Originally posted by lynn cates
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Kelly's Killer
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Originally posted by Errata View PostWell, isn't someone statistically far more likely to be killed by a one off than a serial killer? Shouldn't the assumption be that every murder victim is a solitary kill and let a preponderance of evidence put them in as a victim of a serial killer?
To be fair, the police at the time did look at each murder individually and they did investigate the men who were known to have associated with each victim. This is the way they had always worked and they didn't have the kind of experience in 1888 that might otherwise have led them to an 'assumption' that they were dealing with a phenomenon that would in the dim and distant future be called serial murder. Today, the police might be expected to fall into such a trap, but I still feel that if these murders had been committed over the last few weeks in a similarly small area, a serial killer would be behind most if not all of them. Unsolved murders like these have always been rare, no matter how many times we have heard people claiming they were ten a penny in that particular time and place.
I doubt the police back then were thrilled at the prospect of having to find a veritable needle in a haystack, ie if this was in fact a complete stranger preying on one unfortunate after another just for his jollies, as opposed to being able to haul in abusive partner after abusive partner and get relatively easy convictions.
I do wonder sometimes how much more connective tissue some people want to see before conceding that the murders of Chapman, Eddowes and Kelly (at the very least) are terribly unlikely to have been the work of anyone but the individual who murdered Nichols. So soon after Nichols, statistically (to use your own word) one would not expect to see one similar but one-off murder, let alone three or more.
Time and place is everything here. The sheer closeness of these murders would be quite astonishing if unconnected.
Love,
Caz
X"Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov
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monkeying around
Hello Caroline. Well I should like to see a good bit more connective tissue than I have seen until now.
(By the way, what counts as closeness? 1 mile? 2 miles? 5?)
If you reread Mr. Evans' "Letters from Hell" you begin to get a feel for the power of persuasion--monkey see, monkey do. No letters; 1 letter; next, a deluge.
Cheers.
LC
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Originally posted by lynn cates View PostHello Caroline. Well I should like to see a good bit more connective tissue than I have seen until now.
(By the way, what counts as closeness? 1 mile? 2 miles? 5?)
If you reread Mr. Evans' "Letters from Hell" you begin to get a feel for the power of persuasion--monkey see, monkey do. No letters; 1 letter; next, a deluge.
Cheers.
LC
Do you have any evidence that the letters were written by monkeys?
ChrisChristopher T. George
Organizer, RipperCon #JacktheRipper-#True Crime Conference
just held in Baltimore, April 7-8, 2018.
For information about RipperCon, go to http://rippercon.com/
RipperCon 2018 talks can now be heard at http://www.casebook.org/podcast/
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Originally posted by Fleetwood Mac View PostStride tells us he was instinctive and his desire to kill rendered his desire to escape of little consequence.
But, I suppose you have to factor in the value placed upon life in those times. Today, life is cheap in some countries with serious poverty issues. Perhaps in those days, a life at sea, for example, wasn't too far removed from a life in prison; and it follows thus any fully-functioning, non-lunatic, with a desire to kill, from the lower working classes, would have taken that risk. Although hanging is a different matter.
Why, if he was a sailor, would he only kill in the busiest city in the world?
Stories about the Whitechapel murders were known in every country. It was world news. If any similar murders occured anywhere else, and some did, they would automatically become headlines.
The counter-argument against the sailor is that very point.
He certainly took huge risks, which would suggest to me that he had little to lose or he was a lunatic.
This kind of lunacy might not be readily observable in his day-to-day movements, but all murderers take risks, sane or not.
Regards, Jon S.Regards, Jon S.
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Prime Suspect
Christopher T. George
Organizer, RipperCon #JacktheRipper-#True Crime Conference
just held in Baltimore, April 7-8, 2018.
For information about RipperCon, go to http://rippercon.com/
RipperCon 2018 talks can now be heard at http://www.casebook.org/podcast/
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