Geez, Caz; what you do resembles poaching or guerilla warfare at times. You pop up from nowhere in September and deliver answers to points made in August. And when I answer you, pooof! Gone again.
It would be rewarding to get an answer more directly every once in a while, if you catch my drift!
Moreover, I need some luck to stumble over your answers, when they suddenly surface. That will probably mean that you sometimes are left with no answer at all, and, well .. It´s a bit of a waste, I think.
But here goes:
To fault me on the point of using the wording "very frequent" you of course have to establish just how frequent "very frequent" is.
And that is hard.
Actually, murder is not a very frequent business at all. But comparing knife killings to other killings in the East End of 1888 will leave us with the insight that knives were used in a good deal of the slayings. And cutting throats was not all that unusual either. Many of A P Wolfs posts to the boards have made that very clear.
On your colourful example with Lucky Liz et al, I fail to see what you are trying to prove. Is it the fact that two murders by the same man can look unalike each other?
If so, Caz, I will say that this notion of yours is spot on! The Düsseldorf police thought they were hunting down three or four mad killers in the 1920:s, until they caught Peter Kürten and understood that the scissors killer, the hammer killer, the knife wielder and the strangler were actually one and the same.
But the problem, Caz, does not lie therein. For there is no rule saying that serial killers will employ different methods of despatching each victim. Instead there is ample evidence telling us that such creatures have a tendency to develop killing methods that repeat themselves inbetween the murder sites. In other words, it is a better approach to look for consistencies than it is to chance on inconsistencies if we want to identify a killer.
That, by the way, is the strong point for those who want Jack as Liz´killer - she was after all cut in the neck.
Which brings us back to the first point: knife-killings were abundant, proportionwise, in that day and venue. Slitting throats was often employed by those who killed by means of knives.
A comparison could be todays firearms killings. If two women are shot in the head and eviscerated in downtown Chicago, does that really have to mean that a third woman found in the same approxiamte area, shot in the head and killed, fell prey to the same man who committed the first murders?
Wherein lies the most significant common factor, Caz? Is it the bullet to the head? Or is it the evisceration? Which is the rarer creature? The shooter, or the eviscerator?
Checking out the Chicago police files after such an event, and going back a year, I would suggest that you would find heaps, loads and bagfuls of people killed by firearms, a good deal of the killings having been carried out by a shot to the head.
The evisceration murders, however, would probably amount to two - end of story.
A knife murder, where the wound deviates to a significant extent from the deep throatcuts produced in the other cases, is simply not enough. Not by a long way. The only logical conclusion must be that long as it MAY have been Jack, the more probable solution lies in realizing that it was not him.
The best, Caz! I´ll take a look to see if you have responded in a fortnight´s time!
Fisherman
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Originally posted by claire View PostHi Ben,
No, I didn't quite say that he got the idea to kill from witnessing the violence. I said he may have been triggered by it.
As for the two separate attackers--why not? In the course of my previous work, the number of women I came across raped or assaulted by two different assailants on the same night or within a very short space of time (yes, admittedly not 5 minutes) was shocking...women fleeing from the home of a domestic assailant, raped by a man who saw them waiting at bus stops and so forth. Assailants sniff out victims. It would be more unusual if they didn't. And one thing we do know for certain about Jack: he picked on women who were, objectively, very much down on their luck. We know he had already killed, we know he'd crossed that barrier. I'm not saying that I believe for certain that is what happened; only that I've no reason to dismiss it on the distribution of violent assailants thesis.
Not trying to come off as sexist, but maybe this is something we women can see more readily. I can understand why it would be discomfiting to nice normal guys to think of their own sex inflicting injury upon insult in this way. Also, I read recently that notorious serial killer Peter Kurten played the good Samaritan with one victim, kindly rescuing her in the nick of time from another sexual predator’s hands before luring her somewhere he could have a deadlier crack at her himself. She was very lucky to survive both men’s violent intentions.
Jack would have been only too willing to add injury to the insult Liz had just suffered from BS. I’d be jolly surprised if he didn’t come across a single unfortunate being mistreated while he was out on the prowl that autumn.
Hi Perry,
You wrote to c.d:
An estimate on a cut that took place no later than 1/2 hour or 20 minutes prior to Blackwells arrival is hardly a stab in the dark cd. Maybe you think Doctors couldnt recognize a 1/2 hour old wound....we certainly disagree.
What Blackwell thought he recognised was a wound that was probably less than twenty minutes old, but certainly less than half an hour old when he examined it. He set half an hour as his absolute ceiling just to be on the safe side. You keep misunderstanding this basic fact. In short, his opinion was that the wound was most likely inflicted after 12.56 (ie twenty minutes before his watch told him it was 1.16), but certainly no earlier than 12.46.
You also wrote:
Maybe first you should explain why BSM, who was trying to acquire a hooker by the looks of it, suddenly changes his mind and leaves in the first place.
So now Liz doesn’t look to you like she’s dolled up to the nines in her Saturday best, waiting for her hot date to show up and treat her like the lady she is, but instead she looks for all the world like the professional hooker we know her to be, because otherwise BS would not have assumed he could acquire her services. Right, I think I see progress of sorts.
If you were right the first time and Liz wasn’t working that night, then he’d have had to acquire her services by force or give up. Might not be a good idea to try the former, considering he had witnesses to his clumsy overtures. Ditto if she was working but didn’t propose to service an oaf who wasn’t exactly showing her the colour of his money first.
An alternative is that BS disapproved of such women hanging around the club and was no more trying to acquire this one’s services than a dose of the clap. A quick shove as he passed by would have made his point without having to soil his hands on her any further.
Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
...killed by a method that was admittedly very frequent in that society at that time...
...If Stride had been the only prostitute killed in the East End that autumn, not one of those who try to cram Jack into B S mans shoes would have come up with the notion that the evidence existing pointed to a serial killer being at large.
Very frequent? I would strongly submit that if you were to do the impossible and take the serial killer out of the equation, you would find unsolved outdoor throat cutting murders of women very infrequent indeed in that society, regardless of the period you choose to examine.
‘If’ is far too big a word to use because you can try to take a Whitechapel murder away from Jack but you can never take the Jack out of 1888 Whitechapel.
If the victim (let’s call her Lucky Liz) who survived a strangulation attempt in West Croydon a few years back, because two witnesses (let’s call them Brave Schwartz and Noble Pipe Man) chased off her assailant, had been the only woman attacked that night, nobody would have come up with the notion that this evidence pointed to a serial offender at large. But she wasn’t the only one.
Her attacker (let’s call him Unlucky John) was not spooked by his close call into giving up, going home and cooling off, as some argue Jack would have been if he killed Liz. Not a bit of it. High on drink and drugs (now there’s a surprise) he was soon seeking out a second victim and prowled the main road until he found a woman (let’s just call her Kate) he could really go to town on, to relieve his pent-up anger and frustration at his earlier failure to complete the job. He didn’t try to strangle this one, but battered her over the head with a lump of wood until she was beyond recognition.
Nobody would have had any reason to assume the same man was involved if he hadn’t showed up on cctv prowling that main road and been recognised by a witness to the first assault.
Love,
Caz
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Guest repliedOriginally posted by Elias View PostJust another point. If she was murdered by BS man, the time between Schwartz seeing her attacked and her being found dead could be explained by her being used to violence. Maybe her fear of violence had been numbed somewhat because of the area she lived in and people she met, so she could've been thrown to the ground, but despite her being attacked by him, got up and remained with him for a short time after that before it escalated into something more sinister.
Jack just popping in and making one cut is not very reasonable.
Best regards.
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Just another point. If she was murdered by BS man, the time between Schwartz seeing her attacked and her being found dead could be explained by her being used to violence. Maybe her fear of violence had been numbed somewhat because of the area she lived in and people she met, so she could've been thrown to the ground, but despite her being attacked by him, got up and remained with him for a short time after that before it escalated into something more sinister.
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Guest repliedOriginally posted by Observer View PostHi Mike
Using all the knowns? Liz Stride assaulted minutes before she dies? How many minutes? Liz Stride was still bleeding 18 19 minutes after she was assaulted. From the inquest, the coroner questions Spooner
[Coroner] Was any blood coming from the throat? - Yes; it was still flowing. I noticed that she had a piece of paper doubled up in her right hand, and some red and white flowers pinned on her breast. I did not feel the body, nor did I alter the position of the head. I am sure of that. Her face was turned towards the club wall.
[Coroner] Did you notice whether the blood was still moving on the ground? - It was running down the gutter. I stood by the side of the body for four or five minutes, until the last witness arrived.
If Liz Stride was cut minutes after her assault, and I'll anticipate that you mean 1 maybe 2 minutes then why was the blood still flowing from her throat, still moving down towards the gutter, at 3, 4 minutes after one o clock, a good 16, 17 minutes after her death? Isn't this "known" more consistant with Liz Stride having had her thoat cut shortly before one o clock, that is a few minutes to one o clock?
all the best
Observer
Two things.....Blackwells estimate on the timing of the cut, leaves her being cut between 12:46, and 12:56am. If that is the case, Spooner did not likely see blood flow, though he may have thought he did. Since we do have two medical men there on site, I believe the issues of when the cut occurred, and how quickly she might bleed out, say that Spooner was wrong.
If you review Spooners statements, you'll soon see its not the only incorrect statement he makes under oath.
Blackwell arrived at 1:16....Liz was cut between 1/2 hour and 20 minutes before he arrived. Which translates to Liz on the ground at no later than 12:56am....already cut, and Diemshutz, by his statements, 4 minutes away.
Interruption? Still bleeding at 1:06am? Doesnt jive with medical opinon, and Spooner is no doctor, and he is looking at a woman by matchlight that is in almost total darkness otherwise. I think you could test it yourself, find a pitch black spot with damp pavement, pour some oil on it, then light a match and see if the illumination on the oil makes it seem like it is in motion.... Ive done it.
Another point, can you say that any other Ripper victim was suggested as possibly cut "while she was falling". Now think about her "falling" at 12:45. BSM had already caused her to "fall" once.
Cheers Observer.Last edited by Guest; 08-29-2008, 03:18 AM.
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Guest repliedHello all,
Thanks Stewart for the post, but in all fairness the lines" its is not actually proved that the man Schwartz saw is the murderer although it is clearly the more probable of the two" infer a great deal of suspicion on the two men at the scene.
He is of course referring to Pipeman, but the inference is clear that there was a great deal of suspicion about Broadshouldered Man as the killer. As well there should have been, he is clearly by witness accounts, left alone in the compny of a woman he accosted and who will be killed within 14 minutes.
Mike, you sentiments are good, and I believe you know from my posts for almost two years that cordial conversation is by far my preference. That being said, there is a nagging tendency in these discussions to leave illogical doors open, because someones opinion at that time leaves a less than logical answer on the table....or because that when you cannot be absolute about something, any answer however improbable is still on the table.
In this case, almost all medical and investigative opinion categorized Liz as a murder victim of "Jack's". Is that unapproachable? It's hardly a definitive case, and it is still an unsolved murder. One of perhaps 10 or 11 that happenend during the "Ripper" period. And in those 10 or 11, are the Canonicals, victims assumed to be by a single killer.
For myself....when I am presented with a single wound, no evidence of any further interaction with the corpse, a setting that is essentially deserted at the key times excluding a soon to be murder victim and a witnesses testified drunk man who accosts her within minutes of her cut...without any testimony that anyone saw anyone leave, or arrive, and with the overwhelmingly non-ripperized Victim, ....I dont like assuming it was still possible for it to be Jack, by arriving unseen, and being interrupted at the very moment he would be turning the body on her back.
Yes, it is possible. No... it is not probable, and No, there is nothing in evidence which can authenticate the opinions that Jack must have done this.
Sooner or later all investigators must follow the evidence, including us, and the evidence, what little there is, leaves 2 people who had an altercation at a location which is feet from, and minutes before, 1 of them is cut. We know which one gets cut....and logic and the absolute lack of a tangible case for Jack neccesitates the assumption that if Jack killed her.....Jack was Broadshouldered Man. I cannot buy that myself, nor a magical entrance by the real one.
And in another "Ripper" assumptive, Ill just say that in many cases where a woman is found murdered in her bed in her underwear late at night, she was in the bed sleeping when the attack occurred. Just as it appears....like a woman on her side with a single wound and a known agitant with her just before.
Best regards all.Last edited by Guest; 08-29-2008, 02:48 AM.
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Observer writes, answering Michael:
"If Liz Stride was cut minutes after her assault, and I'll anticipate that you mean 1 maybe 2 minutes then why was the blood still flowing from her throat, still moving down towards the gutter, at 3, 4 minutes after one o clock, a good 16, 17 minutes after her death? Isn't this "known" more consistant with Liz Stride having had her thoat cut shortly before one o clock, that is a few minutes to one o clock?"
Reasonable objection, Observer. But if we can rely on Fanny Mortimer, there still seemed to be very little traffic to and fro the Yard. To me, that suggests that she may have entered the yard and spent a significant amount of time inside it, getting cut only after that.
Right! So she goes in there at about 12.45-12.47, something, and she probably does so together with the man that killed her. After that, they spend perhaps five or ten minutes together in the yard, not having sex, as per the implications. She feels comfortable and secure enough to start munching on her cachous.
Does this sound like something Jack would have participated in? No, it does not. To me, it suggests that there was some sort of discussion or argument between two people who knew each other going on inside that yard. And since we have knowledge of B S man first approaching her verbally, thereafter trying to drag her away with him, I think that a very obvious solution to the question who was there in that yard with her is offered.
The best, Observer!
Fisherman
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Originally posted by auspirograph View PostWell that's odd because not so long ago you were arguing for the ridiculous notion that because Berner Street is south of the Whitechapel Road it was out of the Ripper's area according to the theories of geographical profiling.
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Hi Mike
Originally posted by perrymason View PostYou can disagree with me all you like, Im hardly offended by inferior arguments....but I do not like continually snide comments.
As to who killed Liz cd, Ill stick with the man seen assaulting her minutes before she dies. You can choose Gull for all I care.
I may be wrong, you may be right, but on paper Im the one who uses only the knowns. Thats my point.
Drunk man acosts woman outside empty yard, yells at witness. Within 10 minutes she is cut inside that yard. 2 known people at the site, one showing violent tendencies towards the other. The recipient of the violence is found dead 15 minutes later. Two people scuffling, one dies.....and its more likely that a third party enters, without being seen by Fanny, or Schwartz...and he is Jack, and cuts once?
Sure.
Regards.
[Coroner] Was any blood coming from the throat? - Yes; it was still flowing. I noticed that she had a piece of paper doubled up in her right hand, and some red and white flowers pinned on her breast. I did not feel the body, nor did I alter the position of the head. I am sure of that. Her face was turned towards the club wall.
[Coroner] Did you notice whether the blood was still moving on the ground? - It was running down the gutter. I stood by the side of the body for four or five minutes, until the last witness arrived.
If Liz Stride was cut minutes after her assault, and I'll anticipate that you mean 1 maybe 2 minutes then why was the blood still flowing from her throat, still moving down towards the gutter, at 3, 4 minutes after one o clock, a good 16, 17 minutes after her death? Isn't this "known" more consistant with Liz Stride having had her thoat cut shortly before one o clock, that is a few minutes to one o clock?
all the best
Observer
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I'm glad to see that people have calmed down a bit and that more rational thought and civil behavior have taken over. I know that it is easy to get carried away in these arguments which is unfortunate because it detracts from the goal of trying to discover who killed Liz. That is certainly my goal but I am not immune from falling into the trap of trying to win an argument or defending a position. Now I have to admit that the BS man certainly seems to be the most obvious candidate for being Liz's killer and there are a lot of facts to support that opinion. But as you probably know from my posts, I like to ask questions and put those facts to the test and see how those facts stand up to the harsh light of day. I guess that sometimes gets interpreted by others to mean that I am unwilling to accept facts which is certainly not my intention. So human nature being what it is we get caught up in these little pissing matches which only cause bruised feelings. For myself, I harbor no ill will to anyone here except maybe for Sam and his bad puns.
So I look forward to more spirited debates in the future and hopefully sharing a few pints together someday.
c.d.
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Certainly it is very likely but by no means the 'ridiculous and unlikely degree of "coincidence"' that Ben would have us believe.
Best regards,
Ben
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Thanks, Mike, for clarifying the issue. And I share your wiew that we owe it to ourselves and and our fellow posters to show courtesy out here. And that should apply also when we are convinced that our counterparts actually dont know what the f* they are talking about. In the end we may all be terribly wrong or gloriously right about the different aspects here, and that should make the toughest of us a little bit more humble, I feel.
One thing cannot be discussed, though, since it is a given: getting off on the wrong foot is no good thing, just like you say. Thanks for reminding us all about that!
The best,
Fisherman
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Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
To begin with, I have not specifically pointed out c.d as the sole poster who goes to great lenghts to bring Jack on the stage. That is something that I feel applies to many a poster.
I know you didn't, but the card was brought into play after some thrusts and ripostes in CD's direction and from CD's direction. My post was directed at all folks who might think playing hardass is appropriate. We've all been guilty of it. I hate it when I do it, and I think others should reflect on what they want to say before posting off the cuff. You are a good bloke. Don't worry on that account. It was directed at no one and everyone if you get my drift.
As for saying "Beg my pardon", yeah. I kind of like that. I mean, it is altogether better than, "You don't know what the f* are you talking about."
I just would like us all to have a little more courtesy. I plan on drinking beers of some of you gentlemen (and ladies) in the near future. I wouldn't want us to start off on the wrong foot.
Cheers,
Mike
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Originally posted by Ben View PostBecause it entails a ridiculous and unlikely degree of "coindicence" to swallow, Claire. On the basis of overwhelming probability, the man seen attacking her was the man who killed her. I won't pretend that I don't find it utterly astonishing that people are seriously arguing otherwise.
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Hi Mike!
I feel that I need to answer you on this one. You write:
"I just wanted to defend CD's opinion here, though he doesn't need it. As Stewart's post points out, the most probable answer is that BS killed Stride, but it isn't a given (actually, some of the BS around here is killing me, let alone Stride).
I don't imagine, as Fisherman claims, that CD is doing his utmost to insert JTR into the scene. He is looking at possibilities. People get their pet ideas about Stride and become closed to those of others, and that is harmful to constructive discussion.
I slightly believe that Stride was a Ripper victim and I almost completely believe that BS was the killer. I'm not sure about either thing, however, and I waffle a bit back and forth as people present arguments. I kind of feel that's what learning is all about; taking information and changing and growing from its acquisition. I get so tired of seeing people teaming up on others because their opinions are different. Those same people who team up will turn on each other another time with the same vehemence. By all means, refute others' opinions, but use rationale without smugness. Think, "In what fashion would I speak if we were face to face?" and my guess is there would be much less hostility. Am I guilty? You bet, but it sickens me when I drop to that level."
To begin with, I have not specifically pointed out c.d as the sole poster who goes to great lenghts to bring Jack on the stage. That is something that I feel applies to many a poster.
In accordance with this, I hope that I am not the sole target for your speaking about a hostility that sickens you, Mike. Clearly, I am involved here, though, and I do not like that at all.
I have no wish to team up with anybody against anybody with a malicious intent, and I really do not feel that I am guilty of such a charge. I have my convictions about what the evidence in the Stride case tells us, and I will defend those convictions when I feel it is necessary. If somebody should choose to step into the discussion and give his or hers support at such occasions, there is little I can do about it, just as I cannot - and would not - hinder anybody who wants to challenge my wiews. The exchange offered here is what brought me to the boards in the first place.
If you care, Mike, to have a look at post 55 of this thread, you will see that I freely admit that it would be daft not to recognize the possibility that Jack killed Liz. It is beyond reasoning that this must be a door kept open at all times. That, however, should not mean that I must open my posts by saying "Begging you pardon, but...", should it?
On the issue of Swansons words on the matter - and thanks for posting them , Mr Evans - I think it is abundantly clear that Swanson held the same approximate wiew as I do; to assume that B S man was her killer is the sensible thing to do. To conclude it would be daft.
All the best, Mike!
Fisherman
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