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Did jack kill liz stride?

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  • Hunter
    replied
    Originally posted by Observer View Post

    Baxter wasn't perfect, as Sam pointed out. Cake and eat it I know. However, the reason he gave as to why he considered Eddowes murder the work of an imitator was based solely on medical evidence.
    Unfortunately, it wasn't. It was because he had proposed a theory that had been disproved if Eddowes had been killed by the same hand as Chapman. He wasn't going to admit that he may have been wrong; he couldn't at that point, considering the controversy he had already ignited. And because of this, confusion about the medical evidence and what the medicos involved interpreted has existed to this day.

    Leave a comment:


  • Observer
    replied
    A man not a robot

    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
    Though the discussion is moving on, I´d like to add just one more commentary about how many people were on the streets at the relevant hours. That comment comes from Lechmere himself, who said that he had not met a single person after leaving his home at Doveton Street until he joined forces with Robert Paul in Buck´s Row.
    One can of course ask oneself how long that walk took him. It´s either 20-25 minutes (if he left home at 3.20), 10-15 minutes (if he left home at 3.30) or six, seven minutes (if he walked the stretch at a normal pace, meaning that he would have left home at about 3.35-3.40).

    No matter which option applies, we can see that by his own accord, he would have walked the East End streets for at least six or seven minutes completely alone.
    I´d say that today, there is no way that you can walk through any parts of central London for six or seven minutes without meeting anybody at all, regardless of the district and the time of night.
    But this was nevertheless something that would have been rather ordinary back then, this in spite of the much more crammed population conditions.

    On the whole, of course, I think Lechmere lied about things. But not necessarily about this.

    Now, back to Stride! And of course, since she died so much earlier, the streets would have much more people on them at that time. Coming up to around three o clock, though, it was another matter altogether.

    The best,
    Fisherman
    Hi Fisherman,

    I'd concede that there is a possibility that the back streets were pretty desolate at 3:30 a.m. however, from Nichols inquest.


    "The Coroner: Whitechapel-road is busy in the early morning, I believe. Could anybody have escaped that way?
    Witness: Oh yes, sir. I saw a number of women in the main road going home. At that time any one could have got away."

    I have found similar quotes regarding Commercial Street, Commercial Road, and other major Streets. The point is those people had to enter those streets from the lesser side streets. Not all of them inhabited the major streets.

    However

    Regardless of the time of day. Was there a threat that the murderer could be interrupted mid murder? Absolutely. Was the murderer aware that he could be interrupted mid murder. Absolutely. More so (due to the earlier hour) during the Stride murder. It need not necessarily have been Deimshutz that prompted Stride's killer to abort the mutilation. Then again, we must ask ourselves, was mutilation on the mind of the murderer as he slit Liz Stride's throat?

    Regards

    Observer
    Last edited by Observer; 11-13-2013, 06:55 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • lynn cates
    replied
    conceptual framework

    Hello Nick. Thanks.

    'Maybe he was learning 'on the job' what needed to be done to overpower and kill these poor women. . ."

    Could be. But I'm not sure how one arrives at the concept of double cuts within the context of subduing one?

    Cheers.
    LC

    Leave a comment:


  • Observer
    replied
    Originally posted by Hunter View Post
    Baxter could have said the same about the killer of Catherine Eddowes, but he didn't. He was willing to accept that Stride's killer may have been the same as that of Nichols and Chapman, despite the lack of abdominal mutilations, but he considered a murder that did have mutilations and a uterus removed as the work of an imitator.

    If Jack the Ripper gave birth to the twentieth century, as implied in From Hell, Wynne Baxter gave birth to Ripperology.
    Hi Hunter

    Baxter wasn't perfect, as Sam pointed out. Cake and eat it I know. However, the reason he gave as to why he considered Eddowes murder the work of an imitator was based solely on medical evidence.

    "There had been no skilful mutilation as in the cases of Nichols and Chapman, and no unskilful injuries as in the case in Mitre-square - possibly the work of an imitator; "

    Note the word possibly. Of course the doctors were divided as to which of the murders belonged to the same hand. Bond was of the opinion that all five Nichols through to Kelly was the work of one man.

    If Baxter had been asked, regarding Eddowes murder, whether

    " there had been the same skill exhibited in the way in which the victim had been entrapped, and the injuries inflicted, so as to cause instant death and prevent blood from soiling the operator, and the same daring defiance of immediate detection,"

    I'm sure he would have answered in the positive.

    Regards

    Observer

    Leave a comment:


  • Nick Spring
    replied
    Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
    Hello Nick. Thanks.

    "I don't necessarily see that a single cut to the neck can rule out the Ripper as the murderer."

    No, no "ruling out." But surely the double neck cuts can almost certainly "rule in" a single hand with Polly and Annie? So now the question becomes, Why? Why near identical double cuts then a single cut for the next two? Why cut twice in the first two cases?

    Cheers.
    LC
    Hello Lynn, thanks.

    Yes a very good point. You could also include the facial mutilations on Eddowes and Kelly and none before.

    Maybe he was learning 'on the job' what needed to be done to overpower and kill these poor women, from Tabram onwards. After that the mutilations were perhaps random and done spontaneously as he acted out his fantasies.

    I still see a pattern though but I see your point.

    cheers

    Nick

    Leave a comment:


  • The Good Michael
    replied
    Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Post
    They frowned upon solicitation only in the sense that they preached 'free love'. As for frowning upon servants, there's no indication of that. Again, they had servants in the club.
    There is indication in the idea of communism. You show me several of these young club members who had maids and butlers and I'll sing a different tune. Having someone serving drinks or cleaning periodically in a business is far different than having personal servants.

    Mike

    Leave a comment:


  • lynn cates
    replied
    Double or nothing.

    Hello Nick. Thanks.

    "I don't necessarily see that a single cut to the neck can rule out the Ripper as the murderer."

    No, no "ruling out." But surely the double neck cuts can almost certainly "rule in" a single hand with Polly and Annie? So now the question becomes, Why? Why near identical double cuts then a single cut for the next two? Why cut twice in the first two cases?

    Cheers.
    LC

    Leave a comment:


  • lynn cates
    replied
    Be not a frayed.

    Hello Tom.

    "The only other possible scenario is that her throat was cut AS she was being lowered to the ground, but that ceases to be a viable option when you consider the scarf evidence."

    How so? By pulling the scarf, the knot tightened and moved to the left (as in my reenactment). And IF he cut whilst pulling on the scarf, the knife frayed the edge of the scarf. (Hope to make this clear in my upcoming codicil.)

    Cheers.
    LC

    Leave a comment:


  • lynn cates
    replied
    evidence

    Hello Damaso. Thanks.

    "Oh come now. Kate was subdued and lowered to the ground somehow, probably in silence. If anything, it was a more elegant killing than Nichols or Chapman."

    Yes, but "somehow" tells us little. And that "elegance" does not apply to the deep double cuts of the first two.

    "I know you disagree, but many here also believe that Stride was first subdued and lowered to the ground, then cut."

    Very well. One may indeed believe what one likes--I am referring ONLY to the evidence.

    Cheers.
    LC

    Leave a comment:


  • Nick Spring
    replied
    single cut

    I don't necessarily see that a single cut to the neck can rule out the Ripper as the murderer.

    Yes there are a number of other strange circumstances to this murder however, nothing to disprove the Ripper as the murderer on throat cutting alone.

    Best

    Nick

    Leave a comment:


  • lynn cates
    replied
    Liz

    Hello Cris.

    "He was willing to accept that Stride's killer may have been the same as that of Nichols and Chapman, despite the lack of abdominal mutilations, but he considered a murder that did have mutilations and a uterus removed as the work of an imitator."

    Yes indeed. And if I knew certainly that exactly one of the Double Event victims were done by Polly and Annie's slayer, it would be Liz--no question.

    Cheers.
    LC

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by Observer View Post
    That's true. I believe the urge to kill overrode any fear of being caught though.

    Regards

    Observer
    Though the discussion is moving on, I´d like to add just one more commentary about how many people were on the streets at the relevant hours. That comment comes from Lechmere himself, who said that he had not met a single person after leaving his home at Doveton Street until he joined forces with Robert Paul in Buck´s Row.
    One can of course ask oneself how long that walk took him. It´s either 20-25 minutes (if he left home at 3.20), 10-15 minutes (if he left home at 3.30) or six, seven minutes (if he walked the stretch at a normal pace, meaning that he would have left home at about 3.35-3.40).

    No matter which option applies, we can see that by his own accord, he would have walked the East End streets for at least six or seven minutes completely alone.
    I´d say that today, there is no way that you can walk through any parts of central London for six or seven minutes without meeting anybody at all, regardless of the district and the time of night.
    But this was nevertheless something that would have been rather ordinary back then, this in spite of the much more crammed population conditions.

    On the whole, of course, I think Lechmere lied about things. But not necessarily about this.

    Now, back to Stride! And of course, since she died so much earlier, the streets would have much more people on them at that time. Coming up to around three o clock, though, it was another matter altogether.

    The best,
    Fisherman
    Last edited by Fisherman; 11-13-2013, 12:55 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    Originally posted by Damaso Marte View Post
    Oh come now. Kate was subdued and lowered to the ground somehow, probably in silence. If anything, it was a more elegant killing than Nichols or Chapman.

    I know you disagree, but many here also believe that Stride was first subdued and lowered to the ground, then cut.
    Hi Damaso. It's not so much a belief that her throat was cut while she was on the ground as it is a conclusion arrived at from the blood evidence. The only other possible scenario is that her throat was cut AS she was being lowered to the ground, but that ceases to be a viable option when you consider the scarf evidence. So there really is no alternative to the conclusion that she was in position on the ground when her throat was cut.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

    Leave a comment:


  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    Originally posted by Hunter View Post
    Its a bit ironic that most on both sides of the fence seem to ascribe the same criteria for the person called Jack the Ripper. One side cites the lack of 'ripping' as an indicator of another assassin, while the other side adheres to the notion that he must have been interrupted before he could commence with upholding what would become his namesake. Maybe he didn't read that part in the Ripper playbook.

    I wonder what the perception of all of these murders and who committed them would be if the name Jack the Ripper had not been invented - provided that the evidence and knowledge of such as it exist is still the same.
    Speaking as the most vocal of 'the other side', I am not so sloppy as to write off the lack of mutilation as the killer having been interrupted. That of course must remain a possibility, but there certainly are others. Had the name not been invented, he'd probably still be called Leather Apron. He wouldn't be the sensation he is, but he'd be more well known than the Wallace murder, the Yorkshire Ripper, et al. I'm speaking on a global scale, not just in England.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

    Leave a comment:


  • Damaso Marte
    replied
    Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
    Hello Tom. Thanks.

    And by the time he got to Liz and Kate, he was blase about it.

    Cheers.
    LC
    Oh come now. Kate was subdued and lowered to the ground somehow, probably in silence. If anything, it was a more elegant killing than Nichols or Chapman.

    I know you disagree, but many here also believe that Stride was first subdued and lowered to the ground, then cut.

    Leave a comment:

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