Quoting Dr. George Bagster Phillips at the inquest of Elizabeth Stride:
Over both shoulders, especially the right, and under the collar-bone and in front of the chest there was a bluish discolouration, which I have watched and seen on two occasions since. (My italics)
I have never seen this discussed.
The quote appeared in the Times (London) Thursday, 4 October 1888, and appears here on Casebook under Victims, Elizabeth Stride.
Phillips appears to be saying that he noted distinctive bruises on a body, kept looking for it, and had seen it twice since he first observed it, which I take to mean Chapman and Stride.
1. Does anyone have any idea what these marks mean? how the killer may have inflicted them?
2. Is this the way the authorities arrived at the number of victims of the killer who came to be known as JtR? Were these marks JtR's trademark that perhaps the authorities kept quiet, but which were so distinctive, even unique, that only one killer was leaving them on his victims?
Over both shoulders, especially the right, and under the collar-bone and in front of the chest there was a bluish discolouration, which I have watched and seen on two occasions since. (My italics)
I have never seen this discussed.
The quote appeared in the Times (London) Thursday, 4 October 1888, and appears here on Casebook under Victims, Elizabeth Stride.
Phillips appears to be saying that he noted distinctive bruises on a body, kept looking for it, and had seen it twice since he first observed it, which I take to mean Chapman and Stride.
1. Does anyone have any idea what these marks mean? how the killer may have inflicted them?
2. Is this the way the authorities arrived at the number of victims of the killer who came to be known as JtR? Were these marks JtR's trademark that perhaps the authorities kept quiet, but which were so distinctive, even unique, that only one killer was leaving them on his victims?
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