Hi Cel,
I sure am glad to see Archaic back here and I know you are as well.
Like you, I never voted either way on this thread though I participated in the discussion throughout this marathon... and my reason was because there is no certainty about who killed Liz.
The evidence is this-
She was a known prostitute.
Her attacker took her by surprise; from behind.
Her throat was cut ( not stabbed) from left to right.
Another woman, of the same class, was killed within an hour, in the same area; which is not just a coincidence, but one hell of a coincidence.
Investigations of club members and acquaintances turned up no suspects.
And she was not mutilated.
The last statement is why ( as for many people) I am not certain that the unknown person called Jack the Ripper was her killer... but given the evidence as a whole, and considering the pattern it suggest, I would deem him a likely candidate.
As far as the perceived danger that Dutfields Yard may have posed; we would first be assuming that JTR was a rational man. I personally don't think he was. He was an opportunist, who sought the easiest prey he could find. He struck when the moment felt right but didn't think beyond that. The results of the other murders- probably interrupted wth Nichols... desperate to complete his quest he kills again soon ( in little more than a week) in a precarious place on Hanbury St when people were getting up to go to the privy. Stride is killed and something goes wrong again. Eddowes is killed within an hour in a public square. The apron was probably taken because he had to leave in haste and had faecal matter on his hands. Six weeks pass and Bingo, he finds, by hook or crook, someone with her own room... still a dangerous place, but he finally has more time.
I'm being a bit redundant here, but this guy was lucky. If the killing spree had continued with any regularity, he would likely have been caught.
I realize there are people with more intricate and complicated theories about this short series of murders, but it could also be as simple as that.
I sure am glad to see Archaic back here and I know you are as well.
Like you, I never voted either way on this thread though I participated in the discussion throughout this marathon... and my reason was because there is no certainty about who killed Liz.
The evidence is this-
She was a known prostitute.
Her attacker took her by surprise; from behind.
Her throat was cut ( not stabbed) from left to right.
Another woman, of the same class, was killed within an hour, in the same area; which is not just a coincidence, but one hell of a coincidence.
Investigations of club members and acquaintances turned up no suspects.
And she was not mutilated.
The last statement is why ( as for many people) I am not certain that the unknown person called Jack the Ripper was her killer... but given the evidence as a whole, and considering the pattern it suggest, I would deem him a likely candidate.
As far as the perceived danger that Dutfields Yard may have posed; we would first be assuming that JTR was a rational man. I personally don't think he was. He was an opportunist, who sought the easiest prey he could find. He struck when the moment felt right but didn't think beyond that. The results of the other murders- probably interrupted wth Nichols... desperate to complete his quest he kills again soon ( in little more than a week) in a precarious place on Hanbury St when people were getting up to go to the privy. Stride is killed and something goes wrong again. Eddowes is killed within an hour in a public square. The apron was probably taken because he had to leave in haste and had faecal matter on his hands. Six weeks pass and Bingo, he finds, by hook or crook, someone with her own room... still a dangerous place, but he finally has more time.
I'm being a bit redundant here, but this guy was lucky. If the killing spree had continued with any regularity, he would likely have been caught.
I realize there are people with more intricate and complicated theories about this short series of murders, but it could also be as simple as that.
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