Robert:
"That would imply that all wasn't well with the Cross marriage, Fish, if he felt unable to mention the murder for fear of arousing her suspicions!
Strange that he has not thought far enough ahead to work out what he will do if someone comes swinging round the school, yet he is thinking several murders ahead by giving a name calculated to hide his involvement from his wife."
To be perfectly honest, I think you are writing some pretty strange things, Robert! Then again, you seem to think the same about me ...
Robert, if Charles Cross was the Ripper, I think that he perhaps did not wish his family to find out that he had been involved in the inquest into one of the Ripper victims. Likewise, the less his working comrades knew about it, the better. This is my proposition, and I really donīt find it odd in any way.
As for calculating ahead, who said that he did NOT have plan for what he would do if somebody did come around the corner? It was not me, at any rate. And if the thought of killing out in the open street appealed to him, then what could he do but take his chances? All serial killers, intelligent or stupid, planning or not, are strange creatures, Robert.
Take a look at Paulīs entrance on the stage. That was something Cross could not have foreseen. We know that if he was the Ripper, he killed anyway, and then he adrdressed whatever problems that came along.
We may also observe that he may well have picked Nichols up in Whitechapel Road. No prostitute would have gone to Buckīs Row for trade, since only few men passed along it at that time in the morning. So, if we work from the idea that they hooked up in Whitechapel Road, you may take some comfort in the fact that he was not disorganized enough to kill her there. Instead Buckīs Row was opted for, a silent thoroughfare with a much better rumour than the adjacent, closer Winthrop Street. In that sense, we seemingly have a man who has little time to spare, and who optimizes things according to it.
The risks - huge ones - that came with the territory points to him representing one out of two types of killers: the type who fails to see the risks, or the type that does see them and kills anyway. My contention is that if Cross was the killer, he very clearly belonged to the second type.
The best,
Fisherman
"That would imply that all wasn't well with the Cross marriage, Fish, if he felt unable to mention the murder for fear of arousing her suspicions!
Strange that he has not thought far enough ahead to work out what he will do if someone comes swinging round the school, yet he is thinking several murders ahead by giving a name calculated to hide his involvement from his wife."
To be perfectly honest, I think you are writing some pretty strange things, Robert! Then again, you seem to think the same about me ...
Robert, if Charles Cross was the Ripper, I think that he perhaps did not wish his family to find out that he had been involved in the inquest into one of the Ripper victims. Likewise, the less his working comrades knew about it, the better. This is my proposition, and I really donīt find it odd in any way.
As for calculating ahead, who said that he did NOT have plan for what he would do if somebody did come around the corner? It was not me, at any rate. And if the thought of killing out in the open street appealed to him, then what could he do but take his chances? All serial killers, intelligent or stupid, planning or not, are strange creatures, Robert.
Take a look at Paulīs entrance on the stage. That was something Cross could not have foreseen. We know that if he was the Ripper, he killed anyway, and then he adrdressed whatever problems that came along.
We may also observe that he may well have picked Nichols up in Whitechapel Road. No prostitute would have gone to Buckīs Row for trade, since only few men passed along it at that time in the morning. So, if we work from the idea that they hooked up in Whitechapel Road, you may take some comfort in the fact that he was not disorganized enough to kill her there. Instead Buckīs Row was opted for, a silent thoroughfare with a much better rumour than the adjacent, closer Winthrop Street. In that sense, we seemingly have a man who has little time to spare, and who optimizes things according to it.
The risks - huge ones - that came with the territory points to him representing one out of two types of killers: the type who fails to see the risks, or the type that does see them and kills anyway. My contention is that if Cross was the killer, he very clearly belonged to the second type.
The best,
Fisherman
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