Originally posted by Nemo
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Why is Lawende definitely Anderson's Witness?
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Hi Ben,
You say that you can't see how anyone can put forth an argument different from yours but Chief Inspector Donald Swanson, a trained and experienced Scotland Yard detective, who was on the case at the time and who had all the facts available to him felt that there could have been a killer other than the BS man. So it would seem that there is at least one.
c.d.
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Originally posted by Shelley View PostThe clutching of the cachous could just be a bodily response for being seized at the throat, as with cutting or strangling the fists can clench.
But wouldn't Liz's natural response be to try to get those hand's off of her throat? Hard to believe that if she fought back at all that the bag of cachous would not have ripped.
c.d.
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Originally posted by c.d. View PostHi Shelley,
But wouldn't Liz's natural response be to try to get those hand's off of her throat? Hard to believe that if she fought back at all that the bag of cachous would not have ripped.
c.d.
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Originally posted by c.d. View PostHi Ben,
You say that you can't see how anyone can put forth an argument different from yours but Chief Inspector Donald Swanson, a trained and experienced Scotland Yard detective, who was on the case at the time and who had all the facts available to him felt that there could have been a killer other than the BS man. So it would seem that there is at least one.
c.d.
What's a BS man?
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Hi CD,
Chief Inspector Donald Swanson, a trained and experienced Scotland Yard detective, who was on the case at the time and who had all the facts available to him felt that there could have been a killer other than the BS man.
There could have been. It isn't beyond the realms of possibility, but the likelihood is incredibly slim.
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Originally posted by caz View PostEh? I think you'd better read my post again!
Schwartz may have seen Jack or he may not have. The evidence doesn't allow me to favour one over t'other.
And I don't have a clue what Jack wouldn't have been involved in, for fear of being identified, since he could well have been seen shoving Liz around if he didn't mind being seen with Kate's hand on his chest shortly before he drew his knife across her throat.
Where's the logic?
A stranger to Liz would stand less chance of being identified than someone known to have associated with her.
Love,
Caz
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I don't know this for sure but I'm going to guess Jack didn't want to get caught. So, he'd hardly be making a display of himself manhandling a woman, in front of witnesses, just before he murders her. That's why I don't think Schwartz saw Jack. Michael Kidney is someone I've never thought about before and he does make sense. I wonder if the police ever had that thought
and showed a photo of Kidney to Schwartz or brought them face to face?
What I don't understand is why the city solicitor applied for and the coroner allowed Lawende's description to not be given to the jury, when the police had already released a description to the press?
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Originally posted by Nothing to see View PostHi. I guess I didn't say what I was trying to say clearly. To me, there's a very big difference between Jack being physically rough with an intended victim in front of witnesses, and Jack doing the smooth 'Let's talk terms" in front of witnesses.
I don't know this for sure but I'm going to guess Jack didn't want to get caught. So, he'd hardly be making a display of himself manhandling a woman, in front of witnesses, just before he murders her. That's why I don't think Schwartz saw Jack...
Well the irony of this is that if Jack did manhandle Liz in front of a couple of reluctant witnesses before killing her, it certainly didn't do him any harm at the time, and now people are busy assuming he would never have risked it, or it wasn't his style or his 'normal' approach, so it wasn't him.
Conversely, Jack was still able to rip up Kate like a pig in the market and get away with it, after allowing himself to be seen by three men, doing precisely what most people believe was the fiend's usual thing: lulling his victim gently into a false sense of security. He may as well have had a stand-up row with her instead, because now she'd be considered yet another one-off domestic copycat job, done to resemble Annie Chapman.
Love,
Caz
X"Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov
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Originally posted by celee View Post
Simply put, If Shwartz saw a man attack Stride, he indeed saw her Killer. If it was the Ripper or someone else, He killed her straight off after being seen by Shwartz and he ran off in a hurry maybe to find another victim.
Your friend, Brad
Originally posted by c.d. View Post
I was reading Sugden's account of Liz's murder and it occurred to me that there might be a simple explanation for the BS man's actions. I believe Tom Wescott brought this up before but what if the BS man was someone associated with the Workingman's Club? He sees Liz standing near the entrance to the club and assumes that she is a prostitute. He takes offense at her conducting business so near the club so he simply grabs her and says "get the hell out of here, go peddle your wares somewhere else." This would explain two troubling things (to me anyway) about the BS man/Liz encounter...why, if he was intent on killing her, was he pulling her towards the street and not into the yard and why she didn't call out to Schwartz and the Pipe Man for help. Just a thought.
c.d.
I don't think BS man (whoever he was) was necessarily intending to use a knife on Liz when pulling her about. Nor do I think she would have seen this as anything other than an occupational hazard of hanging around clubs in the early hours - hence no thought of appealing for assistance from other passers-by. We need to use what evidence we have before we start filling in the gaps with speculation that doesn't sit well with that evidence.
Originally posted by Ben View PostAgain, the only explanation that isn't reasonable is one that would have Stride being attacked twice, at the same location, within minutes of eachother, by two seperate attackers. Too much of an implausible coincidence, and the idea that Jack just happened to turn up when an unprovoked attack on a prostitute was in session, and thought "Hey, that looks like fun!" is just hilarious in its unlikelihood. Of course it's true that anyone could have witnessed the broad-shouldered attack, but how insanely unlucky would that make Liz for two attackers to descend on her, entirely independently, but within minutes of eachother?
You've obviously not been out on a Friday or Saturday night anywhere in Croydon, if you seriously think it would be an implausible coincidence for a loner with a knife and an urge to use it to come across (or sniff out more like) an argument in progress and get stuck in himself. But I don’t think you do seriously think that, in which case it must be your agenda talking. Perhaps we can leave it there so yet another thread doesn't get diverted down Hutchinson Way. In the meantime, you would be well advised to read up on the Sally Anne Bowman case. By your logic, if it had happened back in 1888, with no forensics, you’d swear that her innocent ex-boyfriend must have murdered her because he admitted they had been arguing in his car just seconds before she was subjected to a horrific knife attack. Her killer was watching and waiting for the boyfriend to drive off so he could pounce. He may even have got off on the row he witnessed. Not only that, but her killer had tried and failed to attack another woman with a knife earlier the same night, so it was a genuine double event!
Originally posted by Ben View PostPersonally, I don't see anything remotely problematic about the broad-shouldered man being the serial killer who did for the others.
But it’s far from being the only perfectly plausible scenario.
Originally posted by Shelley View Post...he could just as well have solicited her and the pair slink off quietly so he could do his nasty deed in some dark or not well lit street.
Only if Liz was willing to slink off quietly somewhere slightly more suitable for his nasty deed than a busy club entrance with ponies and carts and all sorts coming and going at any moment.
Love,
Caz
XLast edited by caz; 02-11-2009, 02:09 PM."Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov
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Originally posted by caz View PostHi NTS,
Well the irony of this is that if Jack did manhandle Liz in front of a couple of reluctant witnesses before killing her, it certainly didn't do him any harm at the time, and now people are busy assuming he would never have risked it, or it wasn't his style or his 'normal' approach, so it wasn't him.
Conversely, Jack was still able to rip up Kate like a pig in the market and get away with it, after allowing himself to be seen by three men, doing precisely what most people believe was the fiend's usual thing: lulling his victim gently into a false sense of security. He may as well have had a stand-up row with her instead, because now she'd be considered yet another one-off domestic copycat job, done to resemble Annie Chapman.
Love,
Caz
X
And I don't think I'm wrong about Jack choosing who to whack and not in front of witnesses. I know you have much more knowledge about this than me but... He wasn't stupid. Unfortunately for the women he killed.
I know the police believed Schwartz. I'm not saying I don't believe his testimony. He saw something. But..I do believe Jack got Stride. I don't believe it was Jack trying to pull her down onto the pavement or into the yard. Not in front of witnesses.
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Originally posted by caz View PostWell the irony of this is that if Jack did manhandle Liz in front of a couple of reluctant witnesses before killing her, it certainly didn't do him any harm at the time, and now people are busy assuming he would never have risked it, or it wasn't his style or his 'normal' approach, so it wasn't him.
Conversely, Jack was still able to rip up Kate like a pig in the market and get away with it, after allowing himself to be seen by three men, doing precisely what most people believe was the fiend's usual thing: lulling his victim gently into a false sense of security. He may as well have had a stand-up row with her instead, because now she'd be considered yet another one-off domestic copycat job, done to resemble Annie Chapman.
Just because Schwartz happened to run away rather than intervening or calling for help, that doesn't mean the murderer wouldn't have been taking a huge risk by attacking his victim in full view of passers-by.
As for whether it was his "normal approach" how many reports have you seen of Nichols, Chapman, Eddowes or Kelly being attacked in front of witnesses just before their deaths? Aren't the indications that the other victims were taken to a secluded spot in order to be killed, rather than being attacked in front of witnesses?
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Hi Caz,
I don't think BS man (whoever he was) was necessarily intending to use a knife on Liz when pulling her about. We need to use what evidence we have before we start filling in the gaps with speculation that doesn't sit well with that evidence.
so he was on the lookout for just the sort of vulnerable women who routinely had to put up with rough treatment by men who, like him, felt nothing but contempt for them.
How could it possibly be called an 'implausible coincidence' if he had simply taken advantage of one such dust-up?
1) I don't believe umprovoked attacks on women - prostitutes or not - were particularly common.
2) It's even less common for one unusual, aggressive and unprovoked attack on one women in one location to be followed, just minutes afterwards, by an even more aggressive attack on that same victim in the exact same location.
3) Any "alternative" is bound to pale into comparative insignificance alongside the obvious commonsense deduction that the man seen attacking her was the man who killed her.
You've obviously not been out on a Friday or Saturday night anywhere in Croydon, if you seriously think it would be an implausible coincidence for a loner with a knife and an urge to use it to come across (or sniff out more like) an argument in progress and get stuck in himself.
By your logic, if it had happened back in 1888, with no forensics, you’d swear that her innocent ex-boyfriend must have murdered her because he admitted they had been arguing in his car just seconds before she was subjected to a horrific knife attack.
And why did you just introduce Hutchinson into the discussion for no reason at all? I'm dying to know how my "agena" in that regard impacts in the slightest on this issue?
But it’s far from being the only perfectly plausible scenario.
Best regards,
BenLast edited by Ben; 02-11-2009, 04:51 PM.
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Hi Ben,
You continue to insist that Liz being thrown to the ground constituted a vicious and unprovoked attack. How do we know that it was unprovoked? All we have is the testimony of Schwartz who came in in the middle of the movie. We don't know what Liz might have done to provoke the BS man. She might have told him to **** off or even shoved him first. We simply don't know.
As to "vicious", let's assume for the sake of argument that the whole throwing to the ground scene was witnessed by a policeman. If the BS man could give a reasonable explanation for his actions, I would venture to say that based on the policeman's mood that evening and his feelings towards prostitutes that he might have let the BS man go with a simple admonition to go on home. But even if the policeman did his duty and brought the man in what penalty would he face? Hanging? Life imprisonment? Fifty years of hard labor? I would guess maybe a few days in jail. Would the newspaper headlines scream "prostitute thrown to the ground" "police vow full investigation?" "Reward for information being offered?" Of course not. It is only a "vicious" attack when linked to what followed. But if the BS man simply cussed her out afterwards and walked away it seems a lot less sinister and very far from vicious.
c.d.
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