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Was Mary Kelly killed in daylight hours.?

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  • Abby Normal
    replied
    Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
    Hello Darryl.
    Any ability to do what you suggest would require Dr Phillips to be an entomologist. I have never read anywhere that he knew entomology. It isn't the kind of experience that comes with being a surgeon.
    hey wick
    isn't an entomologist someone who is an expert in Ents? you know the walking trees in Middle Earth?LOL!


    but seriously, you would nt need to be an entomologist to see insects, but to Daryls point, I doubt there are any flies or insects still around in November.

    Leave a comment:


  • GUT
    replied
    Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
    McCarthy, .....an entomologist?
    Not that I know of, but it doesn't stop him drawing conclusions based on observation, even if he's wrong.

    Leave a comment:


  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by GUT View Post
    I think Darryl was referring to McCarthy,and his reported statement that MJK was killed hours before the sightings, not Phillips
    McCarthy, .....an entomologist?

    Leave a comment:


  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by David Orsam View Post

    The police understood the benefits of photographing the writing but there was a counter argument that waiting for the photographer and/or allowing the writing to be photographed could lead to a riot.
    There never was a satisfactory argument to justify the destruction of evidence before a trial in a murder case. The 19th century version of "common sense" differs markedly from our understanding today.

    Well you know, that would never happen today, because today we put evidence far ahead of any potential social unrest.
    This situation has nothing to do with any "unhistorical" event, but the application of "common sense".
    The incident demonstrates just how different the application of that virtue was in the late 19th century police.

    Just because something makes sense to us today does not automatically mean the police in the 19th century took the same view.

    So, lets put your "common sense" escape clause aside, and answer my question.
    What difference would it have made to the investigation if Phillips had moved a chair or an arm before the photographer came in to the room?

    Leave a comment:


  • GUT
    replied
    Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
    Hello Darryl.
    Any ability to do what you suggest would require Dr Phillips to be an entomologist. I have never read anywhere that he knew entomology. It isn't the kind of experience that comes with being a surgeon.
    I think Darryl was referring to McCarthy,and his reported statement that MJK was killed hours before the sightings, not Phillips

    Leave a comment:


  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by Darryl Kenyon View Post
    I know this wasn't mentioned at the time but i just wonder when he peered through the window if there was any insect activity round the body, flies etc. Which may have made him conclude, rightly or wrongly that she had been dead for a few hours.
    Hello Darryl.
    Any ability to do what you suggest would require Dr Phillips to be an entomologist. I have never read anywhere that he knew entomology. It isn't the kind of experience that comes with being a surgeon.

    Leave a comment:


  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by Simon Wood View Post

    No.

    You'll have to accept [or not] the word of the person who told me.

    I have no reason to doubt them, and no wish betray a confidence.

    Leave it there, please.
    Well I can tell you, Simon, that I certainly do not accept "the word" of the person who supposedly told you (whatever "the word" means) and I have many reasons to doubt them. In fact, it sounds like you have been sold a complete load of cobblers.

    Leave a comment:


  • Simon Wood
    replied
    Hi David,

    No.

    You'll have to accept [or not] the word of the person who told me.

    I have no reason to doubt them, and no wish betray a confidence.

    Leave it there, please.

    Regards,

    Simon

    Leave a comment:


  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by Simon Wood View Post
    I know this may be hard for you to comprehend, but you are wrong.
    Well it certainly is hard for me to comprehend from that response, impossible in fact - because you haven't even begun to explain why I might be wrong.

    Have you taken the opportunity to explain it in the second revision of your book?

    Leave a comment:


  • Simon Wood
    replied
    Hi David,

    I know this may be hard for you to comprehend, but you are wrong.

    Regards,

    Simon

    Leave a comment:


  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by Simon Wood View Post
    What makes you think someone was pulling my leg?
    We've moved on from McCarthy then have we?

    Why do I think someone was pulling your leg? Only, Simon, because no-one alive has any first hand knowledge of Special Branch operations from 1888 so anyone who claims special knowledge of them from 1888, especially in the context of Mary Kelly's murder, is obviously having you on.

    Leave a comment:


  • Simon Wood
    replied
    Hi David,

    What makes you think someone was pulling my leg?

    Regards,

    Simon

    Leave a comment:


  • Darryl Kenyon
    replied
    Originally posted by Simon Wood View Post
    Hi David,

    George Bagster Phillips wins the Doctor of the Century Award if he was able to peek through a broken window into a darkened room and conclude that the deceased had been dead "some five or six hours."

    Regards,

    Simon
    I know this wasn't mentioned at the time but i just wonder when he peered through the window if there was any insect activity round the body, flies etc. Which may have made him conclude, rightly or wrongly that she had been dead for a few hours.

    Leave a comment:


  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Originally posted by David Orsam View Post
    Why do you say that Simon? Do you mean that the cry of murder should have woken him up? Both people who claimed to hear it were already awake. No-one said it woke them up.

    Perhaps you are thinking that the "Special Branch operation" which you tell us about (so briefly) in your book should have woken him up. Or perhaps you have finally worked out that someone was pulling your leg.
    Maybe McCarthy had heard similar exclamations from Mary in the middle of the night, maybe he deduced that the 2 stories combined help one identify the geographical source of the sound, which would be right around Marys door within the courtyard....(which would be logical and therefore deemed highly speculative by this crowd ), maybe Mary often voiced her disappointment using that specific phrase.

    It seems that logic and reason has long been abandoned here.

    Leave a comment:


  • David Orsam
    replied
    Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
    If the City police could attempt to preserve the graffiti, then so could the Met.
    They didn't, yet common sense would dictate that was the best strategy.
    So much for you assuming common sense was their guide.

    The Met had different priorities not always guided by our modern understanding of common sense.
    All that the graffiti example shows, Jon, is that you would be wrong to claim that the idea of photographing the writing was unhistorical.

    The police understood the benefits of photographing the writing but there was a counter argument that waiting for the photographer and/or allowing the writing to be photographed could lead to a riot.

    So unless you can show that there was some kind of counter argument on the afternoon of 9 November that required Dr Phillips to urgently commence his examination before the photographer started taking pictures, the graffiti example gets you nowhere.

    Leave a comment:

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