Here´s something that was discussed peripherally some time back on another thread. I think it deserves a thread of it´s own, though, which is why I bring it back up again.
When Kelly was found, Dr Bond remarked that "the sheet to the right of the woman's head was much cut and saturated with blood, indicating that the face may have been covered with the sheet at the time of the attack"...
The last time over, it was suggested that Bond would have been wrong, and that the cuts to the fabric were due to the knife travelling into it below her as a result of the fierce wielding of the blade. I don´t think this holds much water, though. The reasons are two:
1.We know that ”the face was gashed in all directions”, from the report Bond made about Kelly. To me, that implies that if the blade really travelled down into the bedlinen and the matress as the killer cut, then we should expect to find the fabric cut at both sides of the head. This, though, was not the case: it was cut only to the right of her (between head and partition wall, that is).
2.The cuts through the linen would not have been situated in immediate proximity to her head. If the linen was folded over her face, and thereafter lifted and replaced on the bed, then we should expect to find the cuts commencing in an area some way to the left of the head and extending perhaps some two or three decimetres further out towards the wall. There would be an uncut area of perhaps about a decimetre in length in the place where the linen travelled up from the bed as he stretched it over the face. I think that making the assumption that Bond checked his theory by placing the linen back over her face again to establish the connection is very reasonable.
Another theory that have been put forward have gone along the line that Mary Kelly herself pulled the linen over her face in a somewhat pathetic attempt to free herself of the sight of what was coming.
Interesting though such a suggestion is, I feel that there are two things speaking against that too:
1.If she had the time to realize that she was threatened at knife-point, then why did she not cry out? The single, nowadays-debated ”Oh, murder!” outcry seems very sparse in such a situation.
2.If she actually did pull the sheet over her face from the outset, then surely she was not obliging enough to keep the fabric stretched over her face as her assailant cut her? And a stretch to the linen would have been called for, since it is very awkward to cut otherwise.
I think that the most probable solution is that the killer was the one who did the stretching and the cutting, just like Bond suggests. I really can´t see any other working explanation to it. And, of course, to me, all of this suggests that the Kelly slaying was perpetrated by someone who had close bonds with her.
All the best,
Fisherman
When Kelly was found, Dr Bond remarked that "the sheet to the right of the woman's head was much cut and saturated with blood, indicating that the face may have been covered with the sheet at the time of the attack"...
The last time over, it was suggested that Bond would have been wrong, and that the cuts to the fabric were due to the knife travelling into it below her as a result of the fierce wielding of the blade. I don´t think this holds much water, though. The reasons are two:
1.We know that ”the face was gashed in all directions”, from the report Bond made about Kelly. To me, that implies that if the blade really travelled down into the bedlinen and the matress as the killer cut, then we should expect to find the fabric cut at both sides of the head. This, though, was not the case: it was cut only to the right of her (between head and partition wall, that is).
2.The cuts through the linen would not have been situated in immediate proximity to her head. If the linen was folded over her face, and thereafter lifted and replaced on the bed, then we should expect to find the cuts commencing in an area some way to the left of the head and extending perhaps some two or three decimetres further out towards the wall. There would be an uncut area of perhaps about a decimetre in length in the place where the linen travelled up from the bed as he stretched it over the face. I think that making the assumption that Bond checked his theory by placing the linen back over her face again to establish the connection is very reasonable.
Another theory that have been put forward have gone along the line that Mary Kelly herself pulled the linen over her face in a somewhat pathetic attempt to free herself of the sight of what was coming.
Interesting though such a suggestion is, I feel that there are two things speaking against that too:
1.If she had the time to realize that she was threatened at knife-point, then why did she not cry out? The single, nowadays-debated ”Oh, murder!” outcry seems very sparse in such a situation.
2.If she actually did pull the sheet over her face from the outset, then surely she was not obliging enough to keep the fabric stretched over her face as her assailant cut her? And a stretch to the linen would have been called for, since it is very awkward to cut otherwise.
I think that the most probable solution is that the killer was the one who did the stretching and the cutting, just like Bond suggests. I really can´t see any other working explanation to it. And, of course, to me, all of this suggests that the Kelly slaying was perpetrated by someone who had close bonds with her.
All the best,
Fisherman
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