A Cross by any other name...smells like JtR?

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  • Abby Normal
    replied
    Originally posted by Patrick S View Post
    I suppose what we are seeing with Lechmere is what's happened with most "suspects" of recent vintage. An idea germinates. You have a few advocates. A little traction is gained because, after all, no one can prove the suspect was NOT Jack the Ripper. A few neophytes think it all sounds quite plausible, so the converts trickle in. And...away we go.

    Lechmere is an interesting fellow. The tale told by Fisherman and Lechmere is riveting. As I've said, it'd make a great movie. Alas, it strikes me as a work of complete fiction. One in which a "suspect" exhibits no consciousness of guilt, and it's interpreted as the cunning of a psychopath. One where we find the serial killer as hobbyist, maintaining a career, a marriage, raising a family....yet - as a sidelight - operating as one (or more?) of the most notorious murders in history. One in which no one who knows him suspects him. Oh, I'm quite sure his living descendents will, no doubt, not resist this theory. They'll say it's been a family secret for a century. "Great grandpap was Jack the Ripper, don't you know! Another pig in a blanket? Yes, it's Lechmere with 'e'."

    You've no idea how badly I wish I could buy in. It's only logic, reason, experience, and common sense that prevents it.
    Hi Patrick
    First of all let me say that I think lech is a weak suspect-weak of a weak lot.
    IMHO he is just the bloke who found the victim. And I think the ripper would have taken off if he heard someone coming, which he probably did when he heard lech coming. Also, I doubt the ripper would have killed on his way to work, for many reasons.

    That being said, I do somewhat disagree with a few of your points and in defense of lech the ripper theory:
    First, lech as suspect is decidedly NOT like most suspects of recent vintage. Those are like maybrick, sickert, even Van Gough for christs sake! Or my pet peeve-the extenuation of the crazy Jew theory suspect, the latest being Jacob Levy, who the only thing going for him is that he was a crazy Jew who lived there at the time.

    Second, many notorious and hideous serial killer have appeared on the surface to be normal men, with normal work and family, so I have never bought that fact about lech to rule him out.

    Finally, there ARE possible red flags with his story. Yes they all could and probably do have innocent explanations, but they are there nonetheless. He was found near the body, he did have conflicting story with PC Mizen, and did give the police a different name, he does have a work and family (his mom) location near the bodies. Again all probably perfectly innocent, but.....???

    I favor the every day joe probability for the serial killer and my handful of best out of a weak lot include every men blotchy, hutch (and rounding out with bury, Kelly, koz and chapman).

    In my opinion, eventhough I think lech is a weak suspect, he is EXACTLY the type of person that is worth looking into and possibly discovering more about.
    Last edited by Abby Normal; 06-26-2014, 05:32 AM.

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  • MrBarnett
    replied
    Hi All,

    I personally find Lechmere a very interesting candidate. His profile, the little we know of it, ties in perfectly with my own hunch as to the killer's background and character. But I would not say the evidence we currently have makes him a very strong suspect. And some of the claims made for his candidacy seem a little imaginative for my liking. For example, he is said to have displayed an "extraordinary"( for which read unhealthy) diligence in form-filling in his Lechmere name. But the evidence put forward to support this seems to be perfectly unremarkable for
    someone in his position. Census forms, birth and marriage certificates, school registration, trade directories, electoral registers: all perfectly normal, most of them legal requirements which only those on the farthest outskirts of society would fail to comply with. The icing on the cake is the suggestion that his children did not even have time off when the family moved home. That does seem a little unusual, but is it based on attendance registers or dates of registration? In applying to a new school, a parent would presumably provide the leaving date from the previous school and the child would be enrolled from the day after. That in itself does not mean that the children were not allowed a day's leave to settle in to their new home. Clarification on that point would be very interesting.

    MrB
    Last edited by MrBarnett; 06-26-2014, 05:10 AM.

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by Patrick S View Post
    One where we find the serial killer as hobbyist, maintaining a career, a marriage, raising a family....yet - as a sidelight - operating as one (or more?) of the most notorious murders in history....One in which no one who knows him suspects him.
    This needs further exploration. What you are basically saying is that nobody who was a notorious serial killer would maintain a career and raise a family and go unsuspected by your close ones.

    How about Gary Ridgway, the Green River killer? He maintained a carreer. He lived a family life. His own wife had no idea what he was.

    Armstrong? Military carreer, family and kids, nobody suspected anything.

    Kürten? Mid-bourgeosie striving, quiet sort of person, married ...

    Dennis Rader? Yep - a carreer, a wife and kids, and no suspicions at all from his close ones as far as we know.

    There are more examples, incidentally, but these will suffice to make my point.

    Is this what defies common sense, experience and logic? If so, yes, I too think it is astonishing. But it´s nevertheless what happened. Psychopaths, mind you, are never without ambition. And that ambition may well involve a carreer, a family, a nice house, kids ... achivements, as it were.

    You are perfectly welcome not to believe in Lechmere as a killer type. But you must understand that history disagrees with you on that point.

    All the best,
    Fisherman
    Last edited by Fisherman; 06-26-2014, 04:04 AM.

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by Patrick S View Post
    What's to say he didn't leave at midnight? What's to say he wasn't out all night, looking kill while his poor wife and children slept, blissfully ignorant of dad was Jack the Ripper. What's to say he wasn't the Torso Killer? What's to say he wasn't from Mars? What's to say he didn't start World War I. I mean, prove to me he didn't!
    That was not the best post I´ve seen out here.

    Here are your answers:

    -The larger the discrepancy between when he said he left and when he did, the greater the risk that somebody would expose him.

    -He quite possibly WAS the Torso killer.

    -There is no human life on Mars.

    -Gavrilo Princip started World War 1.

    Now, can we be a bit more composed and to the point?

    The best,
    Fisherman
    Last edited by Fisherman; 06-26-2014, 04:05 AM.

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by Patrick S View Post
    I suppose what we are seeing with Lechmere is what's happened with most "suspects" of recent vintage. An idea germinates. You have a few advocates. A little traction is gained because, after all, no one can prove the suspect was NOT Jack the Ripper. A few neophytes think it all sounds quite plausible, so the converts trickle in. And...away we go.

    Lechmere is an interesting fellow. The tale told by Fisherman and Lechmere is riveting. As I've said, it'd make a great movie. Alas, it strikes me as a work of complete fiction. One in which a "suspect" exhibits no consciousness of guilt, and it's interpreted as the cunning of a psychopath. One where we find the serial killer as hobbyist, maintaining a career, a marriage, raising a family....yet - as a sidelight - operating as one (or more?) of the most notorious murders in history. One in which no one who knows him suspects him. Oh, I'm quite sure his living descendents will, no doubt, not resist this theory. They'll say it's been a family secret for a century. "Great grandpap was Jack the Ripper, don't you know! Another pig in a blanket? Yes, it's Lechmere with 'e'."

    You've no idea how badly I wish I could buy in. It's only logic, reason, experience, and common sense that prevents it.
    Well, Patrick, SOMEBODY killed these women. That, at least, is not fiction.

    The material we have on Lechmere is not fiction either - it´s from the records we have, at least most of it. The assumption that he would have been a psychopath is something that is not recorded, but it goes without saying that he was if he acted the way he did and was the killer.

    What does your logic, reason, experience and common sense tell you about the correlation between Lechmeres working trek routes, the timings and the killings?
    That somebody else must have covered these exact routes too, at the same approximate hours? Somebody who was the real killer?

    Why is it more logical, reasonable, experience-based and common sense to think that a PC got the "another policeman awaits you"-thing wrong, than it is that Lechmere did say this exact thing?

    And IF Mizen was the one who was wrong on this, then why is he also wrong on how much he was told by the carman?

    Could you take my list of facts from my former post, and explain them away, one by one, and then add that it was just a coincidence that the paths he logically would have walked correlates with the murder sites?

    You are welcome to try!

    All the best,
    Fisherman
    Last edited by Fisherman; 06-26-2014, 03:50 AM.

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  • Patrick S
    replied
    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
    He said he left at 3.30. Or 3.20.

    The route between 22 Doveton Street and Browns Stable yard could be covered quite easily in seven minutes, especially if you were late and in a hurry.

    If he "found" Nichols at 3.45, he would have had eight miutes extra on his hands if he left home at 3.30.

    If he left home at 3.20, he would have had eighteen minutes.

    The damage inflicted on Nichols could have been done in less than a minute.

    Finally, he SAID he left home at 3.20 or 3.30. What´s to say that he did not leave home at 3.10? Or 3.00?

    All the best,
    Fisherman
    What's to say he didn't leave at midnight? What's to say he wasn't out all night, looking kill while his poor wife and children slept, blissfully ignorant of dad was Jack the Ripper. What's to say he wasn't the Torso Killer? What's to say he wasn't from Mars? What's to say he didn't start World War I. I mean, prove to me he didn't!

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by GUT View Post
    G'day again Fisherman

    But did he have enough time, to pick her up, lure her away and kill her given the time he left home and the time Paul first saw him?
    He said he left at 3.30. Or 3.20.

    The route between 22 Doveton Street and Browns Stable yard could be covered quite easily in seven minutes, especially if you were late and in a hurry.

    If he "found" Nichols at 3.45, he would have had eight miutes extra on his hands if he left home at 3.30.

    If he left home at 3.20, he would have had eighteen minutes.

    The damage inflicted on Nichols could have been done in less than a minute.

    Finally, he SAID he left home at 3.20 or 3.30. What´s to say that he did not leave home at 3.10? Or 3.00?

    All the best,
    Fisherman

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  • Patrick S
    replied
    I suppose what we are seeing with Lechmere is what's happened with most "suspects" of recent vintage. An idea germinates. You have a few advocates. A little traction is gained because, after all, no one can prove the suspect was NOT Jack the Ripper. A few neophytes think it all sounds quite plausible, so the converts trickle in. And...away we go.

    Lechmere is an interesting fellow. The tale told by Fisherman and Lechmere is riveting. As I've said, it'd make a great movie. Alas, it strikes me as a work of complete fiction. One in which a "suspect" exhibits no consciousness of guilt, and it's interpreted as the cunning of a psychopath. One where we find the serial killer as hobbyist, maintaining a career, a marriage, raising a family....yet - as a sidelight - operating as one (or more?) of the most notorious murders in history. One in which no one who knows him suspects him. Oh, I'm quite sure his living descendents will, no doubt, not resist this theory. They'll say it's been a family secret for a century. "Great grandpap was Jack the Ripper, don't you know! Another pig in a blanket? Yes, it's Lechmere with 'e'."

    You've no idea how badly I wish I could buy in. It's only logic, reason, experience, and common sense that prevents it.
    Last edited by Patrick S; 06-26-2014, 03:35 AM.

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  • GUT
    replied
    G'day again Fisherman

    But did he have enough time, to pick her up, lure her away and kill her given the time he left home and the time Paul first saw him?

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
    Hello Christer. Thanks.

    Apology accepted.

    The simple answer is that I see you championing the notion that Lechmere did not run, preferring, instead, to brasen it out with Paul. That's fine; however, that MIGHT indicate a certain nature and consequently one might look for other acts that were brasen. And that is at loggerheads with claims about fearing X.

    So, for example, his fearing to go back with Mizen to the body seems rather unbrasen. He could simply go back and keep up his smug demeanour.

    Cheers.
    LC
    I suspect he had the knife on him at that stage, Lynn, so that would potentially get him hung.
    Being brazen does not mean that you will always take the most dangerous route. It is not the equivalent of not caring at all. If it had been, he could just as well have stopped by the bodies and carved away until he was found, caught and executed.
    I mentioned earlier that these types of men - psychopaths and sociopaths - are quite often very practical. That would mean that he could easily do the maths on his chances of staying undetected while killing Nichols, opting to do the deed. He would not be spooked as such, as normal people are. He would not spend the larger part of his time with the body anxiously looking and listening for people arriving, but instead carve away with focus, still having half an ear open for things that happened around him.

    I think that lots of heroes who have had medals of honour hung around their necks after a war have been psychopaths. Thay have not run in the face of danger, but instead calmly assessed their chances and acted upon it, cool as you like. They will have been happy and surprised to know that this is what normal people recognize as courage, while all the while it´s been nothing but a practical exercise to themselves.

    I spoke of Kürten earlier. And so did you. It was suggested, more or less, that it would be strange if he shielded his wife from who he was and what he did, if he was truly a brazen character.
    But Kürten´s wife had no idea what he was. Towards her, he was caring, considerate always courteous and mild.
    Otherwise he was a clear-cut, oversexed psychopath and sadist with no respect at all for people suffering his onslaughts. Which were brazen enough!

    Ridgway offers a great comparison too. He was the best man his wife had ever met. He never laid hands on her, he was a terrific lover and a humoristic, kind man.
    Otherwise, he was an oversexed psychopath who killed dozens and dozens of women with his bare hands, and a man who hated prostitutes.

    It would seem these men had some sort of brazen/mildmannered button they could use when they felt like it. And basically, that is EXACTLY what a psychopath is about: what he feels is not so much the result of reacting to outer world stimuli as a practically chosen internal way to act and react. The switch is there, but nobody can throw it but themselves.

    I hope that you can see where I am coming from now, Lynn.

    Incidentally, I don´t think he feared, as such, to go back with Mizen. He just realized that it would be impractical if he wanted to keep on killing.

    The best,
    Fisherman
    Last edited by Fisherman; 06-26-2014, 03:28 AM.

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  • lynn cates
    replied
    Brasen is as brasen does.

    Hello Christer. Thanks.

    Apology accepted.

    The simple answer is that I see you championing the notion that Lechmere did not run, preferring, instead, to brasen it out with Paul. That's fine; however, that MIGHT indicate a certain nature and consequently one might look for other acts that were brasen. And that is at loggerheads with claims about fearing X.

    So, for example, his fearing to go back with Mizen to the body seems rather unbrasen. He could simply go back and keep up his smug demeanour.

    Cheers.
    LC

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by GUT View Post
    G'day Fisherman

    Do you see Lechmere/Cross having "picked up" his victims or just stumbling on them?
    I think he knew exactly where to find prostitutes, and that he actively sought them out and picked them up.
    A pointer in this direction would be the Eddowes slaying. If he killed Stride and was deprived of the opportunity to eviscerate her, opting for trying to find another victim, then we have him leaving the Metropolitan police premises and heading west alongside his old work trek into City police area, towards the St Botolphs surroundings, where prostitution was rife. It was a clever and quick adaption to altered circumstances.

    The general idea is that he went into prostitution territories, found himself a woman and then headed away from where people were around, into areas where he could count on a fair chance of staying undisturbed.
    Buck´s Row seems to swear against this, but keep in mind that both Lechmere and Paul faced empty streets as they walked to work that morning. Paul´s arriving at the wrong time would have been coincidental, and Lechmere would actually have stood a fair chance to get away unseen if he did not spend very much time with his victim.

    He would not have stumbled on any prostitutes on streets where there was no business to be had from a prostitutes´view.

    The best,
    Fisherman
    Last edited by Fisherman; 06-26-2014, 02:57 AM.

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  • GUT
    replied
    G'day Lechmere

    G'day Fisherman

    Do you see Lechmere/Cross having "picked up" his victims or just stumbling on them?

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by MrBarnett View Post
    Hi Fisherman,

    The streets were not completely empty at that time of the morning - the women themselves were there. Presumably all waiting for the only man awake in the east end to see whether he fancied a bit of how's your father ?

    MrB
    Well, Mr Barnett, there were no women alongside Lechmeres route from 22 Doveton Street to Buck´s Row, was there? Those were the streets I was talking about.
    Nichols was presumably picked up in Whitechapel Road, where there were prositutes to be had.
    In that sense, there WERE people on THAT street to some degree.
    But the gist of the matter is that the streets on the whole were very much deserted during these hours, and the ones Lechmere and Paul spoke of were actually totally deserted, but for themselves.
    The policemen and watchmen on the streets surrounding Buck´s Row saw nobody entering or leaving the street at the relevant time.
    This will greatly diminish the number of potential killers, no matter how we look upon it. If the streets had been crammed with carmen, street vendors, prostitutes and so on, there would be more reason to put trust in a picture where thousands of men could have done it.
    In a sense, more than thousands of men could have done it - but they were seemingly not out and about at that time of the day.

    All the best,
    Fisherman
    Last edited by Fisherman; 06-26-2014, 01:40 AM.

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  • MrBarnett
    replied
    Hi Fisherman,

    The streets were not completely empty at that time of the morning - the women themselves were there. Presumably all waiting for the only man awake in the east end to see whether he fancied a bit of how's your father ?

    MrB

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