Hello Michael,
Back to your original post,
“… Arriving shortly after 1:10, Dr Blackwell examined the woman as she lay, and by 1:16 by his own watch, proclaimed that the woman was cut within the last 30 minutes, perhaps as recently as 20 minutes prior to this conclusion. The doctor was a Senior Medical Man, and was attempting to set a time of a throat cut within a ten minute window, but within the past 30 minutes. I believe this would be within his skill set to do. Approximately. With a 10 minute window…”
A couple of semantic points;
In his interview, on the night of the murder, Blackwell actually “proclaimed,” … Life could not have been extinct for more than 20 minutes... It wasn’t until the inquest that he became even less precise.
He was hardly a “senior medical man” having only qualified sometime in 1882. Some of his earlier case decisions were … well let’s say, not the kind I’d want from a doctor treating my family.
And a major medical fact.
The best forensic experts today would be hard pressed to pin point a time of death to a 10 minute window, in Victorian times it was categorically impossible. What test could he have applied that would be capable of being that precise?
It is not a question of linguistics but rather medicine. Blackwell was stating the murder took place at an indeterminable time within a 20/30 minute period.
The little snippets of medical evidence we have indicate “the blood was still flowing from the throat” when Spooner arrived. Blood flows for approximately five minutes after the heart stops beating. Lamb wasn’t sure if the blood was still flowing when he arrived but was sure some areas were still in a liquid state, which means its was either still flowing or had literally just stopped when he arrived. Bizarrely, Blackwell is reported as saying it was still flowing when he arrived.
Based on medical knowledge, it is quite possible, if not probable, that Elizabeth Stride was murdered around the time Diemschitz arrived. The frightening thought is that she may have been alive right up to Blackwell’s arrival.
Thanks for your time,
Back to your original post,
“… Arriving shortly after 1:10, Dr Blackwell examined the woman as she lay, and by 1:16 by his own watch, proclaimed that the woman was cut within the last 30 minutes, perhaps as recently as 20 minutes prior to this conclusion. The doctor was a Senior Medical Man, and was attempting to set a time of a throat cut within a ten minute window, but within the past 30 minutes. I believe this would be within his skill set to do. Approximately. With a 10 minute window…”
A couple of semantic points;
In his interview, on the night of the murder, Blackwell actually “proclaimed,” … Life could not have been extinct for more than 20 minutes... It wasn’t until the inquest that he became even less precise.
He was hardly a “senior medical man” having only qualified sometime in 1882. Some of his earlier case decisions were … well let’s say, not the kind I’d want from a doctor treating my family.
And a major medical fact.
The best forensic experts today would be hard pressed to pin point a time of death to a 10 minute window, in Victorian times it was categorically impossible. What test could he have applied that would be capable of being that precise?
It is not a question of linguistics but rather medicine. Blackwell was stating the murder took place at an indeterminable time within a 20/30 minute period.
The little snippets of medical evidence we have indicate “the blood was still flowing from the throat” when Spooner arrived. Blood flows for approximately five minutes after the heart stops beating. Lamb wasn’t sure if the blood was still flowing when he arrived but was sure some areas were still in a liquid state, which means its was either still flowing or had literally just stopped when he arrived. Bizarrely, Blackwell is reported as saying it was still flowing when he arrived.
Based on medical knowledge, it is quite possible, if not probable, that Elizabeth Stride was murdered around the time Diemschitz arrived. The frightening thought is that she may have been alive right up to Blackwell’s arrival.
Thanks for your time,
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