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  • Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
    Hello CD. Thanks.

    "If Jack were her killer, do you think that he gave any thought whatsoever as to the deepness of the cut? Her killer did what was needed to kill her."

    Very well. But why the stark similarity in Polly and Annie? Same depth, same twin cuts. Looks like the assailant read from a script. Now, I am to suppose that everything else is just random and by the same chap?

    Cheers.
    LC
    Again, study other serial offenders and the differing methods they employed when committing their crimes. As Tom Wescott indicates not as exciting and worthy of inclusion in a penny dreadful, but if we are to try and unravel the mind of JTR then surely the above is a more common sense course of action to take.

    And lets not forget that Catherine Eddowes throat was cut twice, as were Polly Nichols, and Annie Chapman's.

    Comment


    • Hi all,

      To Harry and Lynn,

      I wonder if the fact that the "knot was twisted" gives us the answer, if it were knotted it might be simply a matter of grabbing the scarf from behind and pulling, but if it were a bow, then then twisting might allow some traction and keep the bow tightly in place without the knot,.... something that may also have occurred as she fell down and to her left.

      Bridewell, on thread premise remarks are never "interruptions".

      My explanation on my position regarding the alleged interruption is simply this....without any physical or circumstantial evidence to suggest that one occurred,.... pragmatically, I cannot see any value in adopting it as a possible or even plausible scenario. If a tree falls in a forest with no-one around, it does indeed make a sound nonetheless. Meaning...there is evidence of the occurrence.

      The interruption theory was a creation of imagination that allowed the first and second murders to be linked,.. and to be explained. The escalation in injuries from Liz to Kate, and also from Annie to Kate, is what people use to explain the effects of that interruption on the killer.

      What I concern myself with is the physical data and what I deem to be reliable and important witness statements. But ultimately Liz Strides murder is described in her death pose I think, and that pose to me doesnt suggest either prostitution or a struggle going on when she was grabbed and cut.

      I believe this was just thug violence, and the murder was a knee jerk, likely drunken, reaction to something Liz said or did while waiting for someone in the club.....in the yard, where she is found.

      Cheers
      Michael Richards

      Comment


      • Hi again,

        This is from the Irish Times dated Monday Oct 1st.

        "Strong suspicion has fallen upon Jews and other foreigners, and the Socialists who have clubs in the East End. There is no definite ground for these surmises, and it is not fair to direct public anger against a class. But it is certainly in an especial way the duty of the Jews and Poles, and particularly of the members of the Socialist club to assist in every way in effecting a discovery. Until it has been made they cannot be perfectly free from a responsibility greater than belongs in those less connected with the spot and its lawlessness. There do appear to be peculiarities in the tale of one of the murders that point more closely to a possible revelation. The woman was not in the company of her assailant. She carried in one hand sweetmeats and in another grapes, as if she were on her way to her home. She was surprised, grasped and her throat severed by a fierce attack, and it is hardly possible that this could have been done without some stains having been made upon the murderer's clothes. The police also know well that the place has always had in it a number of the worst characters."

        I find it interesting that the initial reaction,... (this was likely printed before Israels statement to the police Sunday night was made public),... was that the woman was alone when her killer met up with her, and that the club had better make sure that any suspicions upon themselves be deflected, due to their reputation before this event. In fact the article seems to suggest that Jews in general should be vigilant in clearing suspicions from one of their own.

        The distinct lack of speculation concerning the reason for her being where she was at the time, to me, is refreshing. There is no rush to assume she was soliciting at the time, and some suggestion that she was not.

        I guess at that point in time all they had was the existing evidence,... not the phantom witness Israel Schwartz, not Leon Goldstein, not even Mathew Packer. Funny how witness statements seem to alter what can be said is actually known about this murder and the circumstances.

        Cheers
        Michael Richards

        Comment


        • Lynn,
          I would think that pulling on just one end,would give very little control,but in the main I shy aw ay from e xplaining how she came to be in the position she was,because I just do not know.

          Comment


          • Scarf

            Hi all,

            I've fallen a little behind on the thread, but to reiterate about the scarf...Stride's would have been somewhat similar to (but not as fancy as) the one's Mike posted. A small scarf, not a long Tom Baker Dr. Who scarf that I believe some imagine (as evidenced by the recurring idea that she was dragged into the yard by the scarf). Also, it might be a mistake to assume that Stride tied her scarf in the back and it was her killer who moved the knot around. That may in fact have been exactly as she tied it. What we can all be certain about is that at the moment her throat was cut, the scarf was pulled from the right side of her neck, causing the scarf to pull tight against the left side of neck, as evidenced by the knife blade following the line of the scarf and nicking it in one place.

            Yours truly,

            Tom Wescott

            Comment


            • books carry me too far

              Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
              The killer may have used her own scarf to choke her, the doctors do not appear to have allowed for that consideration.

              he must have choked her while she was on her feet. We know her throat was not cut while she was on her feet because there was no blood across her shoulder or down her left side.

              Therefore, Stride was on her side when her throat was cut, but she was on her feet when he choked her. Which is why she still held the cachous in her hand, and she could not reach for her own throat, the choke was swiftly done.
              Agree.
              A sudden attack is unlikely attending main witnesses. Most probably the killer caught from the rear, while she was taking cachous and thinking about I don't know. She wasn't in alarm but quiet enough. That before they struggled. Few seconds but the murder has already planned to kill.
              For this the murder pulled the scarf barring cries (if she was in feet or not when she cried, it doesn't care) and pushed her into the yard. He held the scarf, maybe she spinned around or stumbled in the irregular soil and so the killer, kept on holding the scarf, drove her falling. Not fast, quite slowly. The weight of Stride made the scarf knot very tight, almost chocking. Perhaps she involved him on fall and the killer directed himself (and Stride) toward to the next wall trying to stay in feet.
              With the free hand (the right) now the killer takes a knife in his pocket and carves the neck from the opposite side planting the point and pulling when Stride is on her side.
              Cachous in hand, knot very tight, no blood stains around and a death rapidly coming by choking (jugular cut).. but above all the murder was well determined to kill and wrongly Stride trusted in him.

              Comment


              • Originally posted by Nino View Post
                A sudden attack is unlikely attending main witnesses. Most probably the killer caught from the rear, while she was taking cachous and thinking about I don't know. She wasn't in alarm but quiet enough. That before they struggled. Few seconds but the murder has already planned to kill.
                For this the murder pulled the scarf barring cries (if she was in feet or not when she cried, it doesn't care) and pushed her into the yard. He held the scarf, maybe she spinned around or stumbled in the irregular soil and so the killer, kept on holding the scarf, drove her falling. Not fast, quite slowly. The weight of Stride made the scarf knot very tight, almost chocking. Perhaps she involved him on fall and the killer directed himself (and Stride) toward to the next wall trying to stay in feet.
                With the free hand (the right) now the killer takes a knife in his pocket and carves the neck from the opposite side planting the point and pulling when Stride is on her side.
                Cachous in hand, knot very tight, no blood stains around and a death rapidly coming by choking (jugular cut).. but above all the murder was well determined to kill and wrongly Stride trusted in him.
                Hi Nino,

                If you review your first sentence then the next 2, they are contradictory. Her being unaware of any impending danger almost assures us that the attack was sudden.

                The only scuffle on record is the brief altercation with BSM as described by Israel Schwartz, there is no indication that the victim was in any physical struggle based on the physical evidence, other than an assumed brief one due to the scarf being twisted and pulled.

                Your suggestion of the event is fine but it need not be starting outside the yard, it may have begun and ended on roughly the spot she was found at, a 2 second murder.

                Youre suggestion that Stride must have trusted him assumes that she knew him to some degree, not essential. If she was in the passageway waiting for someone who was in the club then she wouldnt be expecting an assault. She might even freshen her breath while waiting.

                Cheers
                Michael Richards

                Comment


                • Hi again,

                  I have a question and it would be interesting to see what kind of responses this gets.....thread related, of course,.....what evidence do we possess that, without equivocation, tells us that Louis Diemshitz arrived after 12:45?

                  His own statements are excluded here for the purpose of examining this evidence without bias. Since he has no corroberation until he and a club member meet up to Spooner, (by his account, after 1am, by Spooners, nearer to 12:45), that seems fair to me.

                  What evidence proves he arrived later than 12:45?

                  That would be almost immediately after Eagle and Lave say they left the passage, 2 ships that simply passed in the night apparently.

                  Cheers all
                  Michael Richards

                  Comment


                  • We have his own time, the method of time keeping, and corroboration from Fanny Mortimer (who heard him pass AFTER she closed her door at approx 12:56am. And zero evidence to contradict him.

                    Yours truly,

                    Tom Wescott

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Post
                      We have his own time, the method of time keeping, and corroboration from Fanny Mortimer (who heard him pass AFTER she closed her door at approx 12:56am. And zero evidence to contradict him.

                      Yours truly,

                      Tom Wescott
                      We have his word, yes Tom. His word he saw the clock show 1am. We have Fanny hearing a cart and horse, we do not know whether that was coming or going however, and she didnt see Louis or his cart specifically.

                      My point is since no-one saw him arrive, and since no-one saw any activity near the gates after 12:35am other than Israel Schwartz, who no-one sees or hears as well, its possible that he arrived during the period where no-one was watching the street near the gates, between PC Smiths sighting of Liz around 12:35am and Fanny Mortimer being at her door almost continuously from 12:50am until 1am, not until 12:56 as you suggest. She saw Goldstein then, she didnt leave the doorway.

                      Thats 15 unaccounted for minutes, unless of course you feel Israel Schwartz is a witness worth belief, unlike the people selecting witnesses for the Inquest.

                      Fanny says she was at her door almost continuously from 12:50 until 1am....so why is it she doesnt see or hear any approaching cart?

                      Cheers
                      Michael Richards

                      Comment


                      • Hi Michael,

                        None.

                        [Louis Diemschitz] I left home about half-past eleven in the morning, and returned exactly at one o'clock on Sunday morning. I noticed the time at the baker's shop at the corner of Berner-street.

                        [PC 452H William Smith] I was in Berner-street about half-past twelve or twenty-five minutes to one o'clock, and having gone round my beat, was at the Commercial-road corner of Berner-street again at one o'clock.

                        Neither man mentioned having seen the other.

                        Regards,

                        Simon
                        Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Simon Wood View Post
                          Hi Michael,

                          None.

                          [Louis Diemschitz] I left home about half-past eleven in the morning, and returned exactly at one o'clock on Sunday morning. I noticed the time at the baker's shop at the corner of Berner-street.

                          [PC 452H William Smith] I was in Berner-street about half-past twelve or twenty-five minutes to one o'clock, and having gone round my beat, was at the Commercial-road corner of Berner-street again at one o'clock.

                          Neither man mentioned having seen the other.

                          Regards,

                          Simon
                          Did either man have any particular reason to notice the other at that time?

                          Regards, Bridewell.
                          I won't always agree but I'll try not to be disagreeable.

                          Comment


                          • Hi Bridewell,

                            [PC Smith] When I came to the spot [Dutfields Yard] two constables had already arrived.

                            Kindly explain how PC Smith [on the corner of Berner Street at 1.00 am] contrived to be the third cop to arrive at the murder scene.

                            Regards,

                            Simon
                            Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

                            Comment


                            • Kindly Explain?

                              Originally posted by Simon Wood View Post
                              Hi Bridewell,

                              [PC Smith] When I came to the spot [Dutfields Yard] two constables had already arrived.

                              Kindly explain how PC Smith [on the corner of Berner Street at 1.00 am] contrived to be the third cop to arrive at the murder scene.

                              Regards,

                              Simon
                              Hi Simon,

                              Why have I got to explain anything? All I did was to ask a question.

                              Regards, Bridewell.
                              I won't always agree but I'll try not to be disagreeable.

                              Comment


                              • Hi Bridewell,

                                Because your question implies that you believe both men were where they said they were at 1.00 am.

                                Regards,

                                Simon
                                Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

                                Comment

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