Originally posted by Chava
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Originally posted by Chava View Post
If there is a pic of Kelly's door showing the lock, then that's terrific. But I've been on this case for decades and on this site for a very long time and I don't recall seeing it.
Courtesy of "sgh" circa 2009.
Courtesy of someone else.
Last edited by DJA; 10-16-2020, 10:40 AM.
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Mrs Richardson reveals the secret, MA0913:Originally posted by Chava View Post
Which means the door didn't fit snugly into the frame. All you'd need to do would be to run a blade up from the bottom to lift it and get into the house. Now someone knew that. Was it Annie or was it Jack?
Also this is the first of two occasions where the latch was how you'd get in as long as you knew the secret. The latch on Kelley's room was easy-to-access as well. In that case she'd lost the key. So used the latch to look like the door was locked. It's certainly possible her killer knew that and knew how to get into the room.
The front and back doors are always left open. You have only to raise the latch with your finger and you can go in any of the houses about there.Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing
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To be fair this issue has had some discussions here in the past, but if you think in just practical terms, factoring in the bumped furniture when the police entered, the crack of light shown in MJK images, and the practicality of entering a room directly vs entering to a corner then in around a door, you might gather that the door inward swung towards the windowed wall. The light shown in the MJK2 image is from the door being opened a crack.Originally posted by DJA View Post
Wrong side.
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Cheers for that Dave, posted in context. I think what it shows, is that regardless of any perceived motive, that's beyond inhuman, regardless of how many times I've seen it.Originally posted by DJA View PostHere is MJK2 ......
Also, the light is the photographers flash bulb. It's nothing to do with the angle of the door. Or the location of the knob.
And yes, I know it was Michael that mentioned the light in MJK2, but I'm guessing he'll read this. If he meant the MJK 3 pic, with the strip of light, well that's a different debate.Thems the Vagaries.....
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Yes. Sorry. I couldn't get back to this earlier. And I understand why you're surmising the sneck. However we are not seeing a picture of the door full on. I doubt there was one. They broke it down. I'm not married to the idea of a bolt. But I also note that Lizzie Prater barred her door upstairs with a couple of tables and I don't think it's beyond probability that Mary Jane did something extra as well. As for the door itself, I've been looking and cannot find this immediately. But when the jurors went to visit the scene of the crime I believe it was noted that the door swung back sharpish and hit something--I believe it was a chair--on the way in. Cox describes Mr Blotchy as basically slamming that door when he went into Kelly's room. He may not have intended to slam it. It may have looked a lot more substantial than it actually was.Originally posted by DJA View PostAnyone read post #767 ..... or at least look at the pictures?
However that's not the only slamming door. Getting back to Chapman, I believe that door to the yard was pretty loose too. These doors all seem to have been fairly flimsy. Which doesn't surprise me re Millers Court which McCarthy wouldn't have spent an extra farthing on. But does surprise me re 29 Hanbury St which was probably quite well-built when it went up. I'd have expected a solid door there.
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How do you know the doors along Hanbury St weren't solid?Originally posted by Chava View Post
Getting back to Chapman, I believe that door to the yard was pretty loose too. These doors all seem to have been fairly flimsy. Which doesn't surprise me re Millers Court which McCarthy wouldn't have spent an extra farthing on. But does surprise me re 29 Hanbury St which was probably quite well-built when it went up. I'd have expected a solid door there.
There is just a little trick to opening the door at #29 - raise the latch with a finger, and you're in.
That doesn't imply the door is necessarily loose or flimsy, and one still has to know this little trick with the latch, to open it.
However, for some reason that I just can't put my finger on, Madam Richardson often has the door wide open.Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing
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doorknob
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