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A Possible Reason Why Jack Didn't Mutilate Liz

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  • Originally posted by c.d. View Post
    Hi Michael,

    Whoever killed Liz, be it Jack or someone else, was willing to accept the risks that that particular venue imposed.

    c.d.
    I agree....and since what happened to her took perhaps 2 seconds, as stated by Blackwell, that venue seems to have been fine for him.

    If the killer wanted to cut the body open afterward....something which is speculated,....then he made a poor choice.

    If Jack made a poor choice in Bucks Row then a good choice in Hanbury in terms of completing his objectives, why would he then make a bad call again at Berner? Mitre Square was essentially deserted, 40 Berner was occupied by 29 or 30 men who were drinking and who would have to go into the yard to use the privvy....and the kitchen door was open.

    Cheers cd

    Comment


    • Hi Michael,

      That argument assumes that Jack was functioning rationally at the time and could coldly assess the pros and cons of a possible murder site. We are dealing with a serial killer here not somebody standing out side of a bank casing the joint. He could have been overcome with the desire to kill come hell or high water. While the other sites you mention didn't carry nearly as much risk none of them were entirely risk free.

      c.d.

      Comment


      • C.d asks:

        "I think that Caz makes an excellent point. Why does Jack have to be some sort of champion killer rather than an ordinary human being? Tiger Woods makes bad shots. Pro football players drop passes and fumble the ball. Champion boxers sometimes look terrible against mediocre opponents. It is just being human. Why should Jack be an exception to the rule?"

        He neednīt be, of course. Bu the fact of the matter is that what was achieved in Dutfieldīs Yard did not in any way exceed the tedious everyday knife killing. It has often been argued that there were no other throatcuttings close in time and in public spaces, but I think that is asking a bit much. Itīs quite sufficient to realize that a cut throat is something quite different from what Jack left behind.
        Try a theoretical parallel: If we were to be confronted today with a killer who shot his victims with a gun, and after that dug out the brains of his victims trough the eye socket with a teaspoon; would such a thing call upon us to realize that every victim found shot to death would be a victim of the teaspoon killer who had been interrupted? Especially if we were not even dealing with the same caliber of gun?
        I think not.

        Feeling compelled to dig your victims brains out with a teaspoon points you out as being rather a deviating character. Shooting somebody sorts you in with a very large bunch of everyday, possible perpetrators.

        There was never any real sign of Jack in Dutfields Yard. The fact that we have to think up more or less colourful scenarios to put Jack on the spot speaks volumes.

        The best,
        Fisherman

        Comment


        • Fisherman, while I appreciate you dreaming up the teaspoon bit, it doesn't fit. Jack the Ripper was a murderer first and foremost, and he may or may not mutilate. With a knife. The victims were, until Kelly, middle-aged unfortunates, killed at night in dark places. Like a "yard" which in England is an enclosed space between buildings.
          The weapon, victimology, crime scene location, time of death, place of death, are all very similar.

          Respectfully, sir, you are trying to split frog hairs.

          Roy
          Sink the Bismark

          Comment


          • Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
            If we were to be confronted today with a killer who shot his victims with a gun, and after that dug out the brains of his victims through the eye socket with a teaspoon...
            Ah, one of my favourite films... The Ladle-Killers
            Kind regards, Sam Flynn

            "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

            Comment


            • Roy Corduroy writes:

              "The weapon, victimology, crime scene location, time of death, place of death, are all very similar"

              The weapon was probably a knife, Roy - whether it was similar or not to the one that was used on the other canonicals, we do not know.

              The victimology had the same kind of likeness that it would have had, had the victim been any other of the countless "unfortunates" that lived in the crammed East end.

              The crime scen location was fixed in one of the most crime-ridden parts of London, and it was the southernmost of the suggested canonical venues. Apparently, it went down in an area that did not have the same rumour of being frequented by prostitutes as the other slayings.

              The time of death lies significantly before that of the other four "canonicals".

              The place of death was a yard where people were awake and singing their hearts out, a yard where anybody could be expected to show up for a trip to the privvy and wherepeople were running in and out - as opposed to the quiet venues where people could reasonably be expected to be sleeping that are connected with the other four places.

              "Respectfully, sir, you are trying to split frog hairs."

              With equal respect, sir, I stand by the fact that there is very much pointing away from Jack in this killing, whereas none of the traits that we ascribe to Jack specifically - the silent venue deep into the night, the very deeply cut neck and the mutilations - are at hand.
              I think Iīve got a pretty good case for dismissing Jack on this one, Roy - I really do!

              The very best!
              Fisherman

              Comment


              • Originally posted by Roy Corduroy View Post
                Fisherman, while I appreciate you dreaming up the teaspoon bit, it doesn't fit. Jack the Ripper was a murderer first and foremost, and he may or may not mutilate. With a knife. The victims were, until Kelly, middle-aged unfortunates, killed at night in dark places. Like a "yard" which in England is an enclosed space between buildings.
                The weapon, victimology, crime scene location, time of death, place of death, are all very similar.

                Respectfully, sir, you are trying to split frog hairs.

                Roy
                The above part in bold is what I strongly disagree with Roy.

                The nickname was undoubtedly a result of his first 2 alleged victims, both were mutilated and "ripped" open. The Jack the Ripper that history teaches us about is a serial killer who mutilates his victims....suggesting that he would not do that is in essence suggesting that it was not the reason that he killed in the first place....something both coroners for the first 2 victims suggest was indeed the case. Those women were killed so he could mutilate them.

                Killers kill, Jack ripped. Its a simple qualifier and one that dismisses Liz without much more data being required.

                Liz was killed with a single slice....something atypical of Jack the Ripper...even based on a Canonical Group.

                Cheers Roy

                Comment


                • If you want another disqualifier....then review the evidence to see if we can assume she was out soliciting that night,....or whether Mary was, since you mentioned her. You mention age, location time of day, weapon, yet you dont even mention the fact that he supposedly picks them up while they are outdoors soliciting....a key MO factoid.

                  Middle aged Unfortunate women werent rare, dark street spots in Victorian London werent rare....violent criminal acts with knives werent rare, but what happened in the Fall of 1888 was indeed rare.....due to the appearance of some unusually grisly murders.

                  Liz's murder cannot be placed within those unusual violent acts....she is killed simply and quickly. And thats all the forensic evidence says was to occur.

                  Cheers again

                  Comment


                  • Evening Fish,

                    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                    With equal respect, sir, I stand by the fact that there is very much pointing away from Jack in this killing, whereas none of the traits that we ascribe to Jack specifically - the silent venue deep into the night, the very deeply cut neck and the mutilations - are at hand.I think Iīve got a pretty good case for dismissing Jack on this one, Roy - I really do!
                    You know there were things going on all over the place. Privvies back of Hanbury, carmen walking on Buck's Row, clubs near Mitre Square, maybe singing there. The non-mutilated corpse is the main difference. You're right about that.

                    Hi Michael,

                    Originally posted by perrymason View Post
                    If you want another disqualifier....then review the evidence to see if we can assume she was out soliciting that night
                    She was a prostitute out after midnight. Go figure.

                    Middle aged Unfortunate women werent rare, dark street spots in Victorian London werent rare....violent criminal acts with knives werent rare, but what happened in the Fall of 1888 was indeed rare.....due to the appearance of some unusually grisly murders.
                    Right, and I find this plenty grisly. Very like the other murders in the reasons I have pointed out.

                    Liz's murder cannot be placed within those unusual violent acts....she is killed simply and quickly. And thats all the forensic evidence says was to occur.
                    It can be placed and it is.

                    Forum member c. d. wondered if the killer had a ritual he went through, but not this time. I really don't know. I go with the interruption scenario. Then off he went towards prostitute island. In one night he took two lives with a knife. Punishable by hanging if he's caught and found guilty. But you can only hang a man once.

                    Roy
                    Sink the Bismark

                    Comment


                    • Getting back to the ritual: It is said that the most successful people have many rituals. The belief is that rituals of habit create a foundation for the success of reaching certain goals. For example: a person might have a goal of losing two stone of weight. To this goal he/she decide to cut alcohol out of their diet, and to replace potatoes and butter with cucumbers and a light, vinegar dressing. Upon the successful completion of the goal, this person continues this ritual as it was a positive one.
                      Rituals can be nothing but daily habits, or habits that have produced successful results.

                      Making the leap to JTR, a ritual for him may have been as simple as producing a knife from a place of concealment, using an oilcloth on the blade, doing his work and then using the cloth again before putting it away. Believing that this ritual might somehow be interrupted, he could have dispensed with all other things save removing a woman who could finger him as at the very least, an assailant.

                      Of course this is just an example of ritualism, and we see things much more detailed than this in OCD people and in the lives of many CEOs and politicians who may be just as OCD themselves. Even baseball players and footballers have little rituals that (they believe) make them better players.

                      Cheers,

                      Mike
                      huh?

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by The Good Michael View Post
                        Getting back to the ritual:

                        JTR, a ritual for him may have been as simple as producing a knife from a place of concealment, using an oilcloth on the blade, doing his work and then using the cloth again before putting it away. Believing that this ritual might somehow be interrupted, he could have dispensed with all other things save removing a woman who could finger him as at the very least, an assailant.
                        That could very well be, Mike.

                        politicians who may be just as OCD themselves
                        Like Adolph Hitler. OCD being Obsessive Compulsive Disorder.

                        Roy
                        Sink the Bismark

                        Comment


                        • Why do you suppose that Jack was never found at the scene of any of the murders happily ripping out organs and mutilating when the police arrived? I suggest two possible reasons:

                          1. He accomplished what he had set out to do and was completely satiated for the moment.

                          2. He would have liked to continue further but was afraid of being caught and hanged.

                          Now if you think it was probably reason number 2, then he was interrupted (by his own fear) before he finished his task was he not? In other words, fear of being caught overrode his desires and caused him to stop what he was doing. Does anybody doubt that Annie, Polly and Kate would have looked liked Mary had Jack been absolutely assured of not being interrupted in what he was doing?

                          If we look at Liz's murder in this context, is the idea of securing his own safety overriding his desire to mutilate Liz so hard to believe? To me, it seems like he was following a well established pattern.

                          c.d.

                          Comment


                          • Roy Corduroy writes:

                            "You know there were things going on all over the place. Privvies back of Hanbury, carmen walking on Buck's Row, clubs near Mitre Square..."

                            Our boy, Roy, was a man who chose to kill outdoors, in the streets. He was also a man who was set on mutilating and procuring organs - at least the evidence points in that direction. I think we can safely assume that the mutilations and the organ-procuring was the main driving force behind what he did.
                            He was not a sadist in the traditional sense of the word. Necrosadism has been suggested, but no matter how much trust we can place in that suggestion, it seems pretty obvious that Jack killed extremely swiftly and in a manner that ensured as much silence as possible.

                            Now, why was that? Well, the probable reason was that he wanted to make sure that he could react the ultimate goal of eviscerating without being spotted or interfered with. He did not need very much time to fulfill his intentions, only the fewest of minutes - but it was of essence to him that he did get these minutes.

                            So, Roy, if you for some reason need to kill in ths streets, and if your urges call for a couple of minutes in solitude with your victim, what do you do? Correct, you choose the most silent venue you can find, and you pick the hours of night when the streets are emptiest.
                            George Yard buildings, Buckīs Row, the back of 29 Hanbury Street and the deserted trading venue of Mitre Square all corresponded very well with these intentions. The lively venue of Dutfields Yard did not do that at all - it was another setting altogether and a badly chosen time. There, you could be certain to run into somebody in the yard sooner or later. In the other cases, you stood a fair chance of being left alone, although there was never any abslolute guarantee for this. You choose the optimal kind of venue - and you take your chances.
                            A man heading for the privvy because of a recent operation or a carman on his way to job would be unsuspected surprises - but that could not be said about anybody joining or leavin a bustling club where even the kitchen door was left open!

                            So no, we are not looking at a choice of venue in Berner Street that tallied with Jacks other choices. Not at all, in fact.

                            The best,
                            Fisherman

                            Comment


                            • C. d. asks:
                              "Does anybody doubt that Annie, Polly and Kate would have looked liked Mary had Jack been absolutely assured of not being interrupted in what he was doing?"

                              Yes. Absolutely, c.d.! You are proposing that the Kelly killing was the deed that represented an ultimate goal that the killer consciously carried along with him from the very beginning and at every deed, but I donīt believe that for a minute.
                              How, by the way, are we to know that he was not "interrupted" in the Kelly killing too? How are we to know that his agenda did not prescribe that he turned each and every victim into a pile of minced meat where no single piece of flesh was allowed to outweigh a gram?

                              Wolf Vanderlinden, among others, have pointed to the possibility of the Buckīs Row murder as an uninterrupted killing. Many people say that Jack fled the scene when Cross came along, but Cross never heard or saw anybody leaving, did he? There is every chance that the killer actually did what he wanted/needed to do, and then left - there is no need whatsoever to accept that our man had a conscious agenda of organ-procuring when he struck in Buckīs Row.

                              Taking it further back, we have a victim with a one-inch deep and three inches long wound to the lower abdomen three weeks earlier: Tabram. A tentative wounding to the lower abdomen, followed by an opening up of an abdomen the next time, but with no evinced wish to procure organs, a stiff week later followed by a deed where things were taken a stretch longer. This time we do have organ-procuring. But we also have evidence that our man was not easily scared or interrupted - in all probability he was killing and cutting Chapman in spite of the fact that he could hear a man moving about in the adjacent yard, a few feet away and with his wiew obscured only by a rotting, relatively low wooden paling with air between the boards! This did not scare our man - so what would have? And he did not choose to turn Chapman into a Kelly lookalike. He did not even cut her face, something that in itīs turn was added later on.

                              So, c.d., we either have a progression and a process of learning about inner desires as we move along - or we have the almighty coincidence of allowing him just a little more time with each victim before he is interrupted. To go along with the suggestion of a progression, we have a host of other deeds that point to this kind of thing developing along a series of killings, just as we have an agreed host of experts that acknowledge this mechanism.

                              So yes, quite a lot of people would quibble with you over this suggestion, methinks!

                              The best, c.d.!
                              Fisherman
                              Last edited by Fisherman; 10-04-2009, 11:12 AM.

                              Comment


                              • Hi Fisherman,

                                It seems like you took one statement out of my post to address but not the main point that I was attempting to make. The question is a simple one...why do you think Jack fled the scene of the murders of Polly, Annie and Kate? Was it because he had no further desire to continue with what he had been doing or do you think it was because he was afraid of being caught?

                                c.d.

                                Comment

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