Columbo: I'm not trying to change anyone's mind either way but they say running, and others say oozing.
Thatīs just fine. But I think we should take in the full perspective, and that involves:
1. How the papers reported before the inquest that Neil had seen the blood flowing profusely from the gap.
2. How Neil said BOTH that the blood was oozing and that it was running.
3. That Mizen said it was running.
For some reason, those who dislike the Lechmere theory seem to forget all but the oozing thing. And if you goole "oozing profusely", you will get 2620 hits. I believe Neil chose the word "oozed" for the simple reason that the blood was not pumping out, it was welling out with no underlying pressure.
Now you can say it was too dark for anyone without a lantern to see the blood, but the lighting (which has been discussed to death) has been proven to my satisfaction to be enough for them to at least see that her clothes were up around her waist, for them to find her face, arms and chest. And it was light enough for the killer to see either Lechmere or Paul coming, so it wasn't pitch black. If Lechmere could reach out and touch Paul, then there was enough light to see basic outlines and possibly some details.
Mmm. Like the pool of blood under her neck - if it was there at the time...
Could the blood come from the abdominal wounds? Maybe, but then you have to explain where the pints of blood escaping the neck wound went.
No, I donīt, actually. If Nichols was extensively cut in the abdomen, where there are arteries and veins aplenty, then the blood would sink into the abdiominal cavity, and only what was left would go out through the neck. If the neck cut was below the level of the abdominal cavity blood, then some of that blood would run out through the neck. So we really cannot say that pints of blood must have excited via the neck.
It may be a combination of both we just don't know.
Two truths in one sentence there!
What we do know is that she was mutilated after death which would mean there is no blood pressure to cause massive bleeding from the external mutilations of the stomach.
There was blood pressure as long as the heart beat. And if she was only partially strangled, then the heart would beat for some time into the abdominal mutilations if they came first.
And I believe that it was reported that blood collected in the abdominal cavity (that may be chapman but I'm too tired to look it up) so the amount of blood from the mutilations may have been minimal.
Or not, depending on blood pressure.
That doesn't exonerate or add guilt to Lechmere. We're talking about the blood. It would happen whether she was killed by Lechmere or not.
Well, itīs more a question of HOW it happened - but she would indeed have bled no matter who did the cutting. But would a cutter who was there 15 minutes before Mizen be able to make her bleed for all that time? It is not a very viable suggestion. If Payne-James knows what he is talking about, we should acpet a bleeding time of a couple of initital minutes only. Once we pass the five minute line, we should be wary of how she becomes less and less likely to bleed with every second and minute that passes.
Going by Payne-James, the only persons caught inside the likely window of time are Paul and Lechmere. After that, there is a less likely - but not impossible - window of time. We need to enter that window to find the phantom killer everybody seems to be on about. And we have to discard Lechmere, with all the odd things that cling to him, before we can do so. As Andy Griffiths said:
"Certainly, in a modern age, you could not prosecute anybody else without eliminating him first".
Thatīs just fine. But I think we should take in the full perspective, and that involves:
1. How the papers reported before the inquest that Neil had seen the blood flowing profusely from the gap.
2. How Neil said BOTH that the blood was oozing and that it was running.
3. That Mizen said it was running.
For some reason, those who dislike the Lechmere theory seem to forget all but the oozing thing. And if you goole "oozing profusely", you will get 2620 hits. I believe Neil chose the word "oozed" for the simple reason that the blood was not pumping out, it was welling out with no underlying pressure.
Now you can say it was too dark for anyone without a lantern to see the blood, but the lighting (which has been discussed to death) has been proven to my satisfaction to be enough for them to at least see that her clothes were up around her waist, for them to find her face, arms and chest. And it was light enough for the killer to see either Lechmere or Paul coming, so it wasn't pitch black. If Lechmere could reach out and touch Paul, then there was enough light to see basic outlines and possibly some details.
Mmm. Like the pool of blood under her neck - if it was there at the time...
Could the blood come from the abdominal wounds? Maybe, but then you have to explain where the pints of blood escaping the neck wound went.
No, I donīt, actually. If Nichols was extensively cut in the abdomen, where there are arteries and veins aplenty, then the blood would sink into the abdiominal cavity, and only what was left would go out through the neck. If the neck cut was below the level of the abdominal cavity blood, then some of that blood would run out through the neck. So we really cannot say that pints of blood must have excited via the neck.
It may be a combination of both we just don't know.
Two truths in one sentence there!
What we do know is that she was mutilated after death which would mean there is no blood pressure to cause massive bleeding from the external mutilations of the stomach.
There was blood pressure as long as the heart beat. And if she was only partially strangled, then the heart would beat for some time into the abdominal mutilations if they came first.
And I believe that it was reported that blood collected in the abdominal cavity (that may be chapman but I'm too tired to look it up) so the amount of blood from the mutilations may have been minimal.
Or not, depending on blood pressure.
That doesn't exonerate or add guilt to Lechmere. We're talking about the blood. It would happen whether she was killed by Lechmere or not.
Well, itīs more a question of HOW it happened - but she would indeed have bled no matter who did the cutting. But would a cutter who was there 15 minutes before Mizen be able to make her bleed for all that time? It is not a very viable suggestion. If Payne-James knows what he is talking about, we should acpet a bleeding time of a couple of initital minutes only. Once we pass the five minute line, we should be wary of how she becomes less and less likely to bleed with every second and minute that passes.
Going by Payne-James, the only persons caught inside the likely window of time are Paul and Lechmere. After that, there is a less likely - but not impossible - window of time. We need to enter that window to find the phantom killer everybody seems to be on about. And we have to discard Lechmere, with all the odd things that cling to him, before we can do so. As Andy Griffiths said:
"Certainly, in a modern age, you could not prosecute anybody else without eliminating him first".
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