Originally posted by Jon Guy
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Alice McKenzie - some details not seen before
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostNo. They, like other canonical victims, had their THROATS, cut, albeit Stride to a lesser degree than the rest.
Targetting the neck and the abdomen (with Stride as an exception when it comes to the latter), and a proven wish to take out organs in three cases, is as far as we can stretch things. Meaning, of course, that organ retrieval cannot be put down as "criteria" either.
As far as Iīm concerned, I donīt even think he necessarily was after inner organs in each case.Last edited by Fisherman; 03-28-2018, 06:25 AM.
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostFisherman: "You keep speaking of "criteria" as if there were such things established"
Luckily, the criteria that distinguish necks from throats aren't for me to decide.
That does not allow us to establish any criteria at all when it comes to the extent of the cutting, it only tells us that the killer cut necks to a smaller or larger degree. It would even be stretching things to say that the criteria is that one or more of the large vessels must be severed.
Going any further is to try and get into the killers head and read his mind. That is an interesting exercise, but not a viable one from which we can build a factual ground to stand on.
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostNo. They, like other canonical victims, had their THROATS, cut, albeit Stride to a lesser degree than the rest.
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Originally posted by Sam Flynn View PostThanks for the confirmation, Jon. So, no actual throat wound, and only a superficial cut to the abdomen. No wonder that the surgeon who conducted the post mortem, Bagster Phillips no less, concluded:
"After careful and long deliberation, I cannot satisfy myself, on purely Anatomical and professional grounds that the perpetrator of all the Wh Ch. murders is our man. I am on the contrary impelled to a contrary conclusion in this, noting the mode of procedure and the character of the mutilations"
The wounds differed in character from the previous Ripper murders, and that was all Phillips chose to point out. So we are once again left with the question which is likeliest, two killers who targetted neck and abdomen, or one killer who did not make the same kind of cuts all the time.
It must be added that the medicos of the era were not as informed as we are when it comes to the rarity of certain signature damages. Today we know that the rarer the damage, the greater the likelihood of just the one killer. I doubt that Phillips was as read up on that matter, however obvious it seems to us today.
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Originally posted by Harry D View PostThe throat was cut twice, though, as with previous Ripper victims, yes?
One may contemplate WHY this was so - the expected thing to do for a throat-cutter (or neck-cutter, whichever term we use) would be to cut once. My suggestion is that the killer wanted to make absoutely certain that he did not miss the artery, and so hemade two incisions, close to each other and of the same length. Why he otherwise would make twin cuts is something I have no explanation for.
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Originally posted by Fisherman View PostExcuse me for butting in here, Gareth, but you keep speaking of "criteria" as if there were such things established. That was never the case. We do not know what underlying reason the killer had for cutting the way he did. But we DO know that Stride only had one side of the neck cut and that Eddowes had the left side artery severed whereas the right side ditto was only nicked. Nichols had two cuts, one longer and one shorter. So it seems to me that we are unable to state as a fact that the "criteria" for being a ripper cut to the neck is that the cut is carried all the way around the neck. And MacKenzie fits in a lot better once we look these things, without predisposing any fixed "criteria".
If I was to guess, based on how I see the case, Iīd suggest that the reason for cutting the neck at all may have been to bleed the victim. And that happens regardless if you sever one or both sides of the neck and itīs arteries.
I have never felt certain about MacKenzies inclusion myself, but I accept as a fact that given the odd combination of damages, a cut neck and a mutilated abdomen, means that there at least can be no other prime suspect than the Ripper.
As for the possible link to the Torso murders, Iīd say that both series seem to have peaked in 1888, whereas they also both seem to have produced a final victim each (MacKenzie and the Pinchin Street torso, both in -89) that were comparatively lame and tired compared to the earlier efforts in a number of respects. It is no certain indicator, but it is a compelling matter nevertheless.
Nice to see you again. Good post
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Fisherman: "You keep speaking of "criteria" as if there were such things established"
Luckily, the criteria that distinguish necks from throats aren't for me to decide.
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Thanks for the confirmation, Jon. So, no actual throat wound, and only a superficial cut to the abdomen. No wonder that the surgeon who conducted the post mortem, Bagster Phillips no less, concluded:
"After careful and long deliberation, I cannot satisfy myself, on purely Anatomical and professional grounds that the perpetrator of all the Wh Ch. murders is our man. I am on the contrary impelled to a contrary conclusion in this, noting the mode of procedure and the character of the mutilations"
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The throat was cut twice, though, as with previous Ripper victims, yes?
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