The knife
As Tom has mentioned in regards to the knife, they only had one cut to the throat to go by. The physicians seemed to argue that a long bladed knife would be difficult to position under Elizabeth's jaw, given her perceived position itself. ( lying on her left side and a stone under her neck). The possibility of her being on her back when her throat was cut, then in agony rolling over on her side and drawing her knees wasn't considered- except perhaps where the mud was located on her clothing. But lifting her head by the scarf would have eliminated that obstacle, in my mind.
Because her death was likely not as swift as Nichols or Chapman, she may have had a little time to physically react to her mortal wound, placing her in a posture that she may not have been in when the fatal blow was struck. There is the added posibility, as Tom also pointed out on another thread, that the scene was compromised by Spooner, Johnston and/or Lamb before Blackwell arrived.
Whoever did it still knew how to dispatch someone with a sweep of the knife, instead of stabbing and dragging the point across the throat ( which was usually what happened in a domestic-i.e- Sarah Brown.
It should also be remembered that much of the information that the doctors used in evaluating the weapon in the other murders were from the nature and depth of the abdominal mutilations themselves; which obviously weren't there in this case so they had little to go on.
As Tom has mentioned in regards to the knife, they only had one cut to the throat to go by. The physicians seemed to argue that a long bladed knife would be difficult to position under Elizabeth's jaw, given her perceived position itself. ( lying on her left side and a stone under her neck). The possibility of her being on her back when her throat was cut, then in agony rolling over on her side and drawing her knees wasn't considered- except perhaps where the mud was located on her clothing. But lifting her head by the scarf would have eliminated that obstacle, in my mind.
Because her death was likely not as swift as Nichols or Chapman, she may have had a little time to physically react to her mortal wound, placing her in a posture that she may not have been in when the fatal blow was struck. There is the added posibility, as Tom also pointed out on another thread, that the scene was compromised by Spooner, Johnston and/or Lamb before Blackwell arrived.
Whoever did it still knew how to dispatch someone with a sweep of the knife, instead of stabbing and dragging the point across the throat ( which was usually what happened in a domestic-i.e- Sarah Brown.
It should also be remembered that much of the information that the doctors used in evaluating the weapon in the other murders were from the nature and depth of the abdominal mutilations themselves; which obviously weren't there in this case so they had little to go on.
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