Sam writes:
" I think that Bond noticed knife-cuts in the blood-soaked undersheet at the top right-hand corner of the bed, and misinterpreted what he saw."
Sam, I canīt for the life of me understand why it would lead Bond to a misinterpretation if the cuts were in the undersheet? It was the only sheet apparently around in the scenery that the Ripper left us with. Kelly was lying on it, and in the area between her head and the partition wall, it was much bloodsoaked and cut. Bondīs contention was that the cuts owed to the Ripper having pulled the sheet over Kellys face as he cut it. From that statement we can deduce that the cuts were NOT in the area immediately next to Kellys head, but instead some distance away - so far away, in fact, that if one lifted the sheet in the top corned closest to the wall and pulled it back over Kelly, then the cut area would end up over her face.
The corresponding distance in this case would have been one of the two pointers Bond used to make his statement.
The other one would have been that the mattress underneath the cut area of the undersheet was NOT cut in a fashion that corresponded with the cuts in the sheet. In fact, it was probably not cut there at all.
Neither of these points are pressed in Bondīs report, but logically they must have been what led him to his deduction. Even if - and I donīt recommend it! - we allow ourselves to theorize that a man of Bonds experience for some reason did not check the mattress for corresponding cuts, we are still left with the fact that the cuts in the sheet would NOT let themselves be interpreted as having been made when the sheet was over Kellys face UNLESS the distance between her head and the cut area matched. And if they did, then the cut area would have been positioned a fair distance from Kellys face. As she lay on the sheet, and as the killer must have wrapped it over her, it goes without saying that the area close to her head would have gone undamaged by the blade. Accepting that the diametre of a female head is roughly about 20 centimetres, we are faced with a probable distance between head and sheet cuts of about 20-25 centimetres. And when we find a woman lying with a carved-up face in a bed, plus an undersheet that is undamaged (as far as we know) at the part close to her head, whereas it is much cut and bloodied at an area some 20-25 centimetres to the the side of her - and ONLY to the one side, mind you! - then I think it is about time to give Bond recognition for what he deducted.
In your reasoning, Sam - and I am a very big fan of your reasoning in very nearly all cases - I see no rational explanation to WHY you choose to regard Bonds deduction as a tediously repeated obvious mistake. I only see a preconceived wiew that a killer would not do a thing like this. And that is going about it the wrong way altogether, if you take my meaning. Although it is very unprobable that Mother Teresa would burn her own church down, when you find her standing beside the smoking ruins with a used match in her hand it is OK - and wise - to look for alternative scenarios. But it is not OK to say that since it would be totally unexpected for her to do such a thing, she simply must be innocent.
The best,
Fisherman
" I think that Bond noticed knife-cuts in the blood-soaked undersheet at the top right-hand corner of the bed, and misinterpreted what he saw."
Sam, I canīt for the life of me understand why it would lead Bond to a misinterpretation if the cuts were in the undersheet? It was the only sheet apparently around in the scenery that the Ripper left us with. Kelly was lying on it, and in the area between her head and the partition wall, it was much bloodsoaked and cut. Bondīs contention was that the cuts owed to the Ripper having pulled the sheet over Kellys face as he cut it. From that statement we can deduce that the cuts were NOT in the area immediately next to Kellys head, but instead some distance away - so far away, in fact, that if one lifted the sheet in the top corned closest to the wall and pulled it back over Kelly, then the cut area would end up over her face.
The corresponding distance in this case would have been one of the two pointers Bond used to make his statement.
The other one would have been that the mattress underneath the cut area of the undersheet was NOT cut in a fashion that corresponded with the cuts in the sheet. In fact, it was probably not cut there at all.
Neither of these points are pressed in Bondīs report, but logically they must have been what led him to his deduction. Even if - and I donīt recommend it! - we allow ourselves to theorize that a man of Bonds experience for some reason did not check the mattress for corresponding cuts, we are still left with the fact that the cuts in the sheet would NOT let themselves be interpreted as having been made when the sheet was over Kellys face UNLESS the distance between her head and the cut area matched. And if they did, then the cut area would have been positioned a fair distance from Kellys face. As she lay on the sheet, and as the killer must have wrapped it over her, it goes without saying that the area close to her head would have gone undamaged by the blade. Accepting that the diametre of a female head is roughly about 20 centimetres, we are faced with a probable distance between head and sheet cuts of about 20-25 centimetres. And when we find a woman lying with a carved-up face in a bed, plus an undersheet that is undamaged (as far as we know) at the part close to her head, whereas it is much cut and bloodied at an area some 20-25 centimetres to the the side of her - and ONLY to the one side, mind you! - then I think it is about time to give Bond recognition for what he deducted.
In your reasoning, Sam - and I am a very big fan of your reasoning in very nearly all cases - I see no rational explanation to WHY you choose to regard Bonds deduction as a tediously repeated obvious mistake. I only see a preconceived wiew that a killer would not do a thing like this. And that is going about it the wrong way altogether, if you take my meaning. Although it is very unprobable that Mother Teresa would burn her own church down, when you find her standing beside the smoking ruins with a used match in her hand it is OK - and wise - to look for alternative scenarios. But it is not OK to say that since it would be totally unexpected for her to do such a thing, she simply must be innocent.
The best,
Fisherman
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