Originally posted by Fisherman
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Polly's Wounds: What were they like?
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Originally posted by Joshua Rogan View Post
Erm....isn't that coroner Baxter giving his own version of Llewellyn's view?
Nah, just kidding - my mistake (whopper type). It is Baxter and it is well before he summed up the Nichols murder, saying that Dr Llewellyn seems to incline etc, etc.
Any which way, we can here see that Lewellyn seems to have kept to his notion throughout, something that Helson was not happy about. It seems there were far-reaching efforts to sway Llewellyn, but he stood his ground.
Thanks for pointing the blunder out, Joshua!
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I don't see any real obstacles assuming that the mutilations in a few cases were conducted while the victim was semi or fully unconscious. Nobody drops dead by having their throat cut,.. they bleed, lungs gather fluids, brain has oxygen deprivation, blood arterial volume reduces..passes out, dies. The murders outdoors suggest that the killer was cognizant of the urgency required, he didn't have time to wait for death.
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Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
But anyone who cut up animals would probably not know where the organs were located or how to extract them from a human in quick timeKind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by FishermanAnd the intestines are referred to as loose tissues, medicallyKind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostFirst I've heard of it - there is such a thing as loose connective tissue (wobbly stuff like fat), but "loose tissue" isn't a term that I recognise. Besides, the intestines are organs and, whilst they may also be referred to as "viscera", I can't imagine that any medical practitioner would refer to them as mere tissues, loose or otherwise.
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostThe organs are situated in pretty much the same locations in all mammals. Even if they weren't, once the intestines were heaved out of the way, it wouldn't take long to find them, especially in someone as slight as Catherine Eddowes. The relevant part of her abdomen would have been less than a foot square, so we're hardly dealing with a needle/haystack situation.
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Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
Staying with Chapman, I also have to question as to how many people from the butchery trade would know about a uterus in a female, or how it works, let alone be able to find it and remove it along with the fallopian tubes attached, with some precision, and why would someone want to take it ? Doesn't make sense, no plausible explanation, and only adds to my belief the killer did not remove these organs.
www.trevormarriott.co.uk
Let's admit that serial killers do not define "sense" the way we do.
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Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
Staying with Chapman, I also have to question as to how many people from the butchery trade would know about a uterus in a female, or how it works, let alone be able to find it and remove it along with the fallopian tubes attached, with some precision, and why would someone want to take it ? Doesn't make sense, no plausible explanation, and only adds to my belief the killer did not remove these organs.
www.trevormarriott.co.uk
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Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
What you or I think about the act is irrelevant Trevor, what a killer, someone who has mental illness, thinks about it is important. The explanation might just be he wanted it. I believe the evidence the women were found already missing these pieces is incontrovertible, but in Marys case her scattered remains were placed into a box and later reassembled. Other than the inventory list of anatomy left around the room, we really only have Bonds word that the heart was the item missing, if any at all.
The analagy of comparing and playing modern day serial killers against one 130 years ago doesn't work, modern day serial killers are much more knowledgeable. so many things have changed.
I wonder if you surveyed 100 males today and asked where in the female body the uterus is to be found and what it looks like I wonder how many would know?
So how many back in 1888 would know where it is located, or have ever heard of it.
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Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
What you or I think about the act is irrelevant Trevor, what a killer, someone who has mental illness, thinks about it is important. The explanation might just be he wanted it. I believe the evidence the women were found already missing these pieces is incontrovertible, but in Marys case her scattered remains were placed into a box and later reassembled. Other than the inventory list of anatomy left around the room, we really only have Bonds word that the heart was the item missing, if any at all.
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Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
Staying with Chapman, I also have to question as to how many people from the butchery trade would know about a uterus in a female
Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostIt's in the pelvis, at the other end of the vagina, just like it is in every other mammal.
I will give you credit for trying to smooth over the cracks that there are in the killer removing the organs theory, but the facts against that are there to speak for themselves.
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Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
But 130 years ago would you have known what it looks like, where it is located
Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostLike I said, Trevor - the uterus is in the pelvis at the other end of the vagina, where it's always been. Cutting it out is not drastically different from cutting a head of cabbage from its stem, albeit a cabbage-stalk is tougher to cut through.
www.trevormarriott.co.uk
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