Originally posted by Michael W Richards
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there is ample evidence and expert testimony that the man that killed Polly and Annie had the knife skills and knowledge of a medical student
As you can clearly tell by the summation of the Coroner in the Nichols Inquest," [I]The instruments used in the two earlier cases are dissimilar. In the first it was a blunt instrument, such as a walking-stick...(Emma); in the second, some of the wounds were thought to have been made by a dagger....(Martha); but in the two recent cases the instruments suggested by the medical witnesses are not so different. Dr. Llewellyn says the injuries on Nicholls could have been produced by a strong bladed instrument, moderately sharp. Dr. Phillips is of opinion that those on Chapman were by a very sharp knife, probably with a thin, narrow blade, at least six to eight inches in length, probably longer. The similarity of the injuries in the two cases is considerable. There are bruises about the face in both cases; the head is nearly severed from the body in both cases; there are other dreadful injuries in both cases; and those injuries, again, have in each case been performed with anatomical knowledge."
'The murderer must have had some rough anatomical knowledge, for he seemed to have attacked all the vital parts.' - Dr Llewellyn, from inquest
We always get the phrase "anatomical knowledge" bandied about, but never the "some rough" at the start of it, and how does the killer gets the qualification "anatomical knowledge" - Well it's because he had sense enough to attack vital parts, the throat and abdomen, whilst trying to kill someone.
Oh yeah...and Llewellyn thought that the mutilations were done before the throat cuts....so save the attitude.
Cheers
Cheers
'At nine o'clock the body of deceased was removed from the mortuary to an improvised operating room on the premises, and Dr. Ralph Llewellyn made a post-mortem examination. The object of the examination was to determine if possible, the order in which the various cuts were made. It is evident from the cuts in the throat that the head was bent back by the murderer before the knife was used. Whether the other mutilation took place before or after death remains to be settled, as also the position in which the woman lay when the deed done. There are several questions of this kind which may throw light on the case, notably the small quantity of blood at the place where she was found and the fact that there must have been much of it somewhere else.'
It may be that Llewellyn was unable to make a judgement on this, Nichols death cert mentions both throat and abdominal wounds as the cause of syncope, but he didn't have any clues like the intestines and uterus removed, just a load of violent stabs and rips both in the throat and in the abdomen. Again it's only Baxter's summing up that gives us the abdomen first statement, it's not in any record of what Llewellyn said at the inquest on Sept 1.
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