Just a quick question regarding the apron:
Let's assume he lives in the heart of Met territory and he's making his way home.
In the event he stops to wipe his knife, what would be the point?
Presumably he still has the organs (or does he?), so wiping the knife is pretty much useless to him as a stop and search would reveal the organs.
This would suggest that the point was just to get rid of the apron.
If he has taken the apron to carry the organs, then what changes? Why, at Goulston Street, does he no longer need the apron?
If he's going to take the organs into his home, then why not the apron? Both are incriminating.
So what is going on here? there seems to be no reason to suddenly discard the apron.
Except one:
His hands may have given him away on the way home, so the whole point was to wipe his hands. But then, it is claimed Jack had ample time at the scene, so why didn't he wipe his hands at the scene? Just cut the apron off and wipe your hands. Plus, under pressure in Wentworth Street, would he be able to wipe away all of the blood with a piece of cloth? Would it smear, stick under his nails etc?
Any ideas?
Is the answer that he no longer had the organs, and therefore didn't need the apron?
Let's assume he lives in the heart of Met territory and he's making his way home.
In the event he stops to wipe his knife, what would be the point?
Presumably he still has the organs (or does he?), so wiping the knife is pretty much useless to him as a stop and search would reveal the organs.
This would suggest that the point was just to get rid of the apron.
If he has taken the apron to carry the organs, then what changes? Why, at Goulston Street, does he no longer need the apron?
If he's going to take the organs into his home, then why not the apron? Both are incriminating.
So what is going on here? there seems to be no reason to suddenly discard the apron.
Except one:
His hands may have given him away on the way home, so the whole point was to wipe his hands. But then, it is claimed Jack had ample time at the scene, so why didn't he wipe his hands at the scene? Just cut the apron off and wipe your hands. Plus, under pressure in Wentworth Street, would he be able to wipe away all of the blood with a piece of cloth? Would it smear, stick under his nails etc?
Any ideas?
Is the answer that he no longer had the organs, and therefore didn't need the apron?
Comment