Perhaps I someone would clear something up for me?
I was curious as to Stride's injuries:
If what Schwartz states is in fact correct, viz., she was slammed to the ground ("threw her down on the footway"), how can it be that there is no mention of bruising? In fact it seems that there is almost an implicit notion that there were few marks and that they were detailed. . . ? It seems to me that a man slamming or throwing a woman to the ground would leave marks.
The knife:
I have run across a few places that mention a rounded or even a dull knife. What is the genesis of this? I cannot get my mind around it based on the exegesis of Blackwell and Phillips.
I really question Schwartz. . . I have also come to the tenet that Stride is indeed a victim of a single killer who was shortly afterward carved up K. Eddowes. Odd, but I feel no compulsion to back up those opinions discursively
The more I read about this case the more doxastic I become. Such a paucity of facts. . .
I was curious as to Stride's injuries:
If what Schwartz states is in fact correct, viz., she was slammed to the ground ("threw her down on the footway"), how can it be that there is no mention of bruising? In fact it seems that there is almost an implicit notion that there were few marks and that they were detailed. . . ? It seems to me that a man slamming or throwing a woman to the ground would leave marks.
The knife:
I have run across a few places that mention a rounded or even a dull knife. What is the genesis of this? I cannot get my mind around it based on the exegesis of Blackwell and Phillips.
I really question Schwartz. . . I have also come to the tenet that Stride is indeed a victim of a single killer who was shortly afterward carved up K. Eddowes. Odd, but I feel no compulsion to back up those opinions discursively
The more I read about this case the more doxastic I become. Such a paucity of facts. . .
Comment