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Mary Jane was murdered between 09.00 and 10.30 am
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
It does if it helps stoke up the wood and embers, like why you use lighter fuel to help stoke a fire back up. look obviously the ripper burnt the clothes, either for light and or warmth and or spite. If I had to pick the main reason, it would be light so he could see better what he was doing. The ripper was a post mortem type serial killer who got off on what his knife could do to the female body, so the extra light to see his handiwork is the obvious conclusion.And he took away body parts for trophys-things he can LOOK at and relive the fantasy. He was stoking that fire up more likely to see better.Best wishes,
Tristan
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Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
I went through the case from beginning to end, all what he did to his wife and we all debated the mutilations, I came to the conclusion it's a stretch to see this man responsible for the Whitechapel Murders.
I think the most logical course is to take away opinions of the ripper would have done this or that and not done this or that, and see what the medical evidence suggests. It suggests a clear similarity in the way Bury cut open his wife's privates and cut through her back passage area. There are a range of wounds on her abdomen that serve no purpose other than Bury's pleasure in cutting and stabbing. If you do a point by point comparison, the injuries are far more ripper like than say Alice McKenzie, but I would imagine a lot of people who discount Ellen Bury also count McKenzie. It is assumed the ripper was a strangler. How is it Bury hits on what is a near identical manner of strangulation to that used on Rose Mylett when he was living a mile awy from that location? To effect that method Brownfield thought the killer had stood a little to the left and crossed his hands so as the cord make did not make full circle with a gap on the left. Well Bury must have also stood a little to the left and crossed his hands to leave a gap of almost two inches on the left side of the neck. I may not have the great insight of the professional on here but I can see that the combination of near identical method, location, Bury's association with prostitues and his all round character put him bang in the firing line for that murder.
Why do not of the top offcials mention Bury? Is it possible for an entire police force to believe the wrong thing while a tiny minority have the right answer? Of course we know that is possible because it has happened in the past. Some detectives at SY clearly thought Bury was the ripper.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
I've never understood that conclusion.
all things considered, hes easily one of the least suspects, if not THE least suspect."Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
why not? he was a known killer of a woman ..via knife no less, a contemp police person of interest, lived in the area, had a history of violence toward females, known association with prostitutes , his departures coincides with the end of murders of the c5, and then theres the similar post mortem mutilation and all the peripheral weird stuff like writing on his home in dundee.
all things considered, hes easily one of the least suspects, if not THE least suspect.
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Originally posted by Losmandris View Post
I have always wondered what happened to the blankets/blanket in the room? Was it listed in the inventory? For MJK to be just in her chemise to me suggests either the room was warm because of the fire or she had a decent blanket.
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I would think that anyone putting forth any name as a likely suspect candidate needs to show that the person had the particular deviant aspects in his crimes like abdominal mutilation and organ removal suggests. Its probably a reason why even most of the contemporary investigators couldnt bring themselves to add Martha Tabram to the presumed Canonical kill list. The crime lacked the specificity that is obvious there with Polly and then carried on with Annie. Within 2 weeks of each other. The facts relating to those murders, and in particular Annie murder can offer some real insight into that killers true motivations, if people would use what can be learned in those 2 murders they might not be as anxious to suggest anyone whose crimes do not have those very specific elements.
Ive seen all this serial killer philosophizing about how some killers change their spots so they can use that as a vehicle to add suspects or victims to the proposed Ripper tally that are not obviously of the same ilk. Fine. But those 2 murders show almost identical methods, throat cuts, they were both either inebriated or ill, and the focus on the abdominal mutilation after the throat cuts is very, very, unique. Always wondered why people dont learn anything from those murders, illustrated by the fact they include Liz Stride in the same killers tally despite NONE of those unique characteristics being present. Why? Because it was during that same Fall and in the same neighbourhood?
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Originally posted by Michael W Richards View PostIve seen all this serial killer philosophizing about how some killers change their spots so they can use that as a vehicle to add suspects or victims to the proposed Ripper tally that are not obviously of the same ilk. Fine. But those 2 murders show almost identical methods, throat cuts, they were both either inebriated or ill, and the focus on the abdominal mutilation after the throat cuts is very, very, unique. Always wondered why people dont learn anything from those murders, illustrated by the fact they include Liz Stride in the same killers tally despite NONE of those unique characteristics being present. Why? Because it was during that same Fall and in the same neighbourhood?
On Liz Stride, I'll explain why I generally count her as a victim of the Whitechapel murderer (WM). I believe there are more than five victims of the WM and do think there was learning from his early victims that lead to the process he used across the canonical 5. But that's a conversation for another day. For now, I'll stick with the C5 and Liz Stride.
In fact I split the C5 into two groups - those murders where the killer was interrupted and those where he wasn't. I think Nicholls and Stride were both examples of the murderer being interrupted soon after the murder and hence the victims suffered little if any mutilations. Then Chapmen, Eddowes and Kelly are the group where the murderer had time to mutilate the bodies and he did so.
Nicholls and Stride were both killed at sites close to each other and the other murder sites, in the early hours of the morning, both with their throats cut in similar fashion to the other three victims. In particular with Stride, some 15 minutes walk away another murder was committed a little later, - only this time he was not interrupted and he also went onto mutilate the victim. We cannot be sure, of course, but I think on the balance of probabilities, given the above, Stride was more likely a victim of the WM than not.
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Originally posted by Losmandris View Post
I have always wondered what happened to the blankets/blanket in the room? Was it listed in the inventory? For MJK to be just in her chemise to me suggests either the room was warm because of the fire or she had a decent blanket.
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Originally posted by etenguy View Post
Hi Michael
On Liz Stride, I'll explain why I generally count her as a victim of the Whitechapel murderer (WM). I believe there are more than five victims of the WM and do think there was learning from his early victims that lead to the process he used across the canonical 5. But that's a conversation for another day. For now, I'll stick with the C5 and Liz Stride.
In fact I split the C5 into two groups - those murders where the killer was interrupted and those where he wasn't. I think Nicholls and Stride were both examples of the murderer being interrupted soon after the murder and hence the victims suffered little if any mutilations. Then Chapmen, Eddowes and Kelly are the group where the murderer had time to mutilate the bodies and he did so.
Nicholls and Stride were both killed at sites close to each other and the other murder sites, in the early hours of the morning, both with their throats cut in similar fashion to the other three victims. In particular with Stride, some 15 minutes walk away another murder was committed a little later, - only this time he was not interrupted and he also went onto mutilate the victim. We cannot be sure, of course, but I think on the balance of probabilities, given the above, Stride was more likely a victim of the WM than not.
So I agree, there is some support for an interruption with Polly in the existing evidence. Now with Liz, the reason anyone suggests an interruption there is not because the evidence suggests it....not because anyone saw anyone fleeing the scene, not because there is evidence that abdominal mutilations would be the next step taken....there is no evidence of any of that. The reason for suggesting Liz's killer was interrupted? Because the lack of any real Ripper evidence there, the geographical component, and the victim profile...women who, at some point, solicited. Then Kate is cited because her murder does resemble the first 2, and the argument is that it appears he was out killing on that night. But he NEVER killed anyone within city limits, and ONLY Liz is devoid of the stronger and oft repeated Ripper type of injuries. And Liz had been getting steady work, as recently as earlier that day...she did not have a compelling need to solicit, and certainly not with flowers and cachous as accoutrements. And she was sober and healthy.
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Originally posted by Aethelwulf View Post
Hi Abby, this is what I was talking about, the other extreme compared to totally OTT with a suspect - dismissing everything."Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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Originally posted by Aethelwulf View Post
Hi Abby, this is what I was talking about, the other extreme compared to totally OTT with a suspect - dismissing everything.
How popular is Bury as a suspect?, he's hardly at the top of the list.
If the majority of people had Bury as their suspect you might have a case, but as it sits his candidacy is at best a minority view. Even Lech, or Maybrick may be more popular than Bury (just as guess).
What we do know is a majority of people do not take Bury to be their preferred suspect, so perhaps it's your own minority view that needs to be reassessed?Regards, Jon S.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
Fair enough. but look at it from the other side.
How popular is Bury as a suspect?, he's hardly at the top of the list.
If the majority of people had Bury as their suspect you might have a case, but as it sits his candidacy is at best a minority view. Even Lech, or Maybrick may be more popular than Bury (just as guess).
What we do know is a majority of people do not take Bury to be their preferred suspect, so perhaps it's your own minority view that needs to be reassessed?
When you say popular, do you mean with the general public? If so, I would argue how popular a suspect is has little to do with how strong a suspect is. I would say that the 6 most popular suspects are Kosminski, Lech, James Maybrick, Sickert, Tumblety, and Holmes, and the main reason that Kos is so popular is because of the high profile but highly flawed DNA test.
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Originally posted by Lewis C View Post
Hi Jon,
When you say popular, do you mean with the general public? If so, I would argue how popular a suspect is has little to do with how strong a suspect is. I would say that the 6 most popular suspects are Kosminski, Lech, James Maybrick, Sickert, Tumblety, and Holmes, and the main reason that Kos is so popular is because of the high profile but highly flawed DNA test.Last edited by Aethelwulf; 08-30-2023, 07:04 AM.
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