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  • #76
    Hi,
    Lets give alternative solutions for certain events.
    A] The cry of ''Oh Murder''.[ Kelly awakening from a nightmare, that she was being murdered. Mrs Prater inquest statement, and as Kit Watkins informant Lottie stated]
    B] Kelly lit the fire upon wakening.the spout of the kettle fell to bits because she was murdered whilst boiling water.
    C] Kelly rolled up the bankets into a bed roll, which can be seen on the bed, which would imply she did this in the morning.
    D] Maurice Lewis account of Kelly returning with Milk. would give credence, to the boiling water factor.
    E] The account apparently from Maxwell[ I read over 40 years ago] ''Her eyes looked queer, as if suffering from a cold'' would give backing to Hutchinson's account of hearing Kelly say ''Oh I have lost my handkerchief''.
    F] If all of this seems unlikely..The police believed the murder was committed in daylight.The Times November 12th, and that the killer burnt named items because they were bloodstained..Reason for fire??.
    Regards Richard.

    Comment


    • #77
      Originally posted by richardnunweek View Post
      Hi,
      Lets give alternative solutions for certain events.
      A] The cry of ''Oh Murder''.[ Kelly awakening from a nightmare, that she was being murdered. Mrs Prater inquest statement, and as Kit Watkins informant Lottie stated]
      B] Kelly lit the fire upon wakening.the spout of the kettle fell to bits because she was murdered whilst boiling water.
      C] Kelly rolled up the bankets into a bed roll, which can be seen on the bed, which would imply she did this in the morning.
      D] Maurice Lewis account of Kelly returning with Milk. would give credence, to the boiling water factor.
      E] The account apparently from Maxwell[ I read over 40 years ago] ''Her eyes looked queer, as if suffering from a cold'' would give backing to Hutchinson's account of hearing Kelly say ''Oh I have lost my handkerchief''.
      F] If all of this seems unlikely..The police believed the murder was committed in daylight.The Times November 12th, and that the killer burnt named items because they were bloodstained..Reason for fire??.
      Regards Richard.
      hi Richard

      yes those all seem logical, reasonable alternatives; although I do not necessarily agree with them.

      I fear they will not be seen as such by some, who do not do reasonable or logical.

      regards

      Steve

      Comment


      • #78
        Originally posted by Pierre View Post

        So therefore, we can not use the non existing statements of a dead police investigator to conclude who lit the fire.
        And yet that is exactly what you did in your first post.

        Comment


        • #79
          Originally posted by Azarna View Post
          And yet that is exactly what you did in your first post.
          No. It is a statement about burning of clothes. Read what I am writing.

          Comment


          • #80
            Originally posted by Elamarna View Post
            hi Richard

            yes those all seem logical, reasonable alternatives; although I do not necessarily agree with them.

            I fear they will not be seen as such by some, who do not do reasonable or logical.

            regards

            Steve
            How can you let those points pass, Steve?

            Comment


            • #81
              Originally posted by Pierre View Post
              How can you let those points pass, Steve?
              I have not assessed them in any detail, they are however an alternative, that is not at odds with the known evidence.

              I am not letting them pass, did you not see me say I did not agree with them.
              However I did not consider responding to the points in detail given that I view them as just an attempt to make a point.

              Did you see the post i made about a book by an academic historian on the experiment thread?

              Steve

              Comment


              • #82
                Originally posted by Elamarna View Post
                hi Richard

                yes those all seem logical, reasonable alternatives; although I do not necessarily agree with them.

                I fear they will not be seen as such by some, who do not do reasonable or logical.

                regards

                Steve
                Originally posted by Elamarna View Post
                I have not assessed them in any detail, they are however an alternative, that is not at odds with the known evidence.

                I am not letting them pass, did you not see me say I did not agree with them.
                However I did not consider responding to the points in detail given that I view them as just an attempt to make a point.

                Did you see the post i made about a book by an academic historian on the experiment thread?

                Steve
                Is that the only book written by an academic historian you know or are there more?

                Comment


                • #83
                  Originally posted by Pierre View Post
                  Is that the only book written by an academic historian you know or are there more?


                  Pierre

                  If you wish more titles because you want to read them, I suggest you do an online search.

                  The book quoted is a somewhat inferior in the ripper sections to the books of Helena Wojtczac on Chapman, and Rob House's book on Kosminski.

                  Steve
                  Last edited by Elamarna; 04-11-2016, 05:30 AM.

                  Comment


                  • #84
                    Why don't you do what I did Pierre, and do a Google search for peer reviewed papers and academic literature on Jack the Ripper?

                    I did not find what I discovered any more valuable than a well researched book written by someone who is not a 'historian'. Quite the opposite, actually - I thought one of the papers I read was fairly shoddy and consisted of 90% unsupported opinion. To be fair though, it was written by an undergraduate student.

                    I think I'm just used to reading information and research that has been imparted by people with multiple years of study and research in the field, though. It makes it quite glaring when someone is new to the subject and still making lots of errors and assumptions.

                    Comment


                    • #85
                      Pierre, in your opening post you said -

                      "A) The murderer lit the fire since women´s clothes were burned. The victim could not afford to burn clothes.

                      B) The murderer did not light a fire before or during the murder and mutilations since the risk of discovery was too high: anyone could have put their hand through the window and pulled aside the curtain at any point in time.

                      C) The murderer therefore lit the fire to light up the room for the witness.

                      D) Evidence for the last conclusion is the scream "Oh, murder!" observed by two different witnesses living close to the murder site."

                      I quoted you in my post and asked you -

                      Originally posted by Paddy Goose View Post
                      Pierre,

                      What changed from too risky to start a fire at point (B) to safe to start a fire at point (C)?

                      Paddy
                      Pierre, since you didn't answer my question "What changed from too risky to start a fire at point (B) to safe to start a fire at point (C)?" I'll answer it myself. Nothing changed. There is no plausible explanation for what changed to make the situation go from (B) too risky to start a fire to (C) safe to light a fire.

                      I have Pierre Reviewed your theory and found it lacking.

                      Paddy

                      Comment


                      • #86
                        Hi Pierre
                        if the killer of mary Kelly barricaded her door, why would he light the fire for his intended witness to see the body? Did the killer know that the intended witness knew about his secret entrance?
                        "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

                        Comment


                        • #87
                          Originally posted by Pierre View Post
                          You are totally wrong if you are trying to generalize from Prater to the area or neighbourhood.
                          I'm not trying to do that at all Pierre. I was simply summarizing Prater's evidence. She said in her statement that she frequently heard cries of murder "from the back of the lodging house where the windows look into Millers Court", repeating in her oral evidence that "it is nothing uncommon to hear cries of murder". So when I summarized that evidence as her saying it was not uncommon to hear cries of murder in the area I simply meant the area around Millers Court. As a resident of that area, Prater was able to speak of this from her own personal knowledge.

                          Comment


                          • #88
                            Hi All,

                            As far as can be ascertained there were eight rooms at 26 Dorset Street [rooms 13—20].

                            In Millers Court there were six cottages each split into two rooms, one up, one down. A total of 20 discrete residences.

                            26 Dorset Street & Millers Court, 1881 and 1891 Censuses—

                            1881—43 residents, with 5 rooms occupied at 26 Dorset Street.

                            1891—43 residents, with 1 room occupied at 26 Dorset Street.

                            Of 10 named residents [possibly 9 if Lewis and Kennedy were the same person] only 4 were interviewed on the day of the murder and later called to the inquest [Cox, Prater, Venturney and Lewis].

                            Assuming the tenancy rate to have been similar in 1888, why were not more tenants interviewed by the police?

                            Regards,

                            Simon
                            Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

                            Comment


                            • #89
                              Originally posted by Simon Wood View Post
                              Of 10 named residents [possibly 9 if Lewis and Kennedy were the same person] only 4 were interviewed on the day of the murder and later called to the inquest [Cox, Prater, Venturney and Lewis].

                              Assuming the tenancy rate to have been similar in 1888, why were not more tenants interviewed by the police?
                              Hi Simon,

                              There's an obvious flaw in this question.

                              Firstly you say, correctly, that only 4 tenants of Millers Court & 26 Dorset Street were interviewed on the day of the murder AND later called to the inquest.

                              Then you go on to ask why more tenants were not interviewed by the police.

                              But how do you know how many tenants were interviewed by the police?

                              Or is your question actually: "Assuming the tenancy rate to have been similar in 1888, why were not more tenants interviewed by the police and called to the inquest?"?

                              Comment


                              • #90
                                Re Simon Wood's question: Presumably only 4 were willing to say anything, either to the police, or at the inquest. The others either heard nothing-- or told the authorities they had not heard a thing.
                                Last edited by Pcdunn; 04-11-2016, 11:10 AM. Reason: Clarification
                                Pat D. https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...rt/reading.gif
                                ---------------
                                Von Konigswald: Jack the Ripper plays shuffleboard. -- Happy Birthday, Wanda June by Kurt Vonnegut, c.1970.
                                ---------------

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