Originally posted by lynn cates
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Anyway, the fact that is that the apron is missing. We know hat because of the half left behind. We don't have analogous situations with other victims, because, in Eddowes, we have a torn apron, but if the killer removed something entirely, not leaving half behind, we'd probably never know.
Originally posted by Cogidubnus
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What I'm getting at, is that in addition to the usual human aversion to crap, maybe the odor was especially strong, and the killer didn't want it giving him away. As to why he didn't clean entirely at the scene, maybe he heard footsteps, or just got paranoid. Also, a stimulus that worries us can loom bigger in our senses than it really is, so if the thought occurred to him that the odor would give him away, it might have smelled pretty strong to him.
I know that people tend to make sort of a super-villain out of JTR, as someone who wasn't afraid of risks, or the police, or a little crap on his hands, but that may not have been the case. If he was driven by a really strong compulsion, it may have overcome fears of being caught, but then, and soon as it was satisfied, fears may have returned, so he very well could have become suddenly paranoid, as soon as the "event" was over. I put it that way, because I don't know what made it "over" for him. Not the woman's actual death. Pulling an organ out of her? the body becoming cold? But, the event went all the way from selecting a victim to some end point after she was dead, and his emotional state, and ability to worry about getting caught could have changed dramatically during the event, from what it was on either side of it.
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