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  • #31
    Hi all

    Thanks PC Dunn, that was a fascinating, if disturbing read. points of interest were the frustrated attack on Louise Neidig, the police consultation of psychiatrists and the opinion that it the perpetrator could have been from a 'family of refinement'. and of course the letters, reminds me of Albert Fish a little bit. One to follow up on, brilliant find.

    All the best.

    Comment


    • #32
      Hi Errata.

      I have to say, whilst agreeing with you that the vast majority of child abuse/ violence happens within the family/extended family I tend to think like Ausgirl that this was a stranger.
      To vulnerability I would add opportunity, this was a little girl standing alone at the front of the house in the dark. Wrong time, wrong place. It may suggest hunting behaviour on behalf of the perpetrator, something that may have a bearing on the WM and the concentration of murders in the same area, he went there because that's where he found the most vulnerable victims?

      All the best.

      Comment


      • #33
        1915 New York cases

        Originally posted by martin wilson View Post
        Hi all

        Thanks PC Dunn, that was a fascinating, if disturbing read. points of interest were the frustrated attack on Louise Neidig, the police consultation of psychiatrists and the opinion that it the perpetrator could have been from a 'family of refinement'. and of course the letters, reminds me of Albert Fish a little bit. One to follow up on, brilliant find.

        All the best.
        I'm glad you liked it. I did see a later story describing policemen following someone who was seen apparently trailing some boys by omnibus and foot. The city seemed gripped with terror while this went on. Nothing gets to people more than attacks on children, seen then, as now, as the most innocent and vulnerable of victims.

        Interesting that the very name "Jack the Ripper" seemed to frighten people, much as horror movie characters do now.
        Pat D. https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...rt/reading.gif
        ---------------
        Von Konigswald: Jack the Ripper plays shuffleboard. -- Happy Birthday, Wanda June by Kurt Vonnegut, c.1970.
        ---------------

        Comment


        • #34
          Originally posted by martin wilson View Post
          Hi Errata.

          I have to say, whilst agreeing with you that the vast majority of child abuse/ violence happens within the family/extended family I tend to think like Ausgirl that this was a stranger.
          To vulnerability I would add opportunity, this was a little girl standing alone at the front of the house in the dark. Wrong time, wrong place. It may suggest hunting behaviour on behalf of the perpetrator, something that may have a bearing on the WM and the concentration of murders in the same area, he went there because that's where he found the most vulnerable victims?

          All the best.
          Kids are better judges of people than you think. She went with him because he connected with her. He looked like her. Same race, same class. He didn't just walk up and say "I'm Uncle Jack " and haul her away. He convinced her to go with him in such a manner that no one thought it was strange. At no point did he have to grab her and clap his hand over her mouth or anything until he actually attacked her. Given that they walked for hours before the attack, and she was a five year old girl, she was chatting the whole way, and he was interacting with her without freaking her out. That's a level of sophistication that does not especially occur in the lower class uneducated crowd. And in order for her to feel as comfortable with him as she did, he had to know something about her. Not necessarily a lot, but something.

          I've baby sat in my time. Do you have any idea how hard it is to haul a five year old around for HOURS? This guy was committed to finding some building some yard, that he could go in. I think his lack of preparation and his unwillingness to take her home (which the vast majority of pedophiles want to do) is a little suspicious. Not a lot, but a little. He finally could wait anymore and threw her into an alley sort of across the way from a pub. And he knew he wasn't going to kill her. And it's possible he chose the alley because he knew she would likely be found there. He certainly didn't pick an alley in a warehouse district where she may never have been found. And he had been exceptionally patient. It's an odd combination. He won't kill her. He won't take her home. He possibly makes sure she has a chance of being found. And he searches high and low for a place to take her. He does not love her.He stabs her.

          The only thing that makes sense is that he knew her. She didn't know him, but he knew her, he knew what she looked like, he knew it was a bad idea to take her to anyplace she could identify as his, he knew he wasn't going to kill her, he didn't particularly want her dead, he had a greater than average fear of being identified. He was the same race as the child, same class, likely had some education if he could interact with her. He knew her. He had a weird obsession with her, and when he saw the chance he took her. Which is not that different from a stranger abduction. But a stranger has no fear of being identified. He won't be. A stranger could take her home, or to his place of business. A stranger wouldn't walk for miles looking for a place to do this. A stranger likely would not care if she lived or died. It's not a concrete thing, but I think it leans towards a family friend, a business partner, the husband of a friend. Someone who looked like Joe Anybody, but who lived somewhere or worked somewhere that could be immediately identified by the parents. Someone who didn't want to watch the family go though the death of their daughter.
          The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

          Comment


          • #35
            Originally posted by Pcdunn View Post
            Martin,

            I was browsing in the Library of Congress's Historic Newspaper collection, and found an American story of two children (Lennore Cohn, Charlie Murray) murdered in 1915 with a MO similar to the Fordham attack.They said letters signed "Jack the Ripper" had been sent to the mothers of the two young children.

            New York Tribune, May 6, 1915
            http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lc...arRange&page=1
            Originally posted by martin wilson View Post
            Hi all

            Thanks PC Dunn, that was a fascinating, if disturbing read. points of interest were the frustrated attack on Louise Neidig, the police consultation of psychiatrists and the opinion that it the perpetrator could have been from a 'family of refinement'. and of course the letters, reminds me of Albert Fish a little bit. One to follow up on, brilliant find.

            All the best.
            Yes, very good! And my first thought was "Albert Fish.." hehe. And hey, I think his first known murder was just a couple years after this, he slashed the throat of a disabled boy as I recall, about 1920. Being as he was kind of old by then, and I do not believe his stories about hallucinations (he was killing even before the time he claimed he got his visions from God..) - it's really just a matter of geography as to whether Fish is a feasible contender for these crimes. The taunting letters are certainly his style.

            Thanks for that.
            Last edited by Ausgirl; 02-12-2015, 02:12 PM.

            Comment


            • #36
              Re our poor young girl in the alley - I'm still thinking 'stranger'. A local with everything to lose by being seen with a child he plans to attack wouldn't risk walking miles with her. That's a lot of open, populated area in which the chances of being seen are huge. So in my mind, he didn't a give a crap if he was seen or not. Implying, not a local. Unless the guy was a bit dim and simply was not able to fathom the notion of witnesses not from his own street mattering to the police.

              He knew she would not ID him, so he left her alive with her injuries. Like Annie Millwood's attacker left her alive. Very strange.

              I've had my own 5yo. They're a nightmare to take anywhere they don't want to go, even for a parent. That said, at 5, they're also extremely vulnerable to a kindly face, a quiet lie and promises of sweeties, which is probably why there's so many missing and dead kids in that age group. No particular sophistication needed, just a basic MO that works sometimes.

              What does my head in is why he waited so long to attack her. And why he then left her alive.

              Comment


              • #37
                Same question re Annie Millwood, really - why stab her all over her legs and not kill her? Very strange. Maybe that's why they doubted her.

                Comment


                • #38
                  Originally posted by Ausgirl View Post
                  I've had my own 5yo. They're a nightmare to take anywhere they don't want to go, even for a parent. That said, at 5, they're also extremely vulnerable to a kindly face, a quiet lie and promises of sweeties, which is probably why there's so many missing and dead kids in that age group. No particular sophistication needed, just a basic MO that works sometimes.
                  The thing I've noticed about 5 years olds is they are without a doubt the most embarrassing age. I've been with little cousins who have started screaming and pointing at anything that is "other". They loudly ask whether the Indian man is part tree (what?) because he's a "weird" color. My little cousin walked right up to a guy in a wheelchair and asked if his mommy was a car. And another little cousin started jumping up and down screeching about the guy eating out of the trash like he was a monkey in the zoo. And I took both little cousins to the Science Museum, saw an albino coming and tried so hard to get them back downstairs before they saw her and it's like they KNEW. They flipped their **** because they though she was a ghost. I blamed it on too much Scooby Doo. It's that age, their little brains are starting to find their community and it starts with "like" and "other". "Like" is good. "Other" is bad. They start school and they sort it out almost immediately. But in the meantime I just wanted the ground to swallow me whole every time I had to watch a family member under the age of six.

                  Does anyone know what kind of neighborhood she was taken from? I get the impression it was solid middle class, but it makes a difference if that's not so.
                  The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Originally posted by Ausgirl View Post
                    Yes, very good! And my first thought was "Albert Fish.." hehe. And hey, I think his first known murder was just a couple years after this, he slashed the throat of a disabled boy as I recall, about 1920. Being as he was kind of old by then, and I do not believe his stories about hallucinations (he was killing even before the time he claimed he got his visions from God..) - it's really just a matter of geography as to whether Fish is a feasible contender for these crimes. The taunting letters are certainly his style.

                    Thanks for that.
                    I too thought of Fish.

                    But I always considered him a narcissist, so adopting another name just seems unlike him.
                    The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Maybe "uncle jack" was planning some sort of kidnapping for ransom, but something went wrong... Or maybe he'd been ordered to kill the child as some sort of terrorist act, anti-middle class, whatever... But like the Wicked Queen's Huntsman, he couldn't go all the way through with the murder.
                      It would make a difference if we knew the girl's socioeconomic status, certainly.
                      But remember, Victorian children were seen and not heard, and far, far more trusting of adults than ours are.
                      Pat D. https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...rt/reading.gif
                      ---------------
                      Von Konigswald: Jack the Ripper plays shuffleboard. -- Happy Birthday, Wanda June by Kurt Vonnegut, c.1970.
                      ---------------

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Originally posted by Pcdunn View Post
                        Maybe "uncle jack" was planning some sort of kidnapping for ransom, but something went wrong... Or maybe he'd been ordered to kill the child as some sort of terrorist act, anti-middle class, whatever... But like the Wicked Queen's Huntsman, he couldn't go all the way through with the murder.
                        It would make a difference if we knew the girl's socioeconomic status, certainly.
                        But remember, Victorian children were seen and not heard, and far, far more trusting of adults than ours are.
                        Was just typing this very thing.

                        And look. The "I'm your Uncle [insert name here]" is the oldest pedo abduction trick in the book, for a reason. That being -- it works.

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Originally posted by Errata View Post
                          I too thought of Fish.

                          But I always considered him a narcissist, so adopting another name just seems unlike him.
                          What alias did Fish use when meeting the Budd family?

                          Frank Howard. He chose his middle name, Frank, and Howard because it 'just seemed to come into his mind at the time.' Using this false identity, Fish gained the trust of Albert and Delia Budd, simple people who could not imagine that such a 'kindly gentleman farmer' would bring any harm to their daughter.

                          In 1935, 65 year-old Albert Fish went on trial in New York City. The charge was first degree murder. As the trial progressed, the public discovered that murder was just one of his interests.


                          Actually, from what I can tell.. Fish was in the Manhattan area in 1915. He was in jail in 1903, but was out by 1910 and attacking kids again. I wonder if he was ever a serious suspect for these crimes.
                          Last edited by Ausgirl; 02-12-2015, 07:45 PM.

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            Originally posted by Ausgirl View Post
                            What alias did Fish use when meeting the Budd family?

                            Frank Howard. He chose his middle name, Frank, and Howard because it 'just seemed to come into his mind at the time.' Using this false identity, Fish gained the trust of Albert and Delia Budd, simple people who could not imagine that such a 'kindly gentleman farmer' would bring any harm to their daughter.

                            In 1935, 65 year-old Albert Fish went on trial in New York City. The charge was first degree murder. As the trial progressed, the public discovered that murder was just one of his interests.


                            Actually, from what I can tell.. Fish was in the Manhattan area in 1915. He was in jail in 1903, but was out by 1910 and attacking kids again. I wonder if he was ever a serious suspect for these crimes.
                            Does it seem odd that Albert Fish falls into the category of "Fun trivia"?

                            I think there's a difference between using an alias and giving the credit to an actual if unknown killer. Everything Fish did was about him. Even his confessions were about him.

                            Jello has walked into the room. Gotta go!
                            The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Hi all

                              Good point made by PC Dunn about the huntsman, perhaps that's why he spent so much time with her, working up the courage.

                              In a 1903 article on Broadmoor (studymore) T .W. Griffith informs us that of less than 200 women, 120 were committed for murdering their child or children.
                              I don't think infanticide is the brief of this thread, in the vast majority of cases these women were not motivated in the same way as a SK, and it must inevitably involve a discussion about the socio-economic stressors of the era.
                              but I do note that throat cutting, drowning and dismemberment were common causes of death.

                              BRADFORD OUTRAGE 19th November 1892.

                              Violet Brown 4, of Brooklyn Street Bradford, found in a rubbish heap, outraged and murdered (no details yet on COD).

                              BRADFORD OUTRAGE 22nd September 1893

                              Amy Carter 3, Rebecca Street Bradford,
                              Decoyed away with sweets by a shabbily dressed woman. Returned late at night insensible but alive by a muffled woman who immediately ran away, She was found to be covered in weals and bruises intermingled with burns as though from a red hot poker.

                              All the best.

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Originally posted by martin wilson View Post

                                Amy Carter 3, Rebecca Street Bradford,
                                Decoyed away with sweets by a shabbily dressed woman. Returned late at night insensible but alive by a muffled woman who immediately ran away, She was found to be covered in weals and bruises intermingled with burns as though from a red hot poker.

                                All the best.
                                Another strange one... female sadist? Procurer?

                                Comment

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