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  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by Harry D View Post
    And if these torsos were botched abortions, etc. why was one of them deliberately left in the vault of Scotland Yard's construction site? Was that a convenient dumping ground?
    Maybe Trevor will offer the view that the clumsy abortionist was headed for the Thames, trunk over shoulder, when he heard somebody coming. So he scaled the fence of the building site -maybe he threw the trunk over the fence first, and picked it up as he jumped down on the other side - and hid in the lowest part of the cellar, and then he decided to leave the trunk there...

    Any takers...?
    Last edited by Fisherman; 05-18-2016, 10:33 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by Elamarna View Post
    Hi fisherman

    while that may certainly be true of the first case I listed, the second was a plain (if thats the right term) old murder and try and hide, not very well as it turned out.

    Steve
    Yes, I know, Steve - and that was the case I thought offered a peripheral comparison that is interesting.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by RockySullivan View Post
    Taking the uterus from the torsos is something that is very perplexing to me. Was the motive that the killer wanted this organ as some type of fetish, or to eat or play with? I think the bodies may have been killed to be dismembered. I think the killer liked cutting people up, he killed the c5 to cut them up it seems like. Torsos seem the same. He likes cutting up dead bodies. What does this tell us about the killer anything? I think the chloride of lime is clue, or the condy's fluid
    My take too, Rocky - like I said before, I think Simon Wood turned it the wrong way around in the title of his book, "Deconstructing Jack". I think it is about Jack deconstructing, instead!

    Leave a comment:


  • jerryd
    replied
    Originally posted by RockySullivan View Post
    John do you know the source for the pinchin st sighting story? One thing I'd be really interested in is finding out is a list of who lived at the address the PC was knocking up when the torso was dumped
    Rocky,

    That would be Jeremiah Hurley, living on Ellen Place, that the PC knocked up.

    Leave a comment:


  • RockySullivan
    replied
    John do you know the source for the pinchin st sighting story? One thing I'd be really interested in is finding out is a list of who lived at the address the PC was knocking up when the torso was dumped

    Leave a comment:


  • Harry D
    replied
    And if these torsos were botched abortions, etc. why was one of them deliberately left in the vault of Scotland Yard's construction site? Was that a convenient dumping ground?

    Leave a comment:


  • John Wheat
    replied
    Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post
    ive heard that name-Bellsmith- put out before. could you tell us a little bit more about him and why you think he makes a good suspect?
    To Abby Normal

    The information on Wentworth Bellsmith is scarce. However he may have been The Batty Street Lodger. Bellsmith was reportedly a religious fanatic who wrote about how immoral whores were. It has been claimed that Bellsmith was seen in the area of The Pinchin Street Torso around the time it was discovered acting strangely. Some have suggested that due to the nature of The Torso Murders the murderer would have been taller than the victims. The tallest victim of the 1887-1889 Torso Murders was estimated to be between 5ft8-9. Bellsmith was 5ft10.

    Cheers John

    Leave a comment:


  • Elamarna
    replied
    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
    Robert and Steve, NOW we are getting somewhere...! I donīt know if I would have used the term ritualistic in the Torso murder context, especially since I think that it was a much more personally shaped series of murders.
    But in a sense, I guess that we could be speaking of "rites" that meant something to the killer.

    When somebody leaves body parts to be found after having meticulously cut them up with great skill, there is every reason to think that the dismemberment as such meant something to the killer. The fact that he set about performing the dismemberment very close in time to the moment of death further strengthens the notion that the dismemberment was a defining part of the deed, and not just a means to get rid of the body.
    Hi fisherman

    while that may certainly be true of the first case I listed, the second was a plain (if thats the right term) old murder and try and hide, not very well as it turned out.

    Steve

    Leave a comment:


  • RockySullivan
    replied
    Taking the uterus from the torsos is something that is very perplexing to me. Was the motive that the killer wanted this organ as some type of fetish, or to eat or play with? I think the bodies may have been killed to be dismembered. I think the killer liked cutting people up, he killed the c5 to cut them up it seems like. Torsos seem the same. He likes cutting up dead bodies. What does this tell us about the killer anything? I think the chloride of lime is clue, or the condy's fluid

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Robert and Steve, NOW we are getting somewhere...! I donīt know if I would have used the term ritualistic in the Torso murder context, especially since I think that it was a much more personally shaped series of murders.
    But in a sense, I guess that we could be speaking of "rites" that meant something to the killer.

    When somebody leaves body parts to be found after having meticulously cut them up with great skill, there is every reason to think that the dismemberment as such meant something to the killer. The fact that he set about performing the dismemberment very close in time to the moment of death further strengthens the notion that the dismemberment was a defining part of the deed, and not just a means to get rid of the body.

    Leave a comment:


  • Elamarna
    replied
    Hi robert

    the last few weeks i have had that feeling back of my mind that the torso muders remind me of something recent but could not place what.

    your post today made it snap into vision:

    From the moment he was handed over to a man he didn’t know and brought to London, this poor little boy — five, maybe six years old — would have known only cruelty and terror.



    Very recent, dismemberment, dumped in Thames and ritualistic

    We also had an actress, killed in a domestic, cut up and dumped in a London canal:




    By the way, I am not a daily mail reader, but they came up first on google.



    Steve

    Originally posted by Robert St Devil View Post
    Hello MAYERLING.

    I thought Fisherman asked some interesting questions on pg. 41; the most interesting being, why distribute the body around London if the murderer is trying to conceal the identity.
    Also, why dismember the body more than is necessary?
    Also, why "float" the body parts in the river where they will be found (rather than sinking them down with weights)?
    Also, I think the aspect of scalping may have come into the discussion.

    Either way, it seemed to me to be ritualistic. Because of the scalping, I netted "Native American dismemberment", and I hit upon the story of Oroonoko. In A Companion to the Literature of Colonial America (p.272) Derek Hughes writes in his essay that Oroonoko sacrifices his wife,

    to prevent the child from entering the cycle of the marketplace; and to the final ritual of dismemberment, in which the body reverts to being an abacus, quartered and distributed through the plantations.

    I was hoping that you could fill in the gaps of the story

    Leave a comment:


  • Robert St Devil
    replied
    Oroonoko Flow

    Hello MAYERLING.

    I thought Fisherman asked some interesting questions on pg. 41; the most interesting being, why distribute the body around London if the murderer is trying to conceal the identity.
    Also, why dismember the body more than is necessary?
    Also, why "float" the body parts in the river where they will be found (rather than sinking them down with weights)?
    Also, I think the aspect of scalping may have come into the discussion.

    Either way, it seemed to me to be ritualistic. Because of the scalping, I netted "Native American dismemberment", and I hit upon the story of Oroonoko. In A Companion to the Literature of Colonial America (p.272) Derek Hughes writes in his essay that Oroonoko sacrifices his wife,

    to prevent the child from entering the cycle of the marketplace; and to the final ritual of dismemberment, in which the body reverts to being an abacus, quartered and distributed through the plantations.

    I was hoping that you could fill in the gaps of the story

    Leave a comment:


  • Fisherman
    replied
    Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
    He has read the reports and given his opinion, again you medical knowledge and interpretation supersedes his with all his years of experience, you are truly amazing

    www.trevormarriott.co.uk
    He has never reported on his idea about abdominal walls being cut away in large flaps, Trevor. He believed that flaps were collateral damage, he was very clear on that point.
    Having the abdominal wall cut away in two, three of four large flaps is not collateral damage.

    Back to the drawing board, Trevor. Pull a new one.

    And by the bye: anyone who thinks a collateral tongue of skin is the same as a large pane of skin cut away from the abdomen is certainly less fit to comment on the implications than I am.
    Last edited by Fisherman; 05-18-2016, 09:15 AM.

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  • Trevor Marriott
    replied
    Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
    Dr Biggs believed that the flaps of skin were collateral damage such as tongues of skin joining chunks of meat that had not been completely severed from each other.

    It seems you never took him out of that misconception, Trevor, which is a shame and not very honourable.

    The flaps of skin cut away from Chapman, Kelly and Jackson were their abdominal walls, cut in four, three and two pieces, respectively. Have you grasped that, Trevor?
    He has read the reports and given his opinion, again you medical knowledge and interpretation supersedes his with all his years of experience, you are truly amazing

    Leave a comment:


  • Errata
    replied
    Originally posted by RockySullivan View Post
    Good observation. I think the strangeness of the torso murders, tells us the killer would have appeared incredibly normal. The more freakier the freak the more normal he appears?
    Yes if you go by the Gein model, Absolutely not if you go by the Chase model.

    Leave a comment:

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