Originally posted by Sam Flynn
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At this point I'm inclined to hedge my bets on collateral damage versus intentional attack on the cheeks, but nonetheless, what I see certainly seems consistent with the way a knife would move over Eddowes' very pronounced cheekbones while it was intended to be drawing a straight line.
My one question would be whether - as per Fisherman just previously - if it was a collateral damage situation, the course of the stroke would be disturbed by the contact between blade and bone? Surely the tip end of the knife would be expected to go a bit askew - with more stability and force coming from the handle end, the tip end would, I should think, deflect off the cheekbone, with a very uneven result. I suppose this would depend on the speed and strength applied to the stroke. I would also wonder if this would leave any marks on the cheekbones, which would surely have been mentioned in post-mortem reports.
It's ridiculously impossible, of course, to determine any of this from the rough sketches and poor quality photos we have to work with. I often think of the old time machine fantasy with this case - I don't think I'd want to go back and spy to see who Jack was, but I'd love to go back and get some better evidence! Give me five minutes with each corpse and my camera... On second thoughts, maybe we should send someone with a stronger stomach.
B.
Time for bed, thanks for sending me off with such lovely images, folks!
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