With McKenzie one of the cuts was obstructed by the jawbone. If it were the first, a second cut may have been needed to complete the job. Her head was turned sharply to the right, which may indicate the killer turned her head to avoid the jawbone on the second attempt.
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Originally posted by Joshua Rogan View PostThanks Steve
That sounds like a standard archeologosts explanation for something they can't explain - Must have been for ritual purposes! Still, it can't be dismissed, although I'd personally expect a ritual to be performed in the same.way each time.
Maybe. But if you've already cut one side, why start again at almost the same point, why not just cut the other side? Or if the long cut came first, why add the shorter cut?
This seems the most likely of the three - as Frank Herbert said, accident and error are the most persistent principles in the universe.
I did like Paul's suggestion that the first cut hit cartilage so he moved down slightly to avoid it on the second go. That would work for Nichol's injuries, I think.
But I've always read Chapman's neck wound as going entirely round the neck and back past where it started.
Steve
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Originally posted by Joshua Rogan View PostThanks Steve
That sounds like a standard archeologosts explanation for something they can't explain - Must have been for ritual purposes! Still, it can't be dismissed, although I'd personally expect a ritual to be performed in the same.way each time.
yes reminds me of time team, anything you can't explain is ritual.
Steve
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Originally posted by Robert St Devil View Postwhat if...
the purpose of the higher, shorter cut is to sever the vocal cards or tongue. touch the spot on your neck and decide if there is anything behind there worth cutting from the pov of...
could be he got a tight garrote of a neckerchief around her neck and cut her chords so she reeeally couldnt scream, her blood flowing into the neckerchief; altho i cant arrive at a conclusive sequence of events there
is it the stride or chapman case where the neckerchief looks like it was pulled or sucked into the cut?
"So deep, in fact, was the gash, that the murderer, evidently thinking he had severed the head from the body, had tied a handkerchief round it."
But I think this was just where her own neckerchief had slipped into the gaping wound.
Stride's throat was cut along the lower border of her scarf, nicking the fabric but not getting any blood on it.
the lower, deeper cut... hm, always seemed like a finishing cut to me. as in, polly nicholls. he garrotes and knifes her throat high leaving her speechless and dying, mutilates her abdomen, gets interrupted, so he cuts her throat again to finish the deed.
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Originally posted by Joshua Rogan View PostThanks Steve
That sounds like a standard archeologosts explanation for something they can't explain - Must have been for ritual purposes! Still, it can't be dismissed, although I'd personally expect a ritual to be performed in the same.way each time.
Maybe. But if you've already cut one side, why start again at almost the same point, why not just cut the other side? Or if the long cut came first, why add the shorter cut?
This seems the most likely of the three - as Frank Herbert said, accident and error are the most persistent principles in the universe.
I did like Paul's suggestion that the first cut hit cartilage so he moved down slightly to avoid it on the second go. That would work for Nichol's injuries, I think.
But I've always read Chapman's neck wound as going entirely round the neck and back past where it started.
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Originally posted by Jon Guy View PostThat`s interesting, do you have a source for this ?
I will need to go and search. It something read ages back. Along the lines of the head only just hanging on.
Interesting how we all read same things and get different pictures.
See if I can find it later.
Steve
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Originally posted by Elamarna View PostHi Jon
I will need to go and search. It something read ages back. Along the lines of the head only just hanging on.
Interesting how we all read same things and get different pictures.
See if I can find it later.
Steve
All I really know about the Chapman throat cut is what Phillips says, which is pretty straightforward:
He (Phillips) noticed that the throat was dissevered deeply.; that the incision through the skin were jagged and reached right round the neck
Unfortunately, theories have been built on the misunderstanding of the nicked vertebrae detail. With it being used incorrectly to single out the Nichols and Chapman murders as the two only having the double throat cut, and hence the same killer.
There were two distinct clean cuts on the body of the vertebrae on the left side of the spine. They were parallel to each other, and separated by about half an inch
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Originally posted by Jon Guy View PostThanks Steve. I think I`ve read that somewhere too, but if I recall correctly it was by a civilian witness and not a medico.
All I really know about the Chapman throat cut is what Phillips says, which is pretty straightforward:
He (Phillips) noticed that the throat was dissevered deeply.; that the incision through the skin were jagged and reached right round the neck
Unfortunately, theories have been built on the misunderstanding of the nicked vertebrae detail. With it being used incorrectly to single out the Nichols and Chapman murders as the two only having the double throat cut, and hence the same killer.
There were two distinct clean cuts on the body of the vertebrae on the left side of the spine. They were parallel to each other, and separated by about half an inch
Hi Jon
Agree entirely there.
The double cut to Nichols is nothing like those to Chapman in that only one of the Nichols cuts is long.
I have to say not looked at Chapman much recently and your recollection on civilian witness may be right. Need to find the actual quote before it can be judged.
I am coming to conclusion that the double cuts were due to failure of an initial cut to achieve all it's objectives. However it's far from clear.
Steve
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Originally posted by Jon Guy View PostOr maybe the killer just enjoyed it?
Jon reading this again I think we need to be carefully how we interpret it.
If just accepted as it appears it could suggest one cut which encircled the neck and continued on to a second cut. That is a very difficulty feat to achieve.
Still searching for that source.
Steve
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Originally posted by Elamarna View Post"The incisions of the skin indicated that they had been made from the left side of the neck on a line with the angle of the jaw, carried entirely round and again in front of the neck, and ending at a point about midway between the jaw and the sternum or breast bone on the right hand. "
Jon reading this again I think we need to be carefully how we interpret it.
If just accepted as it appears it could suggest one cut which encircled the neck and continued on to a second cut. That is a very difficulty feat to achieve.
Still searching for that source.
Steve
Is this Phillips on Chapman ?
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