Could MJK have survived Miller's Court

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  • RivkahChaya
    replied
    Originally posted by RavenDarkendale View Post
    Could McCarthy, tired of waiting for his money and Mary perhaps unwilling to give him tricks in it's place, have murdered MJK himself
    For not paying the rent? What sort of motive is that, particularly for a vicious post-murder desecration, when he was perfectly within his rights to evict her.

    Unless you are positing some scenario where McCarthy is a pimp, with a large stable of women working for him, and this was a message to all the uncooperative ones-- "Keep working, Ripper or not, because you have more to fear from ME."

    I'm going to need something better than "Cool story, Dude," before I consider this. Unless it's the basis of your next novel, in which case, cool story, Dude.

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  • Cogidubnus
    replied
    Hi Dale

    You don't drive ME crazy at any event...your scenario's been in the back of my mind since day one...however, we have a minor stumbling block...evidence!

    All the best

    Dave

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  • RavenDarkendale
    replied
    Originally posted by andy1867 View Post
    Its not so much Kellys disregard for the rent arrears , as much as McCarthy's that bothers me somewhat...
    He seems to have allowed her to rack it up.....and then you read other landlords... or proprietors of lodging houses who...if you don't pay on the day...no bed sort of thing.....it just doesn't seem the norm to me..
    Regards
    Andy
    Exactly. It is the landlord allowing MJK to fall behind on the rent, then on the day the body was found, suddenly send someone to collect the rent. Or was it to discover the body?

    Interlude: I think the possibility of MJK not being that body is a fair bet.

    Now, let's go back to that it WAS MJK. Could McCarthy, tired of waiting for his money and Mary perhaps unwilling to give him tricks in it's place, have murdered MJK himself and sent his toady to collect the rent so someone would discover the body and when he was found in the area, he could prove he had been informed of the crime by Thomas Bowyer . Thus the criminal revisited the scene of the crime without suspicion,

    You might say, "Oh, so now you say McCarthy is the Ripper!" Bullfeathers! Perhaps the people who do not believe that there was a "lone knifer" are correct. McCarthy could have killed MJK, perhaps, in any case, she was not a victim of JtR.

    I drive you crazy, don't I?

    Raven Darkendale

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  • RavenDarkendale
    replied
    Originally posted by Tecs View Post
    Hi,

    Sherlock Holmes would of course disagree and say that everything must be considered and then as we all know, "when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truth."


    "He's the local oddball, it must be him."

    "But Sir two witnessess say he was the other side of town when the murder happened."

    "Don't care. they must have been mistaken. Got the identity wrong, or the day maybe." Sound familiar....

    What would Sherlock say?

    "One witness I'd agree with you Lestrade, but two independant people don't get the same thing wrong. No, Mary was alive after the doctors say the body was dead, ergo the body was not Mary. Or She was murdered much later than we think."

    Impossible = Maxwell and Lewis correct and Mary dead.

    So it all hinges on Maxwell and Lewis's evidence and I would argue that we would need a very good reason to just ignore them because it isn't comfortable.

    My ill fitting shoes are still a pair of shoes!

    regards
    Love it. Hard to think both either got the day wrong or the person wrong. It cannot be proven that Mary did not die in that room, but it does fall into the realm of possibility.

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  • DVV
    replied
    Not impossible, I admit. But Hutch's word isn't enough for me.

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  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by DVV View Post
    Did she really venture out at 2.00 ?
    Nein !
    If we are prepared to accept that Cox returned to the streets through the night, and why, then equally why deny that Kelly would?

    Leave a comment:


  • Sally
    replied
    Originally posted by andy1867 View Post
    Its not so much Kellys disregard for the rent arrears , as much as McCarthy's that bothers me somewhat...
    He seems to have allowed her to rack it up.....and then you read other landlords... or proprietors of lodging houses who...if you don't pay on the day...no bed sort of thing.....it just doesn't seem the norm to me..
    Regards
    Andy
    Hi Andy

    Yeah, it does seem a bit weird - at first glance. I think we should remember two things: McCarthy was a slum landlord with far bigger fish to fry than Kelly - would he have been concerned with an individual's rent arrears, considering that she had the means to earn money? And also that Kelly lived in the Court. Doubtless he saw most of the residents on a daily basis, they patronised his shop - good, reliable business. Perhaps it was better the devil you know and a calculated risk.

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  • Tecs
    replied
    Not exactly. If someone is murdered, the police look at the victim's immediate family and circle of acquaintances, and follow up on witness accounts of suspicious behavior in the area, plus known felons nearby who have committed similar crimes. When they have a plausible suspect, and some sort of objective evidence, their lieutenant doesn't say "What about the victim's grandmother?" and the detectives answer "She lives two states away, and we have no reason to believe she was in the area at the time." The lieutenant doesn't tell them to check all airlines and trains, and the victim's grandmother's credit cards, or verify the exact whereabouts of every single person in the city at the time of the murder, give or take two hours. That would be a waste of time. They don't make sure the governor of the state has an alibi, just in case some nut with a blog decides to come up with a conspiracy theory to attract readers.
    The first part of what you say is absolutely correct and of course is the way Police approach a problem. I think the last part about governers is a little off the mark, obviously when police are deducing which line of enquiry is correct they keep within realistic and sensible boundaries.

    That's why I've got no time for any nonsense in the MJK murder. But, two witnessess cannot be ignored. If they can, then forget everything Long, Lawende, Schwarz, Smith, Hutchinson etc etc said.

    regards,
    Last edited by Tecs; 09-30-2012, 05:13 PM.

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  • Tecs
    replied
    You know that Sherlock Holmes wasn't a real person, right?
    One of the problems with the internet is that you often can't gauge the timbre of a comment so I don't know if you are attempting to be sarcastic or informative, but for the record, yes, I am well aware that SH is a fictional creation.

    But, "he" has still contributed towards our society in such a way that we do have words such as "Holmesian" and "Holmseian deductions" and the fact that Holmes never existed doesn't affect the question of how he would approach a problem. Saying he's not real doesn't change the situation at all.

    regards,

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  • DVV
    replied
    Did she really venture out at 2.00 ?
    Nein !

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  • RivkahChaya
    replied
    Originally posted by andy1867 View Post
    Its not so much Kellys disregard for the rent arrears , as much as McCarthy's that bothers me somewhat...
    He seems to have allowed her to rack it up.....and then you read other landlords... or proprietors of lodging houses who...if you don't pay on the day...no bed sort of thing.....it just doesn't seem the norm to me..
    Regards
    Andy
    Which is why I still want to know whether there's any evidence he was trying repeatedly to collect before the murder, or that the amount was fixed and accounted before the murder.
    Originally posted by Tecs View Post
    Sherlock Holmes would of course disagree and say that everything must be considered and then as we all know, "when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truth."
    You know that Sherlock Holmes wasn't a real person, right?

    I think that police today also adopt a similar approach, ie look at everything then one by one whittle out the rubbish until we are left with the truth. Certainly they often crack murders by eliminating every possible person until the only one left is the killer.
    Not exactly. If someone is murdered, the police look at the victim's immediate family and circle of acquaintances, and follow up on witness accounts of suspicious behavior in the area, plus known felons nearby who have committed similar crimes. When they have a plausible suspect, and some sort of objective evidence, their lieutenant doesn't say "What about the victim's grandmother?" and the detectives answer "She lives two states away, and we have no reason to believe she was in the area at the time." The lieutenant doesn't tell them to check all airlines and trains, and the victim's grandmother's credit cards, or verify the exact whereabouts of every single person in the city at the time of the murder, give or take two hours. That would be a waste of time. They don't make sure the governor of the state has an alibi, just in case some nut with a blog decides to come up with a conspiracy theory to attract readers.

    The police have only so much time, and they have to use it wisely.

    Leave a comment:


  • andy1867
    replied
    Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
    Hi Andy,

    Mary rented that room, not Barnett, so when she rented it from McCarthy she must have told him how she made her living and intended to pay the rent due. We know that another Unfortunate in the same small courtyard did "street work", and I believe its possible that Elizabeth Prater resorted to some after her man left.

    Since the murders many women would have been reluctant to work the streets even if they had to...perhaps the circumstances that Fall warranted some lenience on their situation. How would it look if McCarthy had kicked out the next victim because of money owed?

    He was a bit of a slum landlord and amassed a fair bit of wealth, owning a few lodging houses around the East End eventually, and his reputation for being a fair and considerate landlord may have had a play in this situation as well.

    We see some Canonicals having to pay in advance each night....Mary wasnt a transient lodger, she rented by the week. Thats why Bowyer was sent "to see" if he could collect "some" rent Saturday morning...not because she was in arrears, because thats the day her rent for the next week would be due. Had he found her alive and still broke he would be sent back again next Saturday morning to try again.

    So she was being given weeks...not just days...to catch up.

    Cheers
    Thanks for the reply Michael...I can see your point...It just struck me as "lenient" for the harsh times they lived in
    Regards
    andy

    Leave a comment:


  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Originally posted by andy1867 View Post
    Its not so much Kellys disregard for the rent arrears , as much as McCarthy's that bothers me somewhat...
    He seems to have allowed her to rack it up.....and then you read other landlords... or proprietors of lodging houses who...if you don't pay on the day...no bed sort of thing.....it just doesn't seem the norm to me..
    Regards
    Andy
    Hi Andy,

    Mary rented that room, not Barnett, so when she rented it from McCarthy she must have told him how she made her living and intended to pay the rent due. We know that another Unfortunate in the same small courtyard did "street work", and I believe its possible that Elizabeth Prater resorted to some after her man left.

    Since the murders many women would have been reluctant to work the streets even if they had to...perhaps the circumstances that Fall warranted some lenience on their situation. How would it look if McCarthy had kicked out the next victim because of money owed?

    He was a bit of a slum landlord and amassed a fair bit of wealth, owning a few lodging houses around the East End eventually, and his reputation for being a fair and considerate landlord may have had a play in this situation as well.

    We see some Canonicals having to pay in advance each night....Mary wasnt a transient lodger, she rented by the week. Thats why Bowyer was sent "to see" if he could collect "some" rent Friday morning...not because she was in arrears, because thats the day her rent for the next week would be due. Had he found her alive and still broke he would be sent back again next Friday morning to try again.

    So she was being given weeks...not just days...to catch up.

    Cheers
    Last edited by Michael W Richards; 09-30-2012, 05:03 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Tecs
    replied
    It's not really a question of ruling it out. The idea isn't to come up with every single possible theory, o matter how implausible, then look for obscure bits of evidence to rule out each one. It's to look for the most plausible scenario that explains all the facts, then double-check it, to make sure there isn't a fact we missed, a new fact that has come to light, or that there isn't something even more plausible.

    Hi,

    Sherlock Holmes would of course disagree and say that everything must be considered and then as we all know, "when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truth."

    I think that police today also adopt a similar approach, ie look at everything then one by one whittle out the rubbish until we are left with the truth. Certainly they often crack murders by eliminating every possible person until the only one left is the killer. When they stray from this approach and stick with their first thoughts regardless of what evidence comes forwards they often go wrong eg Stefan Kischko (apologies if spelt incorrectly), Colin Stagg, Barry George maybe?

    "He's the local oddball, it must be him."

    "But Sir two witnessess say he was the other side of town when the murder happened."

    "Don't care. they must have been mistaken. Got the identity wrong, or the day maybe." Sound familiar....

    What would Sherlock say?

    "One witness I'd agree with you Lestrade, but two independant people don't get the same thing wrong. No, Mary was alive after the doctors say the body was dead, ergo the body was not Mary. Or She was murdered much later than we think."

    Impossible = Maxwell and Lewis correct and Mary dead.

    So it all hinges on Maxwell and Lewis's evidence and I would argue that we would need a very good reason to just ignore them because it isn't comfortable.

    My ill fitting shoes are still a pair of shoes!

    regards
    Last edited by Tecs; 09-30-2012, 04:59 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • richardnunweek
    replied
    Hi Michael,
    Must agree with you, on the mental state of Kelly that night, hardly the actions of a young lady with a lot on her mind, as you point out, to venture out again at 2am, on the dangerous streets, when it was unlikely she would meet any desirable suitor, and even possibly the killer, would be so out of character, for someone so paranoid.
    And yet according to Hutchinson she did precisely that , and what's more invited someone who was to anyone , of suspicious nature, back to her room..
    No way unless it was premeditated.
    Regards Richard.

    Leave a comment:

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