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  • #76
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post

    Has somebody disproven that statement? Did these get solved and proven to be all by one man since I just had a cig outside?

    Well that only took 130 plus years.....finally linked all five to one guy huh? Whodathunkit. Was it Ripper van Winkle?
    I am not aware that it has been proven that they were they were the work of separate killers. I was just now doing my laundry. Maybe I missed it.

    c.d.

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    • #77
      Just for the record, Michael if you weren't so damn condescending and snarky all the time you wouldn't get the responses that you get. And just for the record, anything that I have ever directed your way I would have no problem saying to your face. If you think you have eggs in your arsenal, let them fly.

      c.d.

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      • #78
        Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post

        Stop wandering across threads looking at every post as something that supports your thesis or doesnt. Your thesis, that these murders of women..., some of which regularly worked as prostitutes....and thats just 2 of the five by the known facts....all were done by one man is almost certainly wrong. No-one has ever made a case for those connections based on the actual evidence as it exists, and the physical and circumstantial details are not all similar.

        Like Strides single cut while dressed in "her good evening wear", as her lodgemate said,... with a new flower and new cashous and less the 6d she had when she went out that night. No evidence she was soliciting, no evidence any further injuries were either desired by her killer, begun and halted, or even intended.

        That doesnt describe the third victim of a killer who killed drunk or sickly working prostitutes so he could then mutilate their abdomens. That describes Liz Strides circumstances...which have nothing to do with any Jack. Despite your beliefs.
        I find it quite apt you have Stockholm syndrome with your theory Michael.

        The incidence of murder was not as high as some would like to believe during 1888. Whitechapel actually skewed the national figures for murder across the whole of Wales & England.

        The cut on Stride was not meaningless. This was no affair of anger or passion. It was clinical. The two cuts reference is meaningless. The second cut on Nichols was the one that killed her. The first cut was a practice run. On Chapman he was still not perfect in rendering his victim totally helpless as he incapacitated them. She made a “no” noise. Yes he got her uterus but what the heck did he want with two thirds of a bladder?

        The exact some method of rendering his victim incapacitated, and then proceeding to clinically slit the left carotid artery was his hallmark for killing his victims. On Liz he even trailed the knife superficially across the neck and downwards for typical effect. An hour later and the same method for murder was performed on Eddowes.

        He may not have been able to execute his favourite pastime on Stride, but his method to murder did not change from Nichol to Chapman to Stride to Eddowes to Kelly. His confidence escalated. By the time he got to Kelly he had reached his “peak”.

        Your theory has you hostage and you just won’t hear anything to the contrary. The evidence as it stands has not made sense for 130 years.
        Author of 'Jack the Ripper: Threads' out now on Amazon > UK | USA | CA | AUS
        JayHartley.com

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        • #79
          Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post

          There are 20-30 men at the location she is killed at at the time she is killed. How many men did it take to kill Liz? The only place you need to look for her killer is among those men who were already there, but unseen from the street.
          No one saw Annie Chapman's killer enter the backyard of 29 Hanbury Street. Does that mean Chapman's killer must have lived at 29 Hanbury Street?

          And you continue to ignore that "On the left side of the yard is a house, which is divided into three tenements, and occupied, I believe, by that number of families. At the end is a store or workshop belonging to Messrs. Hindley and Co., sack manufacturers."

          The police didn't.

          "A thorough search was made by the police of the yard and the houses in it, but no trace could be found of any person who might have committed the murder. As soon as the search was over the whole of the persons who had come into the yard and the members of the club were interrogated, their names and addresses taken, their pockets searched by the police, and their clothes and hands examined by the doctors. The people were twenty-eight in number. Each was dealt with separately, and they properly accounted for themselves. The houses were inspected a second time and the occupants examined and their rooms searched. A loft close by was searched, but no trace could be found of the murderer."

          "The full picture always needs to be given. When this does not happen, we are left to make decisions on insufficient information." - Christer Holmgren

          "Unfortunately, when one becomes obsessed by a theory, truth and logic rarely matter." - Steven Blomer

          Comment


          • #80
            Originally posted by Wickerman View Post

            I can see various ways of describing the same hat like as either wideawake or billycock, but when comparing a cap with a peak to a hat with an all-round brim, it seems such a stretch to me that one could be mistaken for the other.
            In other words, you're saying the comparison in #52 is not close enough to be considered the same man, because of a different type of hat? Seriously? James Brown couldn't recall if the man he saw was wearing a hat or cap at all, let alone what type it was. Do we therefore dismiss Brown as an unreliable witness?
            I think you're grossly overestimating the ability of witnesses to accurately record and recall details. The vagaries of eyewitness accounts are well documented.

            One detail I came across not too long ago was that the wideawake was known in some circles as "a Yankee hat", precisely the words used by A.C.B. in his summary of Packer's statement.
            All this time I thought he meant a western-style like cowboy hat, but it's just the American version of the Bowler - a Wideawake.
            This makes Packer's suspect look more like PC Smith's suspect - hard felt hat, as he described in his first statement (not the deerstalker).
            The vagaries of eyewitness accounts! Yet are you so sure these do not refer to the same thing...?

            Circulated description: hard felt hat
            Smith at inquest: He wore a dark felt deerstalker's hat.

            It's possible we have two other couples in Berner St.
            The pair seem by Mortimer at the corner by the Board School may be different from the ones who spoke to the press.

            Whereas Mortimer places them at the corner...
            "A young man and his sweetheart were standing at the corner of the street, about twenty yards away, before and after the time the woman must have been murdered, but they told me they did not hear a sound."

            The girl, when interviewed says:
            From twelve o'clock till half-past a young girl who lives in the street walked up and down, and within twenty yards of where the body was found, with her sweetheart.

            "We heard nothing whatever," she told a reporter this morning. "I passed the gate of the yard a few minutes before twelve o'clock alone. The doors were open, and, so far as I could tell, there was nothing inside then." "I met my young man (she proceeded) at the top of the street, and then we went for a short walk along the Commercial-road and back again, and down Berner-street. No one passed us then, but just before we said "Good night" a man came along the Commercial-road; and went in the direction of Aldgate."


            I'm not convinced myself that they are two different couples, but Tom Wescott was of the opinion that they were, at the time we talked about it.
            Something to consider I guess.
            Clearly there were two couples - an earlier one and a later one. The earlier couple departed company around 12:30. I refer to this couple in #57 as the early sweetheart couple, in the Echo. The later couple spoke to Fanny. I think it possible James Brown saw both this couple, and Stride with companion, and conflated the two sightings.

            I take it you noticed the potentially huge implications, if I'm right about the timing I argued for in #57?
            Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing

            Comment


            • #81
              Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
              And dont play demure either...youve many times over many years spouted your arguments that they all were soliciting, that they were streetwalkers and thats what they do. And in the process youve argued when Ive accused you of speculation on that issue.
              The above quote was your response to my question: Where have I ever argued that Stride was, or was not soliciting that night?

              If you can find any post of mine from the last two decades, where I have insisted that 'they all' [whatever you mean by that] were actively soliciting when they met their killer, because 'they were streetwalkers' and that's what they did, I'll be very surprised. I have always kept an open mind about Stride, because the evidence does not allow for a hard and fast conclusion either way. But a man was heard to tell her: "You'd say anything but your prayers", and she was heard to tell a man: "Not tonight, maybe another night", which suggests she was okay with a bit of banter and flirting, but might have had no intention of going further with anyone she met that night. She had her sixpence, jolly jolly sixpence, so if she could afford to blow it all on a flower and a packet of cachous, I don't suppose she was desperate to service the first grubby chap who offered to make it worth her while.

              In fact, none of the victims - including Nichols and Chapman - need have solicited the man who killed them. He may have made the approaches himself, selecting women he assumed were not on their way to church, or appeared drunk, sick or desperate enough to put up little resistance. Even if a victim had no intention of going anywhere with her killer, could she have afforded to turn him down if he was offering considerably more than the going rate?

              There is no evidence that tiny little Eddowes went into that dark corner of Mitre Square with her killer, thinking she'd be able to blackmail him there and come out of it alive and well and in the money. And I can't immediately think of a plausible reason why she'd have accompanied a stranger there, if she was not expecting him to want something from her. What did she think he wanted? Travel scrabble and a picnic?

              Mary Kelly may have been entertaining Blotchy in her hovel purely for the pleasure of his company. But then again, the man was flesh and blood, so what did she imagine he might have been expecting, in return for sharing his ale with her and treating her to a fish supper? "I appreciate a shag is out of the question love, so yes, another hour of warbling on about violets will do nicely."

              Why would he think she was soliciting if she didnt approach anyone for business? Thats what they did...they called out to passing men. Maybe her real killer did think that and was pissed of when she said no.
              Well, you clearly know more about the procedure than I do. But you will have to explain to me why the man who killed Nichols and Chapman wouldn't think Stride was soliciting, unless she approached or called out to him, but anyone else may have thought she was - presumably from her demeanor - and cut her throat because she said no, when he had fully expected a yes, based on previous experiences with working prostitutes. If this isn't your bias showing, I don't know what else to make of this astounding piece of logic.

              Stop wandering across threads looking at every post as something that supports your thesis or doesnt. Your thesis, that these murders of women..., some of which regularly worked as prostitutes....and thats just 2 of the five by the known facts....all were done by one man is almost certainly wrong. No-one has ever made a case for those connections based on the actual evidence as it exists, and the physical and circumstantial details are not all similar.

              Like Strides single cut while dressed in "her good evening wear", as her lodgemate said,... with a new flower and new cashous and less the 6d she had when she went out that night. No evidence she was soliciting, no evidence any further injuries were either desired by her killer, begun and halted, or even intended.

              That doesnt describe the third victim of a killer who killed drunk or sickly working prostitutes so he could then mutilate their abdomens. That describes Liz Strides circumstances...which have nothing to do with any Jack. Despite your beliefs.
              The cachous may have been 'new', but you have no evidence for this, nor for how much the flower and cachous might have cost. You are guessing that it was Stride who blew a whole sixpence on both items, to make herself more attractive to the man she was hoping would replace Michael Kidney. You may be right, but you can't prove any of this, so it gets us nowhere. Who would know that she didn't already have the cachous in a pocket when she set out that evening? You are guessing she didn't because nobody reported seeing them earlier. But why would they? Nobody reported selling her the flower or cachous either, yet you are certain she must have bought both that evening with her sixpence.

              No evidence Stride was soliciting, but you have just admitted that her killer - if he was a disgruntled punter - may have thought she was! No evidence that her killer would have been safe to do more in that location than what he did, regardless of who he was or what he thought she was doing there. A punter who felt cheated might reasonably have wanted to beat her up, rob her or rape her, in addition to cutting her throat, but he'd have run the same risk of discovery as the killer who wanted to mutilate as well as murder a woman that night. Whoever decided to kill Stride wasn't going to fanny around at the scene, taking whatever issues he had out on her.
              Last edited by caz; 05-13-2021, 04:22 PM.
              "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


              Comment


              • #82
                Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
                You guys....herlock, caz, cd, all know that if and when any evidence comes out that validates my contentions I will loudly out you all for the resistance youve given to something that in practical terms makes the most sense anyway.

                Ive endured a lot of crap from you folks over the years, and comments you wouldnt dare make to my face, so I am looking forward to seeing the facial egging you can expect.
                You really don't know me too well, if you think I wouldn't dare to say to your face everything I have ever put in a post.

                I'm looking forward to you trying to 'loudly' out us all, if the cigs haven't damaged your vocal cords by the time 'any evidence' comes out that validates your contentions. Good of you to finally admit in the meantime that your contentions to date have all been based on fresh air. That certainly validates one of my own contentions.
                "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


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