Hi Harry.
BS man stopped and spoke to Stride. That does in no way have to mean that he obscured Schwartz´s possibility to see Liz. In fact, if he walked all the way up to her, it is just as reasonable, if not more, that Schwarts saw them both from their respective sides.
"The incidence of domestic interupted assault, leading to murder is rare.In fact domestic assault leading to murder is rare,compared with the number of assaults of that nature that take place."
This inevitably calls for the question "Just how rare is an eviscerating serial killer?". And to be honest, interrupted eviscerating serialists would be even more uncommon, would they not?
"A disturbed mind is but a mild description,and to have two abroad on the same night defies belief"
But there are two TYPES of killings involved here, Harry: One that is evidently the work of an eviscerator, and one that shows no signs whatsoever of any such interests. That means that what you are basically saying here is that if any of the hundreds of thousands of Eastenders who were not Jack decided that he or she wanted to cut a throat that night, it could not be achieved. And if it was tried and succeeded, the slaying would somehow go through a metamorphosis and turn into a genuine Ripper killing anyway.
To me, Harry, THAT is quite, quite beyond belief!
If she had been killed by having her head bashed in with a poker, Harry, would you then say that she must have been a Ripper victim? Weighing in
all the usual stuff of her being a prostitute in Ripper-land and all? I think not.
And yet, she was killed by a weapon that is far more common than a poker - a knife. Plus she was killed in a fashion - a cut throat - that was everything but unknown back then. She was one out of THREE London women who had their necks cut that night, remember!
The best,
Fisherman
BS man stopped and spoke to Stride. That does in no way have to mean that he obscured Schwartz´s possibility to see Liz. In fact, if he walked all the way up to her, it is just as reasonable, if not more, that Schwarts saw them both from their respective sides.
"The incidence of domestic interupted assault, leading to murder is rare.In fact domestic assault leading to murder is rare,compared with the number of assaults of that nature that take place."
This inevitably calls for the question "Just how rare is an eviscerating serial killer?". And to be honest, interrupted eviscerating serialists would be even more uncommon, would they not?
"A disturbed mind is but a mild description,and to have two abroad on the same night defies belief"
But there are two TYPES of killings involved here, Harry: One that is evidently the work of an eviscerator, and one that shows no signs whatsoever of any such interests. That means that what you are basically saying here is that if any of the hundreds of thousands of Eastenders who were not Jack decided that he or she wanted to cut a throat that night, it could not be achieved. And if it was tried and succeeded, the slaying would somehow go through a metamorphosis and turn into a genuine Ripper killing anyway.
To me, Harry, THAT is quite, quite beyond belief!
If she had been killed by having her head bashed in with a poker, Harry, would you then say that she must have been a Ripper victim? Weighing in
all the usual stuff of her being a prostitute in Ripper-land and all? I think not.
And yet, she was killed by a weapon that is far more common than a poker - a knife. Plus she was killed in a fashion - a cut throat - that was everything but unknown back then. She was one out of THREE London women who had their necks cut that night, remember!
The best,
Fisherman
Comment