Originally posted by curious
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Her tops are a problem. And I realize that. I know the clothing of the period, and I know that you can't just shove them up like you could a t-shirt. I know that the tops would likely end about an inch below the navel (except for maybe the chemise). I doubt he took the time the undo her tops, but they would have been in the way for that abdominal cut. The crime scene sketches do not show any open garments besides the coat, but I don't know if that means anything. There is no mention of cuts to those garments. The buttons appear to have been intact.
So she is wearing fitted tops that were neither undone nor cut, however clearly were no longer covering her upper abdomen when she was discovered, but do not appear to have been opened. All of these things cannot be true. He cut the skirts, I think he cut the tops. He appears to have started at the sternum, and he appears to have been attempting a straight line cut until about the navel, at which point he veers off to the right, and cuts down to the pubis from an angle. And it is not a cut that avoids his target organ. It makes sense to me that the abdominal cut is such a wreck because he kept hitting buttons. But there is no way he keeps a sharp knife doing this. So I think he had spares.
It is possible to cut through multiple layers of cloth with a knife. I've done it many times. There is a sort magic number where it gets easier. One layer is kinda hard, 8 layers is impossible, 3-5 seems to provide an appropriate tension. Certainly once you stab through the layers, the sawing is comparatively easy. So it's possible. Is that what happened? I don't know. It works for me at this point.
Ironically the easiest thing for him to do would have been to cut through her tops starting at the neckline and just cutting them open. But he doesn't appear to have done that. I don't know why.
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