I think people may feel strongly about this because, if we believe Israel Schwart, then we have a real window on Liz Stride's probable killer. Which is to say, we have both a good description and something of an insight into his manner and character. And the picture we have doesn't sit well with everyone, including me I might add.
I can accept a loud, burley abusive man as a killer. But a man bawling loudly, possibly aggressively and belligerently, in the presence of at least one and possible two witnesses just prior to committing a ghastly murder does not seem compatible with JtR's style. Maybe JtR needed more stealth than that to survive and prosper as he did.
Of course this could all be one great red herring. How much can we rely on Israel Schwartz? Was he telling the truth? Was he accurate about the timings? Were the police a bit too gullible where Schwartz was concerned? Was the Star right about his unreliability? Why wasn't he called as a witness? No one else can really corroborate his story.
If Schwartz is unreliable or mistaken in any way then it could be that BS did not kill Stride. If so, then lack of care or stealth is not an issue and Stride as a victim is perhaps easier to accept.
There are other objections of course. The lack of mutilations being the obvious one. No signs of strangulation. The not entirely irrelevant opinion of Bagster Phillips. And, yes, it might at first seem a bit too coincidental that Stride should be murdered with her throat cut right in the middle of the Ripper's reign. But, given the massive publicity, a copy-cat killing would have been the obvious option or excuse or camoflage for any would-be murderer, a fact which in my view lessens the weight of the "too coincidental" argument.
I cannot commit to either side in this argument because I think a case can be made either way.
I can accept a loud, burley abusive man as a killer. But a man bawling loudly, possibly aggressively and belligerently, in the presence of at least one and possible two witnesses just prior to committing a ghastly murder does not seem compatible with JtR's style. Maybe JtR needed more stealth than that to survive and prosper as he did.
Of course this could all be one great red herring. How much can we rely on Israel Schwartz? Was he telling the truth? Was he accurate about the timings? Were the police a bit too gullible where Schwartz was concerned? Was the Star right about his unreliability? Why wasn't he called as a witness? No one else can really corroborate his story.
If Schwartz is unreliable or mistaken in any way then it could be that BS did not kill Stride. If so, then lack of care or stealth is not an issue and Stride as a victim is perhaps easier to accept.
There are other objections of course. The lack of mutilations being the obvious one. No signs of strangulation. The not entirely irrelevant opinion of Bagster Phillips. And, yes, it might at first seem a bit too coincidental that Stride should be murdered with her throat cut right in the middle of the Ripper's reign. But, given the massive publicity, a copy-cat killing would have been the obvious option or excuse or camoflage for any would-be murderer, a fact which in my view lessens the weight of the "too coincidental" argument.
I cannot commit to either side in this argument because I think a case can be made either way.
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