Originally posted by David Orsam
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Brady St bloodstains Aug 31st
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Originally posted by Jon Guy View PostHi David
Thanks for reviving this very old thread on an interesting subject.
Originally posted by Jon Guy View PostWhy would it be any "better" if PC Thain had washed away the blood?
Originally posted by Jon Guy View PostIt would have been light at 5 or 6am on Aug 31st ?
A week later John Richardson would be able to see about his yard before 5am.
Originally posted by Jon Guy View PostWhich of the injuries that Nichols sustained caused the blood stains in Brady Street?
Originally posted by Jon Guy View PostIt wasn`t the gash in the throat, that was done where she was found in Bucks Row.
Originally posted by Jon Guy View PostIf she had only been strangled and carried to Bucks Row, why were there blood stains - where from, and which woman was knocking on the shutters of Colville house ?
Originally posted by Jon Guy View PostI don`t think the murderer needed much light to see what he was doing, but Cross and Paul would have required more light to see the damage inflicted.
Originally posted by Jon Guy View PostWe can tell from the throat cut and the pool of blood under neck, and that there no blood on the front of the neck ie she was lying down when it was cut.
"There was a very small pool of blood in the pathway which had trickled from the wound in the throat, not more than would fill two wine glasses, or half a pint at the outside. This fact, and the way which the deceased was lying, made me think at the time that it was probable that the murder was committed elsewhere, and the body conveyed to Buck's row."
He could not possibly have had that thought if anything about the throat wound proved that the body was killed where it was found.
Originally posted by Jon Guy View PostAgain, which of her injuries killed her in Brady Street and left the blood trail ?
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Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View PostI'm going to look at this closer, but I'm not sure any of these blood stains exist, save for a dark spot on Brady Street that might have been blood. I'm going to check and see if there are any first hand accounts. It seems the press reports are all hearsay. I would think huge streaks of blood at Honey's Mews would have been mentioned at the inquest or in reports?
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Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View PostYou don't have trouble suggesting that blood stains only a few yards from her body were from another woman but blood in another street was from Nichols? If the reporters were an aware of an assault earlier that night on Buck's Row, why wasn't PC Neil aware?
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Originally posted by Chris View PostWe're certainly in a position to check whether he is correct in saying that a woman from the neighbourhood with a cut throat was admitted to the London Hospital that morning. I think that would be wiser than accepting the report without corroboration.
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostI am not suggesting anything about the Buck's Row bloodstains! It was the reporter for the Lloyd's Weekly News and Weekly Dispatch who was suggesting that the blood was from another woman. I'm just saying I don't have any reason to doubt it. But I've also agreed with your suggestion that it might have been Nichols' blood dripping from the ambulance. Frankly, I don't care! I'm only interested in the Brady Street bloodstains.
And yes, if a woman were attacked and bleeding in Buck's Row, she'd be taken to London Hospital, and there would and will still be a record of it. Same with Brady Street.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View PostThat's my point. I find it odd that you're not the least bit interested in strange blood stains in Buck's Row. Why aren't you? As for the reporter's explanation for that, I believe the identical explanation was was offered for the Brady Street blood stains, but you don't accept that explanation for those stains. Why not?
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Originally posted by Jon Guy View Post
But what about the policeman who passed down Bucks Row every half hour ?
I know you go on to state that the killer learned from Bucks Row and killed Chapman on private property to achieve the desired effect, but I don`t think the killer carried the body to Bucks Row from Brady Street so it would be discovered in daylight. The police beats would ensure the body was found within half an hour. The same with Mitre Square.
"My own objection to it would be: could the killer have had any reasonable expectation that the bodies would not be found until daylight?"
Or to reverse it, can we be certain that Neil would have seen the body? Did he walk around with his lamp on? I note that Watkins had a lamp fixed in his belt but don't know if it was standard practice to patrol with it on. Monty's book which I am currently reading might answer this for me. But just in case it is not clear Jon, I fully agree with you that that the point you make is a potential weakness in my theory (and I was indeed the first person to identify it!).
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Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View PostIt seems the press reports are all hearsay.
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostWhere does the reporter say that a woman was "admitted" to the London Hospital that morning? For all we know she went to A&E, or whatever they called it then, was patched up and sent home. My own experience of hospital records (from Barts) is that such incidents would not be in the surviving records. But just to repeat from my earlier post, I don't care!!!
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostI forgot to respond to this sentence. Can I ask why you say this? What I see are some unusually detailed press reports. Not only that but two different reports in different newspapers (i.e. first in the Daily Chronicle/Evening Standard on the Saturday and then more detailed reporting of the stains in the Sunday morning papers: LWN/Weekly Dispatch). I would have thought it certain that reporters would have been crawling all over Buck's Row and Brady Street on the Friday/Saturday and I have always assumed that this is how they discovered Robert Paul (but let's not argue about that). For this reason, it is surely at least possible that the reporters saw the stains with their own eyes. But if not, we are not in a court of law and what you refer to as "hearsay" would simply be them reporting something they had been told.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostWell Tom tells me that such records do survive - although god only knows whether anyone has looked at them with this in mind - but here's the thing, I don't care!
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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