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Was Mackenzie a copycat?

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  • Bridewell
    replied
    Originally posted by Hunter View Post
    If Coles had been ripped to pieces Sadler would still likely have come under police suspicion due to his actions on the night of the murder. After all, they did try to fit him with the others despite the lack of abdominal mutilations on Coles.
    They clutched at straws and hoped that Sadler would be identified as the killer. I think that's somewhat less than a fit-up.

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  • Stephen Thomas
    replied
    Originally posted by Jon Guy View Post
    I've yet to see a convincing argument against her being a Ripper victim.
    Try the likelihood that the authorities knew perfectly well that JTR was under lock and key or dead before McKenzie was murdered.

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  • lynn cates
    replied
    Have a heart.

    Hello David. Not the missing heart again? (heh-heh)

    Cheers.
    LC

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  • DVV
    replied
    I remember having read (but can't remember where), concerning this murder, that it seemed the work of a "debilitated" ripper.
    And that's how I see it.

    It was he, but his heart wasn't in it.

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  • GregBaron
    replied
    Multiple copiers...

    Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
    Hi Greg
    I've always been somewhat confused whenever some uses the term copycat when it comes to murder. Does it mean copycat in that someone thought the previous murders were "cool" and wanted to try it and therefore it seems similar or does it mean they had a total different motivation for killing and they tried to make it look like the previous murderers work to throw off suspicion? Which do you have in mind?
    Actually Abby, your point is a good one. In fact both of your methods are part of the equation as is a third.

    I remember reading some time ago about an Island where suicide became endemic among teenagers after one broke the ice! A very strange phenomenon.

    Ted Bundy copied one of his heroes by executing a double murder in a single day. A copycat because he thought it was cool.

    We all know of the type of throwing suspicion on another as RivkahChaya has delineated. The thread refers to this latter type although it could also be for the cool factor. How sick!


    Greg

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by Phil H View Post
    Fisherman, whether Lechmere "enters the equation" or not is a matter for you. He is irrelevant to what I wrote (indeed to pretty much anything) so far as I am concerned - I was thinking generally.

    Phil
    Aha - so he is irrelevant to what you wrote, but you nevertheless wrote that "No doubt Fisherman would argue that Lechmere/Cross was dismissed for much the same reasons!!!", with three exclamation marks.

    Makes sense. Or not.

    Anyhow, in the discussion about whether MacKenzie was a copycat killing or not, one only has to move her a year back in time, place her death in July 1888, and then see what happens.

    Anybody who would seriously argue that she was not a Ripper killing if this was the case? Nah, I did not think so either.

    It is the perceived progression in the Ripper series and the distance in time that singles her out as a possible copycat deed, nothing else. And THAT is VERY relevant.

    All the best,
    Fisherman

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  • Phil H
    replied
    Fisherman, whether Lechmere "enters the equation" or not is a matter for you. He is irrelevant to what I wrote (indeed to pretty much anything) so far as I am concerned - I was thinking generally.

    Phil

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by Phil H View Post
    My point, Fisherman was that, to the police at the time, all the killings (Nichols to MJK) were assumed to be related. So, a possible killer of a later victim (say Barnett for MJK), if he could show that he could not have killed any single one of the earlier victims, i.e. he had an alibi - he would practically be exhonerated.

    But if we begin to look at the individual murders and see what they tell us, we might come to a different conclusion.

    It works the other way too - Druitt could not have killed Mckenzie (as he was dead when she was killed) - so if she WERE identified as a classic "Jack" victim, it might exhonerate him from all.

    Phil
    Hmmm. But where does Lechmere enter this equation? There is nothing telling us that he could not be the killer of any isolated victim. He has no alibi that I am aware of, and so I don´t think the police exhonerated him on any such ground.
    He simply did not fit the bill in terms of answering to the generic picture the police had conjured up if you ask me. That´s how he got off the hook before even getting on it.

    All the best,
    Fisherman

    Leave a comment:


  • Jonathan H
    replied
    To Rivkha

    Along the lines you are speculating: I think that Druitt noticed the press rection to the Tabram murder -- is there a lone killer out there? -- and this gave him the idea to begin killing a succession of prostitutes for publciity reasons, apart from the fact that he enjoyed it.

    Leave a comment:


  • RivkahChaya
    replied
    Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
    Hi Greg
    I've always been somewhat confused whenever some uses the term copycat when it comes to murder. Does it mean copycat in that someone thought the previous murders were "cool" and wanted to try it and therefore it seems similar or does it mean they had a total different motivation for killing and they tried to make it look like the previous murderers work to throw off suspicion? Which do you have in mind?
    It's a term law enforcement uses for a crime that appears to be part of a pattern, but for some reason, they are reasonably certain is by someone else. It may be because of forensics, it may be because the crime is far apart in time from the others, or it may be because someone has been arrested for the pattern crimes (it could be burglary or rape, which is why I'm not saying "serial killer"), and claims not to have done one of them. At any rate, since the term "copycat" is usually used before the motive is known, then the definition has nothing to do with motive. It just means a crime that appears to be a copy of a pattern crime, but was done by someone else. It could turn out that the "copycat" didn't know about the pattern crime, and it was simply a coincidence-- although, the police usually reserve the term for high profile investigations-- but "copycat" describes not so much a motive of a criminal, but a confounding factor in an investigation.

    In that we don't know how many cut-throat murders in the Whitechapel area around late 1888 were committed by one person or another, there are a lot of confounding factors. We can't really even say which crime, if any, is technically the original. Polly Nichols would probably qualify as the original victims, unless the same person killed both her, and Martha Tabram. On the other hand, if one person killed Chapman, Stride, and Eddowes, but no one else, AND that person sent the "Jack the Ripper" letters to the Central News Office, then I think we'd have to call Chapman the original victim.

    That wouldn't preclude JTR getting ideas from news articles about the Nichols murder, or even the Tabram and Smith murders-- or even the Fairy Fay legend, if it was current then, I'm not sure whether copycat is the right term in that case, though.

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  • Jonathan H
    replied
    If you remove Druitt and Tumblety (and Cohen) as viable suspects, and most do, then there is no reason to exlcude McKenzie as a Ripper murder.

    The only reason Kelly is the final victim is because of Mac's obsession with the drowned barrister and the timing his self-murder, and most secondary sources argue the police chief was mistaken.

    If you remove Aaron Kosminski, and most do, then there is no reason to not to include Coles either.

    Press and police sources of the day show that there was strong, though not unanimous opinion that these two women were victims of the earlier killer.

    Leave a comment:


  • Abby Normal
    replied
    Originally posted by GregBaron View Post
    Hi all,

    Methinks Mackenzie and Coles, especially, get short shrift from the
    ripper community.

    I think, intuitively, that one of these outlier cases might yield a clue
    that cracks the whole case wide open. Ok, I know, unlikely, but a nice
    thought..

    Anyway, I think the motivation for at least C's 1-3 was sexual deviance.
    The killer was a pervert or paraphilic of some sort and got pleasure out of
    his foul deeds. Stay with me here.

    But if Mackenzie was killed by another, two questions come to mind.
    Why attempt a copycat? and What is the motivation?

    I could go into a long soliloquy about what I'm getting at here but
    I think you people are smart enough to get the ball rolling..

    Any thoughts?


    Greg
    Hi Greg
    I've always been somewhat confused whenever some uses the term copycat when it comes to murder. Does it mean copycat in that someone thought the previous murders were "cool" and wanted to try it and therefore it seems similar or does it mean they had a total different motivation for killing and they tried to make it look like the previous murderers work to throw off suspicion? Which do you have in mind?

    Leave a comment:


  • Phil H
    replied
    My point, Fisherman was that, to the police at the time, all the killings (Nichols to MJK) were assumed to be related. So, a possible killer of a later victim (say Barnett for MJK), if he could show that he could not have killed any single one of the earlier victims, i.e. he had an alibi - he would practically be exhonerated.

    But if we begin to look at the individual murders and see what they tell us, we might come to a different conclusion.

    It works the other way too - Druitt could not have killed Mckenzie (as he was dead when she was killed) - so if she WERE identified as a classic "Jack" victim, it might exhonerate him from all.

    Phil
    Last edited by Phil H; 05-20-2013, 09:10 PM. Reason: many spelling errors.

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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by Phil H View Post
    On the other hand, an alibi for ONE killing is an alibi for ALL.

    I think this may have been one of the greatest errors made by the police at the time, in this case.

    Clearly Isenschmidt is a case in pont, because he could not have committed the later murders, he was deemed not to be "Jack". But he COULD have perpetrated the earlier murders - and Eddowes, Stride and Kelly are all different enough in various ways to be POSSIBLY by other hands.

    I think Barnett or Flemming might have got away with murder (Kelly) because they had alibis for earlier murders, and the police were fixated on "Jack"; similarly Kidney for Stride.

    No doubt Fisherman would argue that Lechmere/Cross was dismissed for much the same reasons!!!

    It is, to my mind, a good reason to treat all the murders as individual crimes and then see how many WE would compile into the work of a single hand.

    Phil
    I would argue what, Phil ...? That Lechmere had an alibi for an earlier murder than Nichols? I´m afraid I don´t quite follow you here.
    I do, however, think that MacKenzie is a useful bid for a Ripper killing.

    All the best,
    Fisherman

    Leave a comment:


  • lynn cates
    replied
    ignored

    Hello Jon. Thanks.

    Ah, they paid it no mind? Thought so.

    Cheers.
    LC

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