It seems apparent that Martha Tabram’s final wound, the one to the sternum, is the one that killed her. It broke through her "chest-bone", and penetrated her heart, killing her instantly.
One theory that is widely believed is that a sailor, with both a pen-knife & a dagger on his person, was responsible for her death. Many people also believe that Martha was an earlier victim of JtR, therefore resulting in some to believe JtR was a sailor. But what if Martha’s killer was JtR, but not a sailor, and did not carry 2 knives around with him on the night in question?
Is it possible that her killer, after a failed attempt on Annie Millwood five & a half months earlier, which had left her alive to potentially ID him, was anxious not to leave another victim alive? And what if the pen-knife, even though it had inflicted many terrible wounds, had not yet killed her even after 38 stabs? If Martha lay unconscious and gurgling in her own blood, I suspect the killer may have had to come up with a plan B.
So if the killer did not have another knife on his person at the time, but lived nearby, is it possible he could have ventured home to get a larger knife or dagger, and then come back to where an unconscious Martha still lay, and inflicted the final stab to the chest, which penetrated her heart?
If he was fearful that there be any chance that she could live long enough to ID him, I think this is a gamble he would take to protect his identity. It was still dark, most people were still asleep, and Martha would have been largely invisible, hidden in the dark as she was, on the first floor landing - so it was a risk to be sure, but a calculated risk.
Is it possible that Martha’s killer lived locally, and after the pen-knife failed to kill her, went home and got a bigger knife to finish her off?
One theory that is widely believed is that a sailor, with both a pen-knife & a dagger on his person, was responsible for her death. Many people also believe that Martha was an earlier victim of JtR, therefore resulting in some to believe JtR was a sailor. But what if Martha’s killer was JtR, but not a sailor, and did not carry 2 knives around with him on the night in question?
Is it possible that her killer, after a failed attempt on Annie Millwood five & a half months earlier, which had left her alive to potentially ID him, was anxious not to leave another victim alive? And what if the pen-knife, even though it had inflicted many terrible wounds, had not yet killed her even after 38 stabs? If Martha lay unconscious and gurgling in her own blood, I suspect the killer may have had to come up with a plan B.
So if the killer did not have another knife on his person at the time, but lived nearby, is it possible he could have ventured home to get a larger knife or dagger, and then come back to where an unconscious Martha still lay, and inflicted the final stab to the chest, which penetrated her heart?
If he was fearful that there be any chance that she could live long enough to ID him, I think this is a gamble he would take to protect his identity. It was still dark, most people were still asleep, and Martha would have been largely invisible, hidden in the dark as she was, on the first floor landing - so it was a risk to be sure, but a calculated risk.
Is it possible that Martha’s killer lived locally, and after the pen-knife failed to kill her, went home and got a bigger knife to finish her off?
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