Pierre: Hi Fisherman,
I hear you are convinced that the same person killed Jackson, Chapman and Kelly. You induce that from the way of cutting, which is one part of the signature. So letīs say that is your hypothesis.
Not entirely true, Pierre; I conclude that it was IN ALL PROBABILITY the same killer owing not to the way of cutting, but instead owing to how these women had their abdominal walls removed in large panes.
Is it also your hypothesis that the same person killed these three women?
Absolutely. Doubtlessly. Emphatically. I make it a 97, 44 per cent chance. Just about.
If it is, which I believe, and if you hypothesize that Lechmere was the killer, which I think you do - are there any sources connecting Lechmere to any of these three murders?
I reason like this:
Lechmere is the probable killer of Nichols.
If he killed Nichols, he was in all probability the Ripper, and killed a number of other women too.
Two of these women were Chapman and Kelly, tied together very clearly by their cut-away abdominal walls.
Since Jackson suffered the same fate, I am very nearly certain that she was killed by the exact same man.
Since all the torso murders are very similar, involving lots of cutting skill, I am of the meaning that one killer was responsible for the so called Ripper killings as well as for the so called Torso killings.
Charles Lechmere fits the bill agewise, having been 24 in 1873, when the first torso murder, definitely knit to the Kelly murder was perpetrated.
... but how these two murders are related is something I will not tell you. You must do a little bit of the work too, you see.
What you think of the theoretical and academical implications is - I am sad to say - of very little interest to me.
Sorry about that, but I thought Iīd be proactive.
I hear you are convinced that the same person killed Jackson, Chapman and Kelly. You induce that from the way of cutting, which is one part of the signature. So letīs say that is your hypothesis.
Not entirely true, Pierre; I conclude that it was IN ALL PROBABILITY the same killer owing not to the way of cutting, but instead owing to how these women had their abdominal walls removed in large panes.
Is it also your hypothesis that the same person killed these three women?
Absolutely. Doubtlessly. Emphatically. I make it a 97, 44 per cent chance. Just about.
If it is, which I believe, and if you hypothesize that Lechmere was the killer, which I think you do - are there any sources connecting Lechmere to any of these three murders?
I reason like this:
Lechmere is the probable killer of Nichols.
If he killed Nichols, he was in all probability the Ripper, and killed a number of other women too.
Two of these women were Chapman and Kelly, tied together very clearly by their cut-away abdominal walls.
Since Jackson suffered the same fate, I am very nearly certain that she was killed by the exact same man.
Since all the torso murders are very similar, involving lots of cutting skill, I am of the meaning that one killer was responsible for the so called Ripper killings as well as for the so called Torso killings.
Charles Lechmere fits the bill agewise, having been 24 in 1873, when the first torso murder, definitely knit to the Kelly murder was perpetrated.
... but how these two murders are related is something I will not tell you. You must do a little bit of the work too, you see.
What you think of the theoretical and academical implications is - I am sad to say - of very little interest to me.
Sorry about that, but I thought Iīd be proactive.
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