Here's an interesting thought: if Kelly had been alive and conscious when she sustained such a savage wound - or wounds - would her arm not have bled profusely, obscuring the shape the knife had made until cleaned up later at the mortuary? Yet there is the F-shape, as clear as day, as if it was carved into her flesh after death, when the blood flow had ceased.
When we see mortuary photographs of defensive wounds, we see the limb after it has been cleaned of the blood which inevitably would pour from such damage during life. But Mary Kelly was photographed in situ of her murder site and I'm guessing (and am totally open to being corrected) that the F-shape carved into her arm was not cleaned-up by anyone prior to the photograph being taken.
How could such defensive wounds (by definition, whilst her heart was still pumping) have produced no pool of blood where the knife sliced into her as she silently fought back?
Ike
When we see mortuary photographs of defensive wounds, we see the limb after it has been cleaned of the blood which inevitably would pour from such damage during life. But Mary Kelly was photographed in situ of her murder site and I'm guessing (and am totally open to being corrected) that the F-shape carved into her arm was not cleaned-up by anyone prior to the photograph being taken.
How could such defensive wounds (by definition, whilst her heart was still pumping) have produced no pool of blood where the knife sliced into her as she silently fought back?
Ike
Comment