Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

A Modern Day BS Man/Liz Encounter

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Around 35, I believe. Sorry to budge in.

    The best,
    Fisherman

    Comment


    • That's ok Fisherman, thanks for that

      Observer

      Comment


      • Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Post
        Le Grand was quite young at the time of Emma Smith's attack? Exactly when do you think it was that Smith was attacked?
        Apologies, it was a stupid way of stating it. It almost sounded like Emma Smith were attacked a decade before the C5! Emma Smith was attacked on April 3, 1888, and I assume that Le Grand was 34-35 (according to your Ripper Notes #25 piece).
        Best regards,
        Maria

        Comment


        • Le Grand claimed to have been 35 in 1888, but may have been as old as 40.

          Yours truly,

          Tom Wescott

          Comment


          • Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Post
            Le Grand claimed to have been 35 in 1888, but may have been as old as 40.
            Wow! Might I inquire where you got this? No chance to have found his (definite) real name and date of birth?
            Best regards,
            Maria

            Comment


            • Rocker et al

              Hello Maria. Sorry that you are still off your Rocker. (heh-heh) Actually, the materials I sent to Chris Scott in England took 3-4 weeks--and that was in the summer.

              Cheers.
              LC

              Comment


              • Originally posted by mariab
                Wow! Might I inquire where you got this? No chance to have found his (definite) real name and date of birth?
                Just newspaper and census reports. Nothing new, it's in my article. You'll remember that Le Grand was the same age, height, and hair color as Pipeman, which is part of the reason why he fits so nicely into Pipeman's shoes.

                Yours truly,

                Tom Wescott

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Post
                  Just newspaper and census reports. Nothing new, it's in my article.
                  Wait, census reports? Under which of all names? Briscony? And which article of all, 'cause you don't say anything about census reports in Ripper Notes #25 or Examiner #2.

                  Lynn Cates wrote:
                  Sorry that you are still off your Rocker. (heh-heh) Actually, the materials I sent to Chris Scott in England took 3-4 weeks--and that was in the summer.

                  Off my Rocker is indeed an adequate description. 3-4 weeks?? It usually takes about 7-9 days from the US to Berlin. Did you ship it per ship?

                  C.D. is gonna kill us for having turned his thread into a Le Grand thread.
                  Best regards,
                  Maria

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by mariab
                    And which article of all, 'cause you don't say anything about census reports in Ripper Notes #25 or Examiner #2.
                    Examiner 2, and it's all over it. I think Caz read it closer than you did!

                    Yours truly,

                    Tom Wescott

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Post
                      Examiner 2, and it's all over it. I think Caz read it closer than you did!

                      I just went through the article in question (you know I'm quick as a bunny), and it's NOT a census report, it's the Police Gazette stating his age. Still, tons of newspaper reports, also from the inquiries, and a few details I had forgotten. I'll read it again more carefully soon.
                      Best regards,
                      Maria

                      Comment


                      • Hey all,

                        It is certainly not a case of "being difficult" in regards to Mortimer, this has been a question that I have repeatedly asked of Tom since before "A Matter Of Time" even was published, almost a year ago, and no concrete answer has been forthcoming. I understand that sources are not always at hand but anybody interested can refer to the article and subsequent letters for themselves and see that no such source is listed which argues with the original version of "almost the entire time".

                        Cheers,
                        Adam.

                        Comment


                        • No worries, Adam. I'll most certainly look it up, only it'll be weeks, because I'm still establishing a list of Rip back issues to order.
                          Best regards,
                          Maria

                          Comment


                          • Hi Maria

                            I cited the OJ Simpson case to illustrate the differences, as it's a textbook example of spousal abuse going on over a long time, with tons of evidence and people and the police knowing about the ongoing abuse (i.e., a completely different situation than Stride and Kidney), and with the evidence at the murder scene being different from Berner Street (as in overkill, which is typical for domestics).

                            Ah okay I'm with you now. However I think the fact that this is certainly a different era with different views makes OJ a bad analogy to choose. Also just because O.J was overkill doesn't mean they all are. I think the only real similarity is the fact that O.J got away with murder also.

                            It was most certainly a blitz attack (the cachous stuck in her left hand prove this).

                            No again Maria, I disagree, the actual kill may have been swift but the attack was not, this was my argument, he was seen by witnesses talking and dragging her to the floor. As for the cachous we still have the old argument - was it such a quick kill that she didn't have time to react - or was it a death clutch. People are known to have clutched things in a death grip when dying.

                            The knife used was not different, the cut was a little bit shallower because she was cut lying on her side over a stone. And Dutfield's Yard was most definitely NOT well-lit.

                            Please read what I said again, I said [I]better [/I]lit than his other haunts not brightly lit.

                            As it happens, Dutfield's Yard as a location is very reminiscent of Hanbury Street (no Club, but many people coming and going at all hours, plus an escape exit gate right there by the murder scene), and I also believe that without Diemshitz's pony, like, if Diemshitz had entered alone without his carriage, Stride might have ended up disemboweled. After all, the Ripper didn't let the fact that Cadosh was walking around behind the fence all the time disturb him. (Unless the times were wrong and Cadosh got out after the murder, but I don't think so.)

                            No the Ripper took a chance there was no-one about - he didn't know Cadosh was there, the attacker knew he had been seen with Liz.

                            Tj
                            It's not about what you know....it's about what you can find out

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by tji View Post
                              No the Ripper took a chance there was no-one about - he didn't know Cadosh was there, the attacker knew he had been seen with Liz.
                              The Ripper took a lot of chances, and we don't even know if it was not someone who went through a lot of “dry runs“ (exlaining the discrepancy in his killing times). Of course the Ripper heard Cadosh (most probably), he also run the risk of being caught both on Buck's Row and Mitre Square, and he was seen with Eddowes by 3 witnesses.

                              Originally posted by tji View Post
                              the actual kill may have been swift but the attack was not, this was my argument, he was seen by witnesses talking and dragging her to the floor.
                              You are assuming that it was BS who killed Stride, but we don't even know if BS really existed (i.e., was Schwartz's testimony thruthful?). We just know for a fact that Pipeman fits the description of someone who did exist, and who kicked his way forcefully into the investigation. It's most plausible that Pipeman killed Stride.
                              IF he existed, BS might have been
                              - Pipeman's accomplice, trying to bring Stride over to Pipeman
                              - a IWEC member throwing Stride out of Dutfield's Yard
                              - a random drunk/wannabe john bothering Stride.
                              In all three scenarios Pipeman needed only to establish that Schwartz was off, make a round around the corner, re-approach Stride, and escort her into Dutfield's Yard.
                              Best regards,
                              Maria

                              Comment


                              • That is correct, but I was merely pointing out that there's no evidence that it was a domestic homicide, and she certainly wasn't killed by Michael Kidney.

                                Lol, back to where we left off years ago

                                I will be honest Tom, my main reason for posting on the thread was because the impression given that it was a known fact that Stride was a Ripper victim. While I agree everyone has their opinions, nothing has been found to prove Liz was a Ripper killing.

                                While I would love to discuss this - I have not kept up with all the new ideas and findings with the case, being busy researching Jacob Levy and Hyam Hyams. I did indeed read your article in the Examiner with regards to Kidney, which I admit you did raise some excellent points.

                                I don't believe I know enough at the moment to argue against what you say. Hopefully I can look into it more soon. (Bet you can't wait )

                                Teej
                                It's not about what you know....it's about what you can find out

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X