Batman:
Okay I will deal with this technicality first and then back to the Coroner capacity issues.
Deal away, Batman!
Blood moves because the heart pumps it.
Yes.
Without the heart blood will move because of gravitational forces.
Yes.
However just because the heart isn't pumping doesn't mean that interaction with the body with a tool be it a knife or a surgical instrument doesn't cause the blood to still move because of physics.
True.
Basically there are other vectors other than the heart.
Hmmm. "Vectors"? the heart and the heart only makes the blood go through the veins. A slightly raised pressure will inititally be there even some little time after the heart has finished pumping, but that is it.
That's why even when working on small toxic blood samples respirators and surgical masks are a must and they are not slashing anything but carefully inserting syringes etc.
Well, if there is a contamination risk, thatīs understandable. People donīt want to catch ebola on their day off, do they?
That does not mean that there WILL be blood distributed, only that there CAN be - by accicdent.
You might say thats just aerosol composition where the blood amount is too small to see, but this is just a degree of disturbance, and she was violently slashed elsewhere. I don't think the coroner's inquest used lack of blood in places as evidence for the murderer having no blood on them, but simply that the corpse lacked the look of being stabbed while vertical or while defending themselves.
She was violently slashed, you say? Then why can we read that "No blood was found on the breast, either of the body or the clothes"? Why did not violent stabbing and retractions of the knife send blood swirling through the air, dotting and smearing her all over? Why was she spotless on the breast?
Maybe, Batman, the killer was not at all as violent in his moves as you seem to envisage? Maybe he was more methodical, doing things in a more calm manner? Sure Llewellyn speaks of violence, but it seems not to have been portrayed in the bloodspill.
There were no blood dots reported around the body either. It was a surprisingly bloodless deed, if we are to believe what was said: A smallish pool of blood under her neck, a brooke of blood running towards the gutter, some blood where her legs had been, and thatīs it.
So excuse me for asking once again, but just how was the blood that did not find itīs way onto Nichols breast supposed to have climbed up to the killers hands and body?
Now, having said that, I am off the opinion in other threads that the raising of JtRs victims legs is done deliberately to add gravitational forces to the heart pumping blood out of the neck, so it is not just a sexual signature but very much a practical one. However this doesn't mean he will have no blood on him, just less blood.
Aha. Well, we are all different. The suggestion has an odd ring to my ear. Are there any comparisons? Anybody who has ever done this and mentioned it afterwards?
For example, JtR has experience before Eddowes, yet Eddowes apron is blood stained in a fashion suggesting cleaning up.
He stuck his hands into Eddowes. And Chapman. And Kelly. He never did that with Stride and Nichols or Tabram. It makes a world of difference.
Wynne E. Baxter while occupying a judicial place doesn't have medical experience as you say, but if he is mistaken, why is that mistake not highlighted by others in the contemporary? Like why didn't they tell him he was wrong?
Many people thought Baxter was wrong - and on many matters! What Baxter aimed to do was to make the bits and pieces fit, and to that end, he had to shoehorn things into place at times. Besides, Payne-James, for example, is not saying that the killer could not have had blood on his person after killing Nichols - he is saying that he must not necessarily have had.
At any rate, Baxter did not reiterate any view of Llewellyn as far as we know - the doctor said nothing about whether the killer would have had blood on his person as far as I know. If he did, then that did not happen at the inquest.
The best,
Fisherman
Okay I will deal with this technicality first and then back to the Coroner capacity issues.
Deal away, Batman!
Blood moves because the heart pumps it.
Yes.
Without the heart blood will move because of gravitational forces.
Yes.
However just because the heart isn't pumping doesn't mean that interaction with the body with a tool be it a knife or a surgical instrument doesn't cause the blood to still move because of physics.
True.
Basically there are other vectors other than the heart.
Hmmm. "Vectors"? the heart and the heart only makes the blood go through the veins. A slightly raised pressure will inititally be there even some little time after the heart has finished pumping, but that is it.
That's why even when working on small toxic blood samples respirators and surgical masks are a must and they are not slashing anything but carefully inserting syringes etc.
Well, if there is a contamination risk, thatīs understandable. People donīt want to catch ebola on their day off, do they?
That does not mean that there WILL be blood distributed, only that there CAN be - by accicdent.
You might say thats just aerosol composition where the blood amount is too small to see, but this is just a degree of disturbance, and she was violently slashed elsewhere. I don't think the coroner's inquest used lack of blood in places as evidence for the murderer having no blood on them, but simply that the corpse lacked the look of being stabbed while vertical or while defending themselves.
She was violently slashed, you say? Then why can we read that "No blood was found on the breast, either of the body or the clothes"? Why did not violent stabbing and retractions of the knife send blood swirling through the air, dotting and smearing her all over? Why was she spotless on the breast?
Maybe, Batman, the killer was not at all as violent in his moves as you seem to envisage? Maybe he was more methodical, doing things in a more calm manner? Sure Llewellyn speaks of violence, but it seems not to have been portrayed in the bloodspill.
There were no blood dots reported around the body either. It was a surprisingly bloodless deed, if we are to believe what was said: A smallish pool of blood under her neck, a brooke of blood running towards the gutter, some blood where her legs had been, and thatīs it.
So excuse me for asking once again, but just how was the blood that did not find itīs way onto Nichols breast supposed to have climbed up to the killers hands and body?
Now, having said that, I am off the opinion in other threads that the raising of JtRs victims legs is done deliberately to add gravitational forces to the heart pumping blood out of the neck, so it is not just a sexual signature but very much a practical one. However this doesn't mean he will have no blood on him, just less blood.
Aha. Well, we are all different. The suggestion has an odd ring to my ear. Are there any comparisons? Anybody who has ever done this and mentioned it afterwards?
For example, JtR has experience before Eddowes, yet Eddowes apron is blood stained in a fashion suggesting cleaning up.
He stuck his hands into Eddowes. And Chapman. And Kelly. He never did that with Stride and Nichols or Tabram. It makes a world of difference.
Wynne E. Baxter while occupying a judicial place doesn't have medical experience as you say, but if he is mistaken, why is that mistake not highlighted by others in the contemporary? Like why didn't they tell him he was wrong?
Many people thought Baxter was wrong - and on many matters! What Baxter aimed to do was to make the bits and pieces fit, and to that end, he had to shoehorn things into place at times. Besides, Payne-James, for example, is not saying that the killer could not have had blood on his person after killing Nichols - he is saying that he must not necessarily have had.
At any rate, Baxter did not reiterate any view of Llewellyn as far as we know - the doctor said nothing about whether the killer would have had blood on his person as far as I know. If he did, then that did not happen at the inquest.
The best,
Fisherman
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