I'm aware of the poor girl that was strangled outside Fougeres. The choke-hold is a really good point, and it's certainly possible that the killer used that hold. However it does look as if Chapman was strangled in a more conventional manner.
My point about the noise is this: the Ripper killed in the open air on urban streets. It doesn't sound like his victims made amy noise at all, and we know that no one in Buck's Row heard a sound. But noise in the open air is not the same as noise in a closed room with a wooden floor. I think Our Boy is very careful about noise as witnessed by the lack of commotion during the other murders. I'm old enough to remember ricketty iron or wooden beds. They creaked, they grated, they clunked. A struggle on a bed like that would kick up a hell of a row.
But noise or not, choke-holds or not, the fact remains he killed her on the bed at the far side of the room when it had to have been easier to kill her in the middle of the room where there was more space and less opportunity for noise. I am sticking to my guns, he killed her there because it was convenient for him to do so. He waited until she was in bed. The murder site of MJK, to me, tells us a (tiny) bit more about the killer than the other murder sites. I do think he was shorter than she was. It's the only thing that makes sense to me. Otherwise it's safer to kill her in the room where he's got way more control over the situation.
PS, If he was shorter than her, I wonder why he chose her as a victim. I don't think it's likely that he would have gone after a woman he didn't think he could control completely. So (sticking to yet more of my guns) I think he knew her and had other personal reasons for killing her over and above his inclination to kill and mutilate women.
My point about the noise is this: the Ripper killed in the open air on urban streets. It doesn't sound like his victims made amy noise at all, and we know that no one in Buck's Row heard a sound. But noise in the open air is not the same as noise in a closed room with a wooden floor. I think Our Boy is very careful about noise as witnessed by the lack of commotion during the other murders. I'm old enough to remember ricketty iron or wooden beds. They creaked, they grated, they clunked. A struggle on a bed like that would kick up a hell of a row.
But noise or not, choke-holds or not, the fact remains he killed her on the bed at the far side of the room when it had to have been easier to kill her in the middle of the room where there was more space and less opportunity for noise. I am sticking to my guns, he killed her there because it was convenient for him to do so. He waited until she was in bed. The murder site of MJK, to me, tells us a (tiny) bit more about the killer than the other murder sites. I do think he was shorter than she was. It's the only thing that makes sense to me. Otherwise it's safer to kill her in the room where he's got way more control over the situation.
PS, If he was shorter than her, I wonder why he chose her as a victim. I don't think it's likely that he would have gone after a woman he didn't think he could control completely. So (sticking to yet more of my guns) I think he knew her and had other personal reasons for killing her over and above his inclination to kill and mutilate women.
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