Originally posted by Single-O-Seven
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From Mitre Square to Goulston Street - Some thoughts.
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Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
I agree. I think that we have to be wary of assumptions. It’s far from impossible that the killer returned and deposited the apron later because we don’t know the circumstances but it can’t be impossible that he did it immediately after leaving Mitre Square which, if it wasn’t for Long, would have been the likeliest scenario.
He was taking a risk if he lied, perhaps he had not stepped inside the entryway on his round at 2:20, but did not want to admit that.
He is somewhat supported by Det. Halse who says he passed the same spot at 2:20 and he didn't see it either.Regards, Jon S.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
That he missed it on his round at 2:20 is always going to be the preferred assumption, yet he is quite certain about it not being there.
He was taking a risk if he lied, perhaps he had not stepped inside the entryway on his round at 2:20, but did not want to admit that.
He is somewhat supported by Det. Halse who says he passed the same spot at 2:20 and he didn't see it either.Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
Yes, if he lied and they caught the killer who then told them he’d dropped it immediately after leaving Mitre Square he’d have been exposed as a liar. If it wasn’t there it of course leaves us with the age old question - what had he been doing and where had he been in the meantime? Do you think that an injury might potentially be an explanation Wick? It’s seems a bit of a long time just to roughly dress a wound? Unless he whipped out his Gladstone bag and stitched himself up course? An alternative is some kind of bolt-hole of course. Then the thrill perhaps of going back out with the apron piece and dumping it?
I'm forgetting about the email....I'll send it now.Regards, Jon S.
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View PostI still think that there’s possibility that Long didn’t see the apron at 2.20. Perhaps he just wasn’t a particularly diligent officer and hadn’t bothered to look into the doorway with his lamp. He was, after all, sacked in July of 1889 for being drunk on duty. A killer dropping the apron immediately after leaving Mitre Square would have been the likeliest scenario to the police so was Long just covering his own backside without thinking it out fully?
But if Long was not the only policeman to pass by that doorway at about 2.20 a.m., then why should he have felt the need to explain away the fact that he did not see the apron piece at that time?
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Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post
But if Long was not the only policeman to pass by that doorway at about 2.20 a.m., then why should he have felt the need to explain away the fact that he did not see the apron piece at that time?
By Mr. Crawford: “At twenty minutes past two o'clock I passed over the spot where the piece of apron was found, but did not notice anything then. I should not necessarily have seen the piece of apron.“
Also, do we have any way of knowing if Long was aware that Halse had been in Goulston Street at close to the time that he himself had been there?Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
It looks like Halse didn’t particularly check the doorway closely though PI:
By Mr. Crawford: “At twenty minutes past two o'clock I passed over the spot where the piece of apron was found, but did not notice anything then. I should not necessarily have seen the piece of apron.“
Also, do we have any way of knowing if Long was aware that Halse had been in Goulston Street at close to the time that he himself had been there?
Yes.
You are right.
According to the record we have, Long gave evidence just before Halse.
But Long was quite definite that the apron was not there at 2.20 a.m.
[Coroner] Are you able to say whether the apron was there then? - It was not.
He did not need to be definite.
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Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post
Yes.
You are right.
According to the record we have, Long gave evidence just before Halse.
But Long was quite definite that the apron was not there at 2.20 a.m.
[Coroner] Are you able to say whether the apron was there then? - It was not.
He did not need to be definite.Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by Losmandris View Post
Purely anecdotal I know but making that journey by foot at a brisk place has pretty much convinced me that the killer possibly taking a similar route was fleeing back toward Whitechapel, passing the entrance way to the Wentworth model dwellings (as you do!) he dumps the bloodied/soiled piece of apron. No hanging around. No writing on the wall. No hiding in a bolt hole to emerge later on. Just passing through in a great hurry. It just makes the most sense, especially when you follow the route in person.
When he left the square, he may have left in a hurry and so didn't have his gains and tools in order, and so just bundled them all in wherever he could hide them on his person.
Goulston Street is not necessarily significant outside of him thinking he was far enough away from the crime scene to have the space to stop, get his items together and organised as best he could on his person, dress himself down a bit; and feel more composed for the walk home, wherever that was.
By the time DC Halse organised a search, the WM had approx. 20 minutes on him. We (criminals and otherwise) know that in today's society, police cars can be radioed in very quickly. He could well have known that in his society, the method of police procedure and the nature of communication/telegraphs; meant he had the time to stop at Goulston Street long before a search would be upon him.
And from there, the idea that he was running around in back alleys could well be a quick and ill-conceived judgement. 'Well away from the crime scene by the time a search was organised and may well have known that would be the case. 'No real reason to run down back alleys and his best option may have been to walk down a main road like nothing was the matter in among other people walking down the street, at least while he was confident no search was taking place (based upon what he knew of how it worked in his society).
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It does not make sense to me.
There was no need to cut the apron in two, no need to carry one half of it so far from the scene of the murder, and no need to discard it where it was found, unless for a specific purpose.
If, as some have suggested, he took the apron piece in order to wrap the kidney in it, then why was the kidney not found with it, unless he returned to base before leaving the apron piece where it was found?
If there was no particular purpose in cutting the apron and taking half of it with him, then why commit either act?
If he used the apron piece to wipe the knife, then why not do that and leave the apron in the Square?
There is also the fact that Pc Long testified that the apron piece was not in the entrance to Wentworth Dwellings about 40 minutes after the murderer must have left Mitre Square.
That means he could hardly have discarded it on his way back to base.
The only explanation that makes sense to me is that the apron piece authenticated the graffito as having been written by the murderer.
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Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post
If there was no particular purpose in cutting the apron and taking half of it with him, then why commit either act?
Clearly there was a reason otherwise he wouldn't have done it.
Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post
The only explanation that makes sense to me is that the apron piece authenticated the graffito as having been written by the murderer.
For what purpose? Why would a serial killer write that message?
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Originally posted by Fleetwood Mac View Post
Why would a serial killer write that message?
The police thought at the time that he did it to exploit local anti-Jewish feelings.
There had been a march down Hanbury Street with chants declaring that the murderer was a Jew, an apron reportedly found in the yard giving rise to accusations against a local Jew, and an erroneous report that the murderer had left a chalked message in the yard.
Is it purely coincidental that aprons and chalked messages figure in both the Hanbury Street and Mitre Square murders?
But I am going by the evidence: Long's testimony, if true, rules out the mere discarding of the apron, the murderer knew that the apron piece he took could be identified as Eddowes', and the proximity of the message, which could easily have been rubbed out had it been there the previous day or days, to the apron piece, suggests a connection with it.
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Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post
But I am going by the evidence: Long's testimony, if true, rules out the mere discarding of the apron, the murderer knew that the apron piece he took could be identified as Eddowes', and the proximity of the message, which could easily have been rubbed out had it been there the previous day or days, to the apron piece, suggests a connection with it.
By your own admission, this piece of apron could have linked him to the crime.
What could have happened in his life (in relation to 'the Jews') that made it worthwhile risking his life, all for a message on a wall?
What was he hoping to achieve by writing that message, that would have made it worth risking his life?
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Originally posted by Fleetwood Mac View Post
I reckon the motive is missing.
By your own admission, this piece of apron could have linked him to the crime.
What could have happened in his life (in relation to 'the Jews') that made it worthwhile risking his life, all for a message on a wall?
What was he hoping to achieve by writing that message, that would have made it worth risking his life?
I was not aware that I had made an admission, FM.
If Long's testimony is correct, then the murderer must have gone to Wentworth Dwellings more than 40 minutes after leaving Mitre Square and for the express purpose of leaving the piece of apron there.
He was thereby risking his life anyway.
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Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post
I was not aware that I had made an admission, FM.
Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post
If Long's testimony is correct, then the murderer must have gone to Wentworth Dwellings more than 40 minutes after leaving Mitre Square and for the express purpose of leaving the piece of apron there.
He was thereby risking his life anyway.
1) The WM went back out from wherever he was hiding and dropped the apron in that doorway at the time you suggest, but it wasn't connected to the writing. 'Difficult to understand the motive for that given a search of his home would have revealed other incriminating evidence: 'may as well have hung onto the apron.
2) As above except the WM deliberately went back out to incriminate 'the Jews'.
3) PC Long didn't see the apron first time 'round.
4) Unknown to the police, the WM was hemmed in somewhere around Mitre Square and he saw a window of opportunity to leave at some point that would marry with passing Goulston Street after PC Long passed first time 'round.
5) The WM didn't drop the apron there; the police did. The motive being an attempt to avoid a scare spreading beyond its already entrenched place.
I'll go with 3 and I'd lean towards 4 and 5 before 1 and 2. Just me.
Still, it would be interesting to hear why a serial killer would take the time to a write a message on a wall aimed at incriminating 'the Jews' when those seconds could be the difference between being alive and being dead. Why would it be so important for him to do that and what was he hoping to achieve that made it worthwhile for him?
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