To Womb It May Concern

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • perrymason
    Guest replied
    Sam, it isnt what the Lancet said thats the crux...its how the data was interpreted and summarized by the physicians attending the victims.

    And Bond said the man in room 13 had no skill or knowledge. Since he only saw her first hand, thats all he can really speak to with any authority....despite his wave of the hand dismissals of his peers conjectures about the women that they were in charge of.

    All the best SF

    Leave a comment:


  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
    Sam you have this fixation for slashing
    It comes to us all with age, Trevor
    Time for a reality check !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    Always glad for one of those, Trevor - but in this case I was just replying to, and quoting, someone else.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by perrymason View Post
    On that last point you may be right, in which case a completely intact and cleanly excised uterus might have been left behind. Needless to say, thats highly improbable for a killer who may have killed for that very organ his second.... and perhaps also attempted it with his first, victims.
    Whatever the aim, Mike - which is something we'll never know - and despite my speculating about the cleanness (or otherwise) of Kelly's hysterectomy, the salient facts are these:

    1. Despite what the Lancet might have said, the Ripper made a truly awful mess of Annie Chapman's body;

    2. If it takes a certain amount of determination (I won't use "skill") to remove a womb, it certainly takes more to remove a kidney and a womb, and yet more again to remove a womb, two kidneys, a liver, a spleen, the entire intestinal system, a stomach, two breasts, a heart... and a womb.

    Leave a comment:


  • perrymason
    Guest replied
    Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
    I like many others have grave doubts about Kelly being killed by the same killer as Eddowes and Chapman, Likewise Strides murders i would suggest was the work of a totally different killer to the aformentioned three
    Its always good to see someone else put the logical ideas forward, although Im referring only to the above encapsulation, and not all of what you personally feel is the most probable time organs were taken Trevor.

    I believe that the evidence suggests that victims 1 and 2 were killed so that the killer could obtain what was only successfully taken in his second attempt....that victim # 3 was only murdered almost immediately following a witnessed altercation with a man in the street, victim #4 was killed in almost the identical manner but clearly with a different objective or focus than the killer of victims 1 and 2 had, and that the killer in room 13 attempted to utilize the fear and reputation generated by the alleged Ripper to disguise a murderer from within Marys personal circle.

    I think thats what the existing evidence suggests....and story that ties all 5 to one man is just that....a story.

    Cheers Trevor

    Leave a comment:


  • Trevor Marriott
    replied
    Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
    It takes no less "slashing around" to cut the pericardium and remove the heart than it does to cut the peritoneum to remove a kidney. In fact, it's a darn sight trickier - and much more fiddly than removing a womb. Don't forget that we have no info from Bond as to how cleanly he excised Kelly's uterus either. It might have been a perfect, stumpless cut for all we know.
    Sam you have this fixation for slashing I would be the first to agree that the killer did slash the victims but in the course of the mutilations and as part of the frenzied attack. There is no way on this earth that a killer could remove those organs by means of slashing. Even a modern day surgeon would not be able to remove for example a kidney by your slashingmethod.

    A modern day consultant gynecologist has stated that in the case of Eddowes the uterus and its attachments were removed almost intact and would appear to have been taken in a way consistent with being remobed for medical research. Time for a reality check !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Leave a comment:


  • Trevor Marriott
    replied
    Originally posted by richardnunweek View Post
    Hello Trevor,
    I understand your theory naturally, however the murder in millers court , had many organs removed at the scene by the killer I presume...
    If of course your assumptions are correct , that would add more fuel to many, that Kelly was a copycat murder , and committed by someone who was acting out what he had read in the newspapers, but if the previous murders had not been reported correctly, surely then suspects such as Fleming, Barnett, and ex lovers, or aquaintances of kelly cannot be dismissed.
    In other words the only JTR murder that showed real sickening mutilation was Kelly, the others were just a rip or two.
    Intresting...but...??
    Regards Richard.
    I like many others have grave doubts about Kelly being killed by the same killer as Eddowes and Chapman, Likewise Strides murders i would suggest was the work of a totally different killer to the aformentioned three

    Leave a comment:


  • perrymason
    Guest replied
    Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
    It takes no less "slashing around" to cut the pericardium and remove the heart than it does to cut the peritoneum to remove a kidney. In fact, it's a darn sight trickier - and much more fiddly than removing a womb. Don't forget that we have no info from Bond as to how cleanly he excised Kelly's uterus either. It might have been a perfect, stumpless cut for all we know.

    Hi Gareth,

    On that last point you may be right, in which case a completely intact and cleanly excised uterus might have been left behind. Needless to say, thats highly improbable for a killer who may have killed for that very organ his second.... and perhaps also attempted it with his first, victims.

    Im sure that removing a kidney under the conditions that existed in Mitre Square required some skills, but finding a heart to take when youve removed everything else in the area doesnt seem exceptionally savvy to me.

    In Mitre Square even a partial uterus was worthy of theft...in Bucks Row and in Hanbury Street it may have been the reason for the killings,.. but not in Dutfields Yard, nor in Millers Court.

    Cheers Sam

    Leave a comment:


  • Scott Nelson
    replied
    Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
    ...more and more readers warming to the theory that the killer did not remove the organs from Eddowes or Chapman at the crime scene !!!!!!!!!
    I think he did. But still unexplained is the lack of blood-stained handprints and fingerprints at any of the crime scenes.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by perrymason View Post
    That works with Mary Janes murderer...he obviously had no anatomical training or knowledge, and certainly no surgical skills. Slashing his way around is most apt for that murder.
    It takes no less "slashing around" to cut the pericardium and remove the heart than it does to cut the peritoneum to remove a kidney. In fact, it's a darn sight trickier - and much more fiddly than removing a womb. Don't forget that we have no info from Bond as to how cleanly he excised Kelly's uterus either. It might have been a perfect, stumpless cut for all we know.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by The Good Michael View Post
    Let's look at the doctor's partial words: "...whilst from the pelvis, the uterus and its appendages with the upper portion of the vagina and the posterior two thirds of the bladder, had been entirely removed. No trace of these parts could be found and the incisions were cleanly cut, avoiding the rectum, and dividing the vagina low enough to avoid injury to the cervix uteri..."
    Strictly speaking, Mike, wasn't that the word of the Lancet? They're often attributed directly to Phillips himself, but as far as I'm aware we don't know that.

    A side issue, but one of some minor importance perhaps - not least because, in those papers who chose to print more details of Phillips' inquest deposition than others, it's apparent that the large intestine (if not explicitly the rectum) was, in fact, cut.
    In my mind I see myself as a child removing photos from magazines in order to make a collage for a school project. I want to get the information quickly, but I don't want to damage a distinct component. I therefore make a clipping in a swath around the exact image I want because I am in a hurry and so I don't damage that particular image. I use my scissors quickly and effectively so the cutting isn't jagged and doesn't tear anything. In essence, it is a clean cut. I am not a scissors expert. I am not cutting clothing in a precise pattern that i will sew together. Yet, I am still tidy and efficient.
    Good analogy. That's how I see it too.

    PS: Stanley lived about 400 metres away from my house - albeit across the valley! - and that other great Victorian adventurer, Alfred Russel Wallace, lived literally down the road from me, a mere 5 minute walk away... both of them long before my time, of course

    Leave a comment:


  • richardnunweek
    replied
    Hello Trevor,
    I understand your theory naturally, however the murder in millers court , had many organs removed at the scene by the killer I presume...
    If of course your assumptions are correct , that would add more fuel to many, that Kelly was a copycat murder , and committed by someone who was acting out what he had read in the newspapers, but if the previous murders had not been reported correctly, surely then suspects such as Fleming, Barnett, and ex lovers, or aquaintances of kelly cannot be dismissed.
    In other words the only JTR murder that showed real sickening mutilation was Kelly, the others were just a rip or two.
    Intresting...but...??
    Regards Richard.

    Leave a comment:


  • Trevor Marriott
    replied
    i do not intend to become embroiled in further arguments over who where when and how the organs were removed my views on that have been fully documented and well discussed on here.

    i would add however that the doctors of the day suggested that the killer of Eddowes and Chapman used a knife with a blade length of around 6 inches.

    I should point out that the results of tests conducted recently by medical experts suggest that it would have been impossible to remove Edowes kidney using such a knife given the conditions of the crime scene at the time.

    So either the killer had two knives or he, as I previoulsy stated did not remove the organs.

    I also see that the removal of the organs topic has been more openly discussed of late and its pleasing to see more and more readers warming to the theory that the killer did not remove the organs from Eddowes or Chapman at the crime scene !!!!!!!!!

    Leave a comment:


  • The Good Michael
    replied
    Let's look at the doctor's partial words: "...whilst from the pelvis, the uterus and its appendages with the upper portion of the vagina and the posterior two thirds of the bladder, had been entirely removed. No trace of these parts could be found and the incisions were cleanly cut, avoiding the rectum, and dividing the vagina low enough to avoid injury to the cervix uteri..."

    In my mind I see myself as a child removing photos from magazines in order to make a collage for a school project. I want to get the information quickly, but I don't want to damage a distinct component. I therefore make a clipping in a swath around the exact image I want because I am in a hurry and so I don't damage that particular image. I use my scissors quickly and effectively so the cutting isn't jagged and doesn't tear anything. In essence, it is a clean cut. I am not a scissors expert. I am not cutting clothing in a precise pattern that i will sew together. Yet, I am still tidy and efficient.

    Cheers,

    Mike

    Leave a comment:


  • protohistorian
    replied
    structure density suggests that it cannot be that simple. Actions have reactions, and intent can be verified by action on occasion.

    Leave a comment:


  • perrymason
    Guest replied
    Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
    You don't need an intimate knowledge of the structure of plants in order to slash your way through the undergrowth with a stick.
    That works with Mary Janes murderer...he obviously had no anatomical training or knowledge, and certainly no surgical skills. Slashing his way around is most apt for that murder.

    Since all 5 Canonical murders show different traits by the killer (s)....that missing skill or talent need not be set as "Jacks" profile though.

    Its clear that the killer in room 13 was a newbie at surgery.....its also clear that both physicians who inspected the first 2 Canonical victims wounds thought that their killer definitely had some "talent". That they sought 3 med students for questioning supports a thesis that they did indeed at one time feel the man might even be a doctor or one in training.

    That idea faded when they decided to add murders to his list that did not show any knowledge or skill.

    No wonder everyone has been so unlucky looking for Jack all these years, they've been looking for a man who has a very rare case of Sporadic Knowledge apparently.....what a rare bird that is.

    Seems to me if someone knew something on their first kill... or 2nd kill....it wouldnt appear as if he had forgotten all that on his 4 or 5th. Someone that cut a uterus out of a woman... "cleanly"... during that Fall had skill, and knowledge.

    Cheers all.

    Leave a comment:

Working...
X