This might be a crazy stretch, but here's an idea which I've back engineered
to fit the questions raised by the facts.
This is more of a mental exercise, or an idea, I wouldn't call it a theory or anything.
This is probably totally wrong, but let's kick the ball around and see if we get anywhere.
A lot of people have very good reason to question the Stride case.
Both in the location and the state the killer left the victim in.
And it's fairly agreed that the International Working Men's Club makes this
a busy and undesirable location for either sex trade or wanton murder.
Now, here's where I'm allowing some cinematic imagination to come in.
First,
The Pall Mall Gazette says
"And, even should, by the most remote possibility, the murderer be disturbed by anybody opening the gate from the street entrance, he is by no means caught in a trap, for there are plenty of backyards that can be scaled, and a great many courts and passages, leading to Berner and other streets, to be easily reached"
So in my made for Hollywood scene:
Stride starts off by leading her killer to one of these courts, passages, or
private backyards. In the near distance one can hear the activity and bustle
of the working men's club, but they are in a spot which is reliably secluded
enough to carry out a quick sex act.
The killer somehow tips his hand, or errs, or in some way triggers Stride to
want to flee the secluded location.
As she can hear the working men's club, and it's obviously busy there, she
tries to make her way to this public location as quickly as possible.
If she escapes, she could describe, and perhaps even positively ID the suspect.
The killer now has to pursue Stride.
Stride makes it as far as Dutfield's Yard when the killer catches her up.
Now this murder becomes different. The killer now has a good reason to kill
Stride with the killing itself having it's own merit -- killing a potential
witness against him.
So even though the International Working Men's Club is right there, his hand is forced, he kills as quickly as he can and then flees -- either by being genuinely interrupted, or just wanting to make the best of a bad job and leaving a location he knows is dangerous for him.
So, likely a million holes here, shoot me down
to fit the questions raised by the facts.
This is more of a mental exercise, or an idea, I wouldn't call it a theory or anything.
This is probably totally wrong, but let's kick the ball around and see if we get anywhere.
A lot of people have very good reason to question the Stride case.
Both in the location and the state the killer left the victim in.
And it's fairly agreed that the International Working Men's Club makes this
a busy and undesirable location for either sex trade or wanton murder.
Now, here's where I'm allowing some cinematic imagination to come in.
First,
The Pall Mall Gazette says
"And, even should, by the most remote possibility, the murderer be disturbed by anybody opening the gate from the street entrance, he is by no means caught in a trap, for there are plenty of backyards that can be scaled, and a great many courts and passages, leading to Berner and other streets, to be easily reached"
So in my made for Hollywood scene:
Stride starts off by leading her killer to one of these courts, passages, or
private backyards. In the near distance one can hear the activity and bustle
of the working men's club, but they are in a spot which is reliably secluded
enough to carry out a quick sex act.
The killer somehow tips his hand, or errs, or in some way triggers Stride to
want to flee the secluded location.
As she can hear the working men's club, and it's obviously busy there, she
tries to make her way to this public location as quickly as possible.
If she escapes, she could describe, and perhaps even positively ID the suspect.
The killer now has to pursue Stride.
Stride makes it as far as Dutfield's Yard when the killer catches her up.
Now this murder becomes different. The killer now has a good reason to kill
Stride with the killing itself having it's own merit -- killing a potential
witness against him.
So even though the International Working Men's Club is right there, his hand is forced, he kills as quickly as he can and then flees -- either by being genuinely interrupted, or just wanting to make the best of a bad job and leaving a location he knows is dangerous for him.
So, likely a million holes here, shoot me down
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