Harry writes:
"The cause of death was haemorrhage"
...and yes, that was the given cause. But Killeen also said that the pierceing through the sternum and heart in itself would be enough to cause death. Therefore, Harry, I think we are left with the only possible solution that it was the last blow, and not the first. Had it been the first, then there would have been no reason to surmise that she died from blood-loss, would there?
"As killen implies it was the only one different,all others must have been caused by the same person,including the slash wound."
Ah, but he never did say that the 37 wounds MUST have been by the same instrument to begin with - what he said was that the wounds all COULD have been inflicted by the same blade, but for the one through the sternum. And indeed, although the 37 stabs would reasonably have been made by the same blade, there is of course no way to be sure that they were not inflicted by 37 blades that were similar in shape.
The cut, though, is another thing altogether: no way to measure blade width from an entrance hole, and no way to establish the thickness of the blade. It could have been made by the smaller blade and it could have been made by the wider one. Try and cut a loaf of bread with a number of different blades, and then tell by the appearance of the cuts which blade made which cut - can´t be done, I´m afraid. But stab the loaf with a small, thin blade and with a sturdy, wide-bladed dagger and anyone can tell which blade made which stab.
"If the sternum wound was the last given,and not done by the same hand,that would mean another attacker after she was dead or nearly so,a very implausible situation"
...which is why the obvious possibility to fit the wounds in with BOTH a frenzied attacked and a man interested in eviscerating has illuded us for so long a time. Together with John Bennetts find of that pic of George Yard Buildings, it makes for a very compelling scenario, I believe.
All the best, Harry!
Fisherman
"The cause of death was haemorrhage"
...and yes, that was the given cause. But Killeen also said that the pierceing through the sternum and heart in itself would be enough to cause death. Therefore, Harry, I think we are left with the only possible solution that it was the last blow, and not the first. Had it been the first, then there would have been no reason to surmise that she died from blood-loss, would there?
"As killen implies it was the only one different,all others must have been caused by the same person,including the slash wound."
Ah, but he never did say that the 37 wounds MUST have been by the same instrument to begin with - what he said was that the wounds all COULD have been inflicted by the same blade, but for the one through the sternum. And indeed, although the 37 stabs would reasonably have been made by the same blade, there is of course no way to be sure that they were not inflicted by 37 blades that were similar in shape.
The cut, though, is another thing altogether: no way to measure blade width from an entrance hole, and no way to establish the thickness of the blade. It could have been made by the smaller blade and it could have been made by the wider one. Try and cut a loaf of bread with a number of different blades, and then tell by the appearance of the cuts which blade made which cut - can´t be done, I´m afraid. But stab the loaf with a small, thin blade and with a sturdy, wide-bladed dagger and anyone can tell which blade made which stab.
"If the sternum wound was the last given,and not done by the same hand,that would mean another attacker after she was dead or nearly so,a very implausible situation"
...which is why the obvious possibility to fit the wounds in with BOTH a frenzied attacked and a man interested in eviscerating has illuded us for so long a time. Together with John Bennetts find of that pic of George Yard Buildings, it makes for a very compelling scenario, I believe.
All the best, Harry!
Fisherman
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