Originally posted by Sox
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Martha Tabram
Barrett did not move the body before the doctor arrived, but let it remain in situ, with her hands lying by her side, clenched up and empty. The victim's clothes were thrown upwards, completely disarranged, and the bosom of the dress was torn away. Barrett further testified at inquest that the woman's clothes were thrown up so as to expose the lower part of the body, and the limbs were open, which suggested recent intimacy (East London Observer, Saturday, 11 August, 1888).
Mary Nichols
(East London Observer, Saturday, 8 September, 1888)
Directly he turned his lantern on the body he noticed blood was oozing from the woman's throat. She was lying on her back with her hands beside her body, the eyes wide open, the legs a little apart, and the hands open. Feeling her right arm he found it quite warm. Her bonnet was beside her on the ground.
Originally posted by Sox
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none are mentioned. There was a trauma to the back of the head which may have been caused by a whack, or she may have been subdued a different way.
Her injuries were reported as focussing on breast, belly and groin. I was wrong to suggest it was the neck - but the groin is merely a more polite way of saying genital area.
Originally posted by Sox
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