Originally posted by Bridewell
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Martha was killed on the 7th and there was a Bank Holiday on the 6th, which meant that soldiers, active and retired, could wear uniforms and carry some smaller swords and bayonets legally. In this case we have a wound that could have been caused by a "bayonet" during the evening immediately following the Holiday. Its suggestive.
As to one killer using both a "pen knife", (which he used 37 times), and the bayonet, I believe its more probable that a second man used the larger instrument to deliver a final death blow....almost merciful when you consider she was alive and likely conscious for most of the stabs. The pen knife to me suggests that it was the only knife the killer had on him, its why he had to stab her so many times to kill her. Had he a larger knife, he likely would have used it and we would see far fewer wounds. She would have been obviously dying with just a few stabs of a large knife.
I believe the evidence, including the fact that we have a soldier seen waiting for a friend near where the incident occurred and we have a co-worker state they both had soldier clients that night, suggests that a second man was there or arrived to find his mate stabbing away and he finished the woman off to get the killer to leave quickly with him.
The bond between soldiers does not end when they leave the battlefield, I believe the second man assisted his comrade based on that bond.
Another way to look at this is statistically.....how often to killers in frenzied attacks switch weapons from one knife to another? My guess is that killers might switch weapons mid-kill, but it would likely be to acquire a blunt instrument to finish the victim. Switching from one knife to a larger knife for one stab, to me, sounds improbable.
Cheers BW
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