Cheers, Fish!
I've got quite a few templates at the ready to be employed if necessary, but I'll add that one to the mix.
It's more of an inference than a suggestion, Mike. I think the most salient point in that serial killers don't start out on a semi-professional level. All crafts require practice, even the more grisly ones, and murder and mutilation is no different. Tabram would be the most obvious example of a possible "intermediary step" in this case.
I don't agree, I'm afraid.
I believe there's at least ample evidence for advacing the case that Tabram may have been an early - perhaps the earliest - murder of JTR at a time when his techniques were not yet fully honed and discovered.
Fair enough, but you can't say with any authority that the reverse was true in each case, either.
I don't disagree with that observation. Can't argue with "perhaps". On the other hand, Abberline, Anderson and Reid all believed that Tabram belonged in the series.
Best regards,
Ben
I've got quite a few templates at the ready to be employed if necessary, but I'll add that one to the mix.
I mis-phrased myself evidently Ben, of course you can suggest that the killer went from obviously amateur status to seemingly semi-professional without intermediary steps
What you cannot say is that there is any physical or circumstantial evidence in the case of Martha Tabrams death that indicates she was killed by the man with the specific agendas shown in perhaps 4 of his 5 attributed murders called the Canonicals.
I believe there's at least ample evidence for advacing the case that Tabram may have been an early - perhaps the earliest - murder of JTR at a time when his techniques were not yet fully honed and discovered.
You cannot say with any authority that her attack was done by one man. You cannot say with any authority that she was unconscious, or on the ground, when being stabbed.
And she is thought by the Coroner of at least Mary Ann's Inquest to perhaps be by another hand than the one that killed Polly and Annie.
Best regards,
Ben
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