Originally posted by Sam Flynn
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Eddowes V-shape wounds are scissors I think
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So basically the Vs come from the tip of the knife cutting through the nose? They are incidental.
But they are on both sides of her face, under each eye.Last edited by Batman; 10-08-2018, 10:20 AM.Bona fide canonical and then some.
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostWell, it was all deliberate, I guess, in that he intended to inflict damage. But there was no "grand design" in any of it as far as I can see. I seem to remember writing that article in response to a number of discussions about the "clown's mask" and various attempts to read symbolism into the wounds - stuff which I refuted then, and still do now.
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Originally posted by Batman View Posthttps://www.casebook.org/images/rip73-photo1.jpg
So basically the Vs come from the tip of the knife cutting through the nose? They are incidental.
But they are on both sides of her face, under each eye.
Incidental? Yes, entirely - which is always unexpected to some degree when we are dealing with symmetric wounds. But there you are.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostThey are - and a combination of a longish blade (keep in mind what Bagster Phillips suggested) and protruding cheek bones à la Eddowes forms a very good ground for that.
Incidental? Yes, entirely - which is always unexpected to some degree when we are dealing with symmetric wounds. But there you are.
So let's say the one under her left eye-lid was made by a knife tip traveling from the right side of her nose. How does the one under her right eye-lid get made?Bona fide canonical and then some.
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostJon and I arrived at our conclusions independently, although I didn't twig that the infliction of the wounds might have coincided with the attempted cutting off of the nose - that ingenious suggestion was entirely Jon's. However, we both maintained that the wounds were an accidental byproduct of a slicing action of the knife, and not deliberately written/drawn on the skin.
For those who haven't read it, my dissertation - which covers a lot more than the cheek wounds - can be found here on Casebook:
https://www.casebook.org/dissertatio...or-design.html
It kicks my idea that two inverted Vs = W for Wolverhampton into touch, though.
😬
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Originally posted by Batman View PostOkay, I understand how the article writers believe its the tip of the knife making these incidentally as the nose is cut... but the Vs are on both sides.
So let's say the one under her left eye-lid was made by a knife tip traveling from the right side of her nose. How does the one under her right eye-lid get made?
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Originally posted by MrBarnett View PostThere's a possible Wolverhampton connection between Kate Eddowes and Henry Tomkins - via a man named Jesse Croote. It's a long story, and there is actually a wolf in it.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostYou must treat me to it some time, Gary. It sounds very interesting. I somehow seem to remember the name Croote; have you discussed him before?
Incidentally, there was also a Croot(e) living at the same address in Mary Ann Street as Ma Lechmere in 1871 (from memory). It's a fairly unusual name, so there may be a connection there, too, but probably not.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostYou need to look again. Post 69, second sketch from the top. Both cheeks, both flaps. Promise!
Ah, okay I see now. I really didn't expect to see that both are being done in one movement. It is a nice illustration but I don't think this is how they were made.
I think the idea that both wounds were made in one movement is a bit unlikely given JtR made the wounds over each eye-lid by deliberately going to each part of the cheek under the eye. So he was going back and forth on them.
In the illustration, the edge (middle) of the knife is on the bridge of the nose first. The heel (blade near handle) and tip (blade near point) will not be making contact with either upper cheeks at the same time. It would be pivoting on the nose.
You would have to tip back towards the heel or upwards towards the point to touch either cheek. So the knife would be pointing either up or down to reach each side.
However, if they saw straight down, the focal point of pressure would be on the knife edge cutting down, sawing until it hit the bone. It would have to be a straight knife, not curved to be making contact with both checks.
Yet it is a sawing motion of the cut that makes this cut go down. The slice in the illustration is a chop rather than a sawing motion. It is hard to imagine how sawing motions could even 'peel' two u-shapes let alone v-shapes. Would slicing do this also? I think this could easily be replicated in a video if it were possible. I'd watch a demonstration.Bona fide canonical and then some.
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