This has been touched upon in other threads but I thought I'd bring it some special attention, as it is a question that has always nagged at me. Doctor Killeen declared that Martha Tabram was stabbed 38 times with a smaller knife and just once with a larger one. It raises all sorts of mysteries- Was she attacked by two people, or by one person carrying two knives? Why would a single attacker pull his smaller knife first and then take 38 thrusts before realizing that he should be using his bigger one? If there was a killer walking around with the m.o. of using two knives- one to begin, and then a "special" bigger one to use for the "deathblow"- shouldn't there have been other murders in the area at the time done the same way? If it was just a hypothetical man who was prone to explosions of temper and who saw the need to carry a weapon for self defense in Whitechapel, why carry two? And of course the big mystery- how likely is it that the man with two knives was Jack the Ripper?
The question that has nagged at me (and others, as I've read) is- was it really two knives? How likely is it that Dr. Killeen could have been in error? Could a smaller knife have hit the same spot twice, or been wrenched out in a particular way, making one wound look bigger? I think Martha was a Ripper victim, perhaps not his first overall but his first fatality, and that she was stabbed with just one knife, a fairly small one for easy concealment. If Dr. Killeen got it wrong, I'd bear him no ill will as everyone makes mistakes, and the forensics of then as compared to now were obviously still in a developing state.
And further, if anyone cares to comment on the weird synchronicity of Martha at the age of 39 being stabbed once for each year of her life, feel free.
The question that has nagged at me (and others, as I've read) is- was it really two knives? How likely is it that Dr. Killeen could have been in error? Could a smaller knife have hit the same spot twice, or been wrenched out in a particular way, making one wound look bigger? I think Martha was a Ripper victim, perhaps not his first overall but his first fatality, and that she was stabbed with just one knife, a fairly small one for easy concealment. If Dr. Killeen got it wrong, I'd bear him no ill will as everyone makes mistakes, and the forensics of then as compared to now were obviously still in a developing state.
And further, if anyone cares to comment on the weird synchronicity of Martha at the age of 39 being stabbed once for each year of her life, feel free.
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