnīt reason like that!
The best, Frank!
Fisherman
The point I was trying to make, Christer, is that I find it odd that Lechmere, the killer who’s able to come up with relatively complex & risky solutions, apparently wasn’t able to come up with a simple, important & efficient idea to lose the knife. I find that a striking oddity and for me another weakness, however small in your view, in the scenario you and Edward support.
I know thatīs the point you were trying to make, Frank. But is it a good point? Would not a knife found under the body of a victim where there was a solitary bystander point a finger straight at him?
A killer that had time to get away could surely have A/ Displayed the victim the way the others were displayed (and I know that we canīt bank on them actually beeing displayed, but the cushion Kelly was served with makes me think...), and B/ Taken the murder weapon along with him.
It wouldn’t matter why it was left there, Fish. Simply because, once it left the hand of whoever killed Nichols, the police would never ever be able to prove which person had held it in his hand.
The only one who ran the risk of being caught red (or knife-) handed was Lechmere, Frank. Another killer - if there ever was such an evasive character - would not have run that risk other than if he was stopped and searched. It can equally be said that the knife could have been of a character that would have led the police to the killer. What if it was engraved "Lechmere"? Ridiculous? Perhaps so, but there could have been many pointers to the owner nevertheless, we just canīt tell.
Leaving the knife behind would also mean an economical loss in an age where many people struggled, plus he would need to replace it. And people walking into stores asking for the sharpest knife they had, with a long enough blade to ... eh ... fillet rabbits, would have been looked upon with suspicion.
No, I donīt think the suggestion is a very good one, Iīm afraid, and I am much inclined to think that a psychopath would feel certain that he could easily trick anybody if the problem arose.
We differ, as we sometimes do.
Why would that be? He could very easily have directed Paul to one side of the body – the way he saw to it that he would be the one to do the talking to Mizen and that Paul was out of earshot at that point - and hid it on the side he would be on. Why would it be difficult to kill Paul with it?
It would perhaps not be difficult as such. But risky. His ordinary prey were defenceless, drunken and sickly women, Frank. A fit carman is another proposition. If he did not want Paul to cry out, for example, he needed to choke him first - the risks involved would be huge.
Yes, I am, Fish.
Sorry, Frank. I disagree.
Me too Fish, just as I would be interested to hear if there are examples of murderers who killed with the knife before the 1890s, who had almost been caught in the act and who didn’t lose the knife while they had taken other precautions to minimize getting caught after all.
That sounds like a tough research enterprise to me. I donīt think you will find yourself a statistically viable measure of examples. Plus the parameters will vary from deed to deed.
But if you ever take the task on, Iīd be interested to hear the outcome.
With what you wrote it seemed that you acknowledged that it wasn’t too smart not to lose the knife, but at the same time I suspected that it would turn out not to be the case. Which you have shown now…
Ah! Well that explains what you wrote - it had me slightly baffled. No, I didnīt reason like that!
The best, Frank!
Fisherman
Comment