Originally posted by Sam Flynn
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Double throat cuts
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[QUOTE=Michael W Richards;421948][QUOTE=Pierre;421927]
They are very uncommon
Is there a source for this?
Pierre, and as such should be one of the defining signatures one looks for when assessing a probable suspect.
Cheers, Pierre
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[QUOTE=Pierre;421927]Originally posted by Jon Guy View Post
Yes, double cuts. Were they common?
Pierre
Its how Jack is born. The man who kills and mutilates 2 women in a very specific manner after meeting and subduing them while they solicited, and miraculously he just decides hes scared and cuts the next one just once, the next one he botches his extractions and severs the colon, and the next one he finds by sneaking into a small self contained courtyard with a narrow tunnel.
This was never a series of Five, it's been a mismatched group.
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Originally posted by Joshua Rogan View PostHi Robert, interesting idea. It seems to me that if this was the purpose then a more central cut would have the best chance of accomplishing this, rather than a cut on one side only....
...if he had already attacked the throat, why only do half a job and have to cut it completely later? I think it was Phillips who said Stride's cut could have been done in two seconds...that seems like a good investment of time for a killer to make sure his victim was dead, before embarking on more prolonged mutilations.
{in my scenario, polly nicholls is lying on the ground when both cuts are made. i'm running into an obstacle when considering that he blitzkrieged her with a quick stab to her throat while both are standing. Wouldn't you think that the higher shorter cut would have cut the strings of her jolly new bonnet (damned! if noone reported on the its condition)?}
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[QUOTE=Jon Guy;421922]
Hi Pierre
Specifically, which sort of throat cuts do you refer to ?
Double throat cuts ?
Pierre
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Hi Pierre
Originally posted by Pierre View PostIn murders where there were throat cuts: how common were such cuts?
Double throat cuts ?
Were all / some of these cuts "tentative"?What does a suggestion about a cut being "tentative" say about the Whitechapel killer - if anything at all?
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I see no reason a normal strength person couldn't cut through muscle and cartilage with a sharp enough knife
Paul
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Originally posted by kjab3112 View PostThis though is a massive sample of medicolegal autopsies, yet throat cut homicide is incredibly rare. There are other series which compare suicidal (rare), accidental (very rare) and homicidal, neck sharp wounds.
The deeper wounds are near inevitably homicidal, but still a mere fraction of the total. Unfortunately I can only access the abstracts and a summary on forensicmed.
One needs to remember the sternocleidomastoid muscles are a couple of cm thick and although the larynx is fairly superficial, the carotid artery and jugular vein are deep to the muscle in a normal neck position
Paul
Do you think this rare type of wound, i.e. what you call deeper wounds, can be caused by normal individuals with normal strenght - this is of course testable - or do you think it demands stronger individuals?
Pierre
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is there any implication observer that, by "overlapped", dr phillips means that the ripper cut in the same place twice, leaving those two nick marks on the vertebra illustrated by wickerman? like cutting a head of lettuce in half twice
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Originally posted by Observer View PostIn Chapman's case the the two cuts are in effect one continuous cut which overlapped each other. Wickerman submitted a drawing sometime back to demonstrate this. Doctor Philips observed that an attempt had been made to separate the vertebrae in the neck, raising the possibility that an attempt had been made to decapitate Chapman. I am of the opinion that the killer attempted the same procedure in the Nichols murder.
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Originally posted by Elamarna View PostWhile i agree. The orginal question was for suggestions why?
Not sure what reliable data we are likely to have on if two or more cuts are made because of failure of the first, confessions of killers perhaps?
I seriously doubt there is any meaniful data from the 19th century on such.
Paul's data may give a more modern perspective.
I think it really is just speculation on possible reasons. None of which I fear can be supported by data.
Steve
Again, regarding Alice McKenzie. I did find another detail of the inquest reported by the London Evening News. Dr. Phillips states the first incision seems to have been interrupted by the prominence of the lower jaw.
So Phillips felt it was in fact the first cut that was interrupted. I wasn't sure about that in my earlier post.
This to me could be a possible 'botched' attempt by the killer and he felt he needed another cut to complete his work. The killer may have had enough with the first incision to already kill her, but he was unsure and gave it another go.
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostHi Wickerman,
I donīt know what to make of this (excerpt from the article in your reference):
"The evidence given by Dr. Phillips on 18 Sept. at the Hanbury-street inquest is incontrovertible proof that Annie Chapman was partially strangled before her throat was cut. When Dr. Phillips was called to see the body he found that
THE TONGUE PROTRUDED
between the front teeth, but not beyond the lips. The face was swollen, the finger-nails and lips were turgid, and in the brain, on the head being opened, he found the membranes opaque and the veins and tissues loaded with black blood. All these appearances are the ordinary signs of suffocation."
Is this something I can belive in?
Pierre
Some of what is written in that paragraph is a direct quote from inquest testimony published on Sept. 14th.
The mention of "18 Sept" in that paragraph is a misprint for 13th Sept.
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Pierre
Here's a link to a South African series of all neck injuries, demonstrating how rare that degree of injury is
PS there is an obvious survivor bias but this is probably as good as it gets in terms of numbers, and strangely no one is meta-analysing homicidal neck woundsLast edited by kjab3112; 07-13-2017, 02:30 PM.
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