Hi Jon
So a slight incline precludes the use of the word footway? Tell that to Donald Swanson!
Well whoever killed her and whenever, the cachous apparently, (mostly). stayed put...and yes I'd love to hear a medic's explanation too, although I probably wouldn't understand half of it!
Hi Lynn
Well yes...or anybody's story. They obviously stayed put throughout her murder, however and whenever it happened, because the evidence says so...
Hi Harry
That's an interesting thought, and one that's just as likely in my view as a separate killer coming along later...but that's not to say either is impossible...
Hi again Jon
But if the killing is one swift move (cutting the throat as she's pushed/thrown to the ground?)...
All the best
Dave
So the body did indeed lay on the regular paved section, which was the gutter, but as those paved sections were on a slight grade, it cannot be called a footway.
I think we need a sound medical authority to explain how the muscular spasm works to clench the hands of a woman when physically threatened.
I think most of us of the great unwashed are divided on the subject.
How on earth, if Stride was pushed into the yard, did she fall and still retain those cachous? and this 'push' must also come before the knife attack, yet she held on to them damn cachous...unbelievable!
I think most of us of the great unwashed are divided on the subject.
How on earth, if Stride was pushed into the yard, did she fall and still retain those cachous? and this 'push' must also come before the knife attack, yet she held on to them damn cachous...unbelievable!
Hi Lynn
And this is the MAIN hurdle one must leap if one buys into the Schwartz story.
Hi Harry
I am pretty much alone in my view that pipeman was also the man seen by Brown in the company of Stride,and that he is the more likely person to have killed her.
Hi again Jon
I think the dilemma we have always faced is that Stride appears to have suffered two physical assaults. The first in the gateway, and the second further within the yard. Some suggest the first assault was the only one. However, if that is so, then she held onto those cachous while being pushed to the ground, then also half strangled by the scarf (it was noted as 'tight'), then having her throat cut.
One might be forgiven for thinking she regarded those cachous as more precious than life itself.
If, as you suggest, no muscle spasm occurred then how was it that she did not drop them at any point during those three separate attacks (push/choke/cut)?
One might be forgiven for thinking she regarded those cachous as more precious than life itself.
If, as you suggest, no muscle spasm occurred then how was it that she did not drop them at any point during those three separate attacks (push/choke/cut)?
All the best
Dave
Comment