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  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Pleeeeeeese can someone select a new topic for discussion and not one in which allows deliberate attempts to manipulate a half-baked mystery.

    Surely we can find something?

    Leave a comment:


  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post

    Even on your own terms, the timespan yourself and others suppose for this truncated 'Schwartz incident' is questionable.

    Swanson: ... having got as far as the gateway where the murder was committed he saw a man stop & speak to a woman, who was standing in the gateway. The man tried to pull the woman into the street, but he turned her round & threw her down on the footway​ ...

    This makes it sound like the interaction between the man and woman lasted mere seconds. The problem is that the single paragraph describing the incident is heavily condensed. In reality, how long did it take to go from the man and woman talking, to the man getting violent with the woman? Was there an angry argument before he threw her down? Did it continue after that point? For all we know, Schwartz could have stood gawking at the spectacle for 2 or 3 minutes. Why would a verbal dispute escalate into violence after a few seconds? I think your estimate could be way out.
    This incident clearly took seconds.

    “The Hungarian saw him put his hand on her shoulder and push her back into the passage, but, feeling rather timid of getting mixed up in quarrels, he crossed to the other side of the street.”

    This doesn’t sound like a man who pulled up a chair. This event took seconds.

    Why ‘escalate?’ This is misleading. It got physical pretty much straight away.

    You are deliberately trying to stretch out this incident, as you have done before, to try and make it sound less likely to have gone unseen and unheard.

    Leave a comment:


  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by New Waterloo View Post
    Lets look a some things we can generally agree on. Based on what people have said and not really disputed.

    Stride was on a date. She was seen in the Bricklayers pub with a respectably dressed man with weak looking eyes. He was wearing a morning jacket and coat.

    A few yards down Settle Street is the Gloster Arms pub where maybe at the same time certainly a bit later Spooner and his girlfriend were drinking (on his admission)

    Stride and her man appear to keep together with them being seen by PC Smith and Marshall.

    At some point after all of this morning/cutaway coat man disappears. I think he is the man seen with Stride buying grapes. Forget timing at the moment.

    cutaway coat or parcel man as he is more commonly known is highly suspicious and has to be well in the frame I would have thought.

    I now am going to suggest a theory. Spooner was with his girlfriend as he stated but has just walked her home. He married a woman called Catherine Sullivan a year or so later. There was a Sullivan family living in Backchurch lane but not sure about 1888. On the way home to His house in Fairclough street he encounters Stride momentarily on her own. Parcelman has his eyes on the yard and waiting for his moment. Spooner may be the man seen with Stride by Brown.

    Anyway perhaps Spooner is BSM. Thats why he is on his own when found by the searchers. He dare not say he was involved. He is trying to pull Stride out of the yard where Parcelman now is. He fails and Pacelman/Jtr cuts Strides throat and clears off.

    Spooner sticks to his story even the time. He is messed up because his timing doesnt work because he says he was with his girlfriend which he wasnt at the time of the pulling of Stride. He goes away not knowing what was about to happen to Stride

    I am sure there are lots of problems with this

    NW
    I dispute that we can be sure that Stride was ever in The Bricklayers.

    Im not having a go at you RD but I’m making a general point here. I think that in the case of the Berner Street murder we forget, more than in any of the others, how wrong witnesses can be in identifying people. I would still say that we cannot be 100% certain even that PC Smith saw Stride. Could anyone, even a police officer, recall exactly everyone they saw during an evening walk/beat? These women didn’t have a wide range of clothing of distinctive styles and colours. So someone of Stride’s general build and hair colour? Smith was human. He sees the corpse. It looks like the figure that he saw across the road. The clothes look similar. It would be difficult to imagine the voice in his head saying “that close to the murder time…surely it must have been her?”

    Im not saying it wasn’t her. But it might not have been.

    Leave a comment:


  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post

    This is not an argument. You cannot answer the points put to you, so you resort to playing the 'conspiracy theory' card. It's pathetic.
    I’ve answered every single question and point over the years. I gone over these events in detail. I’ve debated/discussed ad nauseum with you, Michael R and others over the idea that something ‘wasn’t quite right’ in Berner Street so I’m not just ‘playing the conspiracy theory card.’ The problem is that you keep on and on and on about this issue which is all based around one single but erroneous point - the fact that you think it’s somehow impossible that a short event could occur unseen or unheard.

    To support this you have, over time, tried to stretch the duration of the incident, argued that the ‘not very loudly’ was simply added to cover up the fact that no one heard the incident, you’ve also claimed that Schwartz spoke (or probably) spoke English. If I read back I could probably find more. So why do you have an aversion to a prosaic explanation? It’s very simple. Schwartz saw an incident which occurred over a very short duration with little noise being made. When it occurred there was no one else in the street. Why does this appear an outrageous claim to you?

    Leave a comment:


  • New Waterloo
    replied
    Lets look a some things we can generally agree on. Based on what people have said and not really disputed.

    Stride was on a date. She was seen in the Bricklayers pub with a respectably dressed man with weak looking eyes. He was wearing a morning jacket and coat.

    A few yards down Settle Street is the Gloster Arms pub where maybe at the same time certainly a bit later Spooner and his girlfriend were drinking (on his admission)

    Stride and her man appear to keep together with them being seen by PC Smith and Marshall.

    At some point after all of this morning/cutaway coat man disappears. I think he is the man seen with Stride buying grapes. Forget timing at the moment.

    cutaway coat or parcel man as he is more commonly known is highly suspicious and has to be well in the frame I would have thought.

    I now am going to suggest a theory. Spooner was with his girlfriend as he stated but has just walked her home. He married a woman called Catherine Sullivan a year or so later. There was a Sullivan family living in Backchurch lane but not sure about 1888. On the way home to His house in Fairclough street he encounters Stride momentarily on her own. Parcelman has his eyes on the yard and waiting for his moment. Spooner may be the man seen with Stride by Brown.

    Anyway perhaps Spooner is BSM. Thats why he is on his own when found by the searchers. He dare not say he was involved. He is trying to pull Stride out of the yard where Parcelman now is. He fails and Pacelman/Jtr cuts Strides throat and clears off.

    Spooner sticks to his story even the time. He is messed up because his timing doesnt work because he says he was with his girlfriend which he wasnt at the time of the pulling of Stride. He goes away not knowing what was about to happen to Stride

    I am sure there are lots of problems with this

    NW

    Leave a comment:


  • NotBlamedForNothing
    replied
    Originally posted by c.d. View Post

    I don't have a one size fits all definition unfortunately but I think what Schwartz described would fit into that category. She apparently was alive when he left the scene and had simply been pulled and thrown to the ground according to him. We don't know how violently she was thrown or if it was unintentional or if Stride contributed to the situation in any way. We don't know the B.S. man's intentions. He simply might have wanted her to move and got pissed by her refusal or something she said.
    A non-associate of the club would have no business in wanting her to move on. Morris Eagle, on the other hand, may have resented her presence. Her refusal would imply she was not soliciting, which would suggest she was waiting for someone. If not BS, then Jack. How might he have baited her?

    But let me ask you what is your definition of "ill-using?" Does it imply a hanging offense? Are all assaults equal in nature so that they carry the same penalty?

    c.d.
    Dictionaries refer to harsh, cruel, unfair treatment, and abuse. Inappropriate touching or grabbing comes to mind.

    In answer to your questions: No. No.

    Leave a comment:


  • NotBlamedForNothing
    replied
    Originally posted by JeffHamm View Post

    There is nothing problematic at all. We were talking about how long the Schwartz event would last, so that means the things Schwartz describes. He doesn't describe how or when Stride gets to the gate, she is just there.

    And what B.S. does after Schwartz leaves is unknown, as I already indicated by my examples. Different theories would result in different durations, as I said.

    But so what? How are those problems when the goal is to get a reasonable estimate of the Schwartz event? We have about 90s for what Schwartz himself describes, to which one adds the time for B.S. The minimum being that B.S. leaves very quickly after Schwartz has fled and he took exits to Fairclough. If he kills Stride add maybe 10 seconds more if you wish.

    You are now talking about fitting the Schwartz event into a bigger description of the night, but that is an entirely different phase. All we are doing is timing this piece of the puzzle. Once we have it understood, if we can construct the rest of the night we can then look to see if there are sections of time that could be suitable places to fit the Schwartz piece. If there is only one, then we've narrowed down when it likely occurred, if there are two, we have options, and so forth.

    And, if you find a time window when the above shortest version fits and there is an extra 2 minutes to work with, then you could suggest more may have transpired as well.

    - Jeff
    Even on your own terms, the timespan yourself and others suppose for this truncated 'Schwartz incident' is questionable.

    Swanson: ... having got as far as the gateway where the murder was committed he saw a man stop & speak to a woman, who was standing in the gateway. The man tried to pull the woman into the street, but he turned her round & threw her down on the footway​ ...

    This makes it sound like the interaction between the man and woman lasted mere seconds. The problem is that the single paragraph describing the incident is heavily condensed. In reality, how long did it take to go from the man and woman talking, to the man getting violent with the woman? Was there an angry argument before he threw her down? Did it continue after that point? For all we know, Schwartz could have stood gawking at the spectacle for 2 or 3 minutes. Why would a verbal dispute escalate into violence after a few seconds? I think your estimate could be way out.

    Leave a comment:


  • c.d.
    replied
    In reality, the man might have been ill-using the deceased woman. What is your definition of a little street hassle?​​

    I don't have a one size fits all definition unfortunately but I think what Schwartz described would fit into that category. She apparently was alive when he left the scene and had simply been pulled and thrown to the ground according to him. We don't know how violently she was thrown or if it was unintentional or if Stride contributed to the situation in any way. We don't know the B.S. man's intentions. He simply might have wanted her to move and got pissed by her refusal or something she said.

    But let me ask you what is your definition of "ill-using?" Does it imply a hanging offense? Are all assaults equal in nature so that they carry the same penalty?

    c.d.

    Leave a comment:


  • NotBlamedForNothing
    replied
    Originally posted by The Rookie Detective View Post

    I accept your point and can envisage a scenario whereby Stride was defiant and chose not to move.

    A little street hassle is not indicative of a man who then cuts a woman's throat and then leaves her to die.

    So based on the idea of a little street hassle, we can be fairly certain that Bs man was not the killer, and certainly not the Ripper.

    The body of evidence from Stride's murder shows that the killer made one clean cut (not jagged) across her throat and dispatched her cleanly and quickly.

    Her death was more akin to a professional killer, than a drunken man throwing her to the ground and shouting racial slurs.

    There was no evidence of a struggle, apart from some blood on her right hand, and it is clear that Stride's murder occurred extremely quickly.

    One clean cut. Controlled rage, but not the work of a drunken thug; as per eluded to by Schwarz's sighting of a little street hassle.

    It is also important to note that the very first report of Schwartz's story that appeared in the newspaper, did indeed mention about the witness believing it was a domestic between a couple.

    So on that basis it would seem that IF Schwartz was correct with what he saw and his timings, then Stride was the most unfortunate woman in having been assaulted and then less than 10 minutes later being murdered by a stealthy one-cut killer who acted in complete silence and then disappeared without trace.
    Good post. BS Man as killer is a problematic notion.

    Kozebrodski: ... Mr Diemshitz called me out into the yard. He told me there was something in the yard, and told me to come and see what it was. When we had got outside he struck a match, and when we looked down on the ground we could see a large pool of blood. It was running down the gutter, and in the direction of the gate, and reached about to the door of the club.

    By this time, the killer is not "hiding in the shadows". He is long gone. There were a few minutes at most for another man to come along, after BS does. Even that requires Schwartz to have been correct about the time, and for BS not to be on the scene for more than a minute or so. The odds are against. Something is not right.

    Leave a comment:


  • NotBlamedForNothing
    replied
    Originally posted by c.d. View Post

    Technically it could have been an assault but in reality might have been just a little street hassle. Something she was used to. She might have been more pissed then scared, not really hurt, and told herself she'd be damned if she was moving. So consider it an act of defiance.
    Abberline: I beg to report that since a jew named Lipski was hanged for the murder of a jewess in 1887 the name has very frequently been used by persons as mere ejaculation by way of endeavouring to insult the jew to whom it has been addressed, and as Schwartz has a strong jewish appearance I am of opinion it was addressed to him as he stopped to look at the man he saw ill-using the deceased woman.

    In reality, the man might have been ill-using the deceased woman. What is your definition of a little street hassle?​​

    Leave a comment:


  • NotBlamedForNothing
    replied
    Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

    We’re back in silly conspiracy territory again. There’s just no escaping it. A deliberate attempt to manufacture a mystery. We can produce half a dozen different scenarios at least which allow for all of the facts but all we get is ‘what are the chances of..’ ‘it doesn’t seem likely.’

    What isn’t likely is that there was a far-fetched plot going on in Berner Street.
    This is not an argument. You cannot answer the points put to you, so you resort to playing the 'conspiracy theory' card. It's pathetic.

    Leave a comment:


  • JeffHamm
    replied
    Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post

    This is a highly problematic claim.

    We only have Schwartz's word that this unexplained standing in the gateway actually occurred. Not a single witness provides support.

    Even if we assume this gateway vigil to be the truth, saying that this is not part of the event, collides with reasons hitherto given for Stride being there. Like, she was waiting for the BS Man. In that case the event starts when Stride gets to the gateway, and not when she is first noticed by Schwartz.



    If we assume that BS killed Stride, we cannot assume he did the moment Schwartz is out of sight.

    There are four individuals involved in this event. It may be true that the entirety of this incident is usually truncated down to only look at it from the point of view of Schwartz, but I'd suggest that this is often to avoid some troubling questions.
    There is nothing problematic at all. We were talking about how long the Schwartz event would last, so that means the things Schwartz describes. He doesn't describe how or when Stride gets to the gate, she is just there.

    And what B.S. does after Schwartz leaves is unknown, as I already indicated by my examples. Different theories would result in different durations, as I said.

    But so what? How are those problems when the goal is to get a reasonable estimate of the Schwartz event? We have about 90s for what Schwartz himself describes, to which one adds the time for B.S. The minimum being that B.S. leaves very quickly after Schwartz has fled and he took exits to Fairclough. If he kills Stride add maybe 10 seconds more if you wish.

    You are now talking about fitting the Schwartz event into a bigger description of the night, but that is an entirely different phase. All we are doing is timing this piece of the puzzle. Once we have it understood, if we can construct the rest of the night we can then look to see if there are sections of time that could be suitable places to fit the Schwartz piece. If there is only one, then we've narrowed down when it likely occurred, if there are two, we have options, and so forth.

    And, if you find a time window when the above shortest version fits and there is an extra 2 minutes to work with, then you could suggest more may have transpired as well.

    - Jeff

    Leave a comment:


  • c.d.
    replied
    So on that basis it would seem that IF Schwartz was correct with what he saw and his timings, then Stride was the most unfortunate woman in having been assaulted and then less than 10 minutes later being murdered by a stealthy one-cut killer who acted in complete silence and then disappeared without trace.

    From a strictly statistical probability perspective, I would say yes, quite unlikely. But we have to consider the circumstances. Stride was not standing in front of a church on Sunday afternoon surrounded by hundreds of people. Whitechapel was a rough place. She was a lone woman standing by herself late at night right after the pubs had closed and there were probably a lot of drunk workingmen on the streets. So with that in mind, a little prior street hassle becomes much less ominous and statistically less important. At least in my mind.

    c.d.

    Leave a comment:


  • Lewis C
    replied
    Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post



    TRD is right not to casually assume that the 3rd-person report must be based on another interview with Fanny. How the 10-minute versus nearly all of 30-minutes doorstep vigil impacts on the credibility of Schwartz, however, comes down to when the 10 or so minutes occurs - if indeed it did and was Fanny. In the 3rd-person report, it starts pretty much on 12:45 - right after a policeman's plod is heard passing her house. So, an immediate issue arises.

    If we suppose the 10-minute vigil is close to the truth, and base the starting time on PC Smith's testimony, we have Fanny locking up not long after 12:45. Did she see Goldstein just before turning in, as in the Evening News (yet another) interview would suggest? There are two problems with this. At that time, she should have seen Schwartz, not Goldstein. The second problem being that the police put Goldstein's traversal of the street at "about 1am".

    Is 12:45 about 1am? What do the quoted words Fanny suggest?

    I had just gone indoors and was preparing to go to bed, when I heard a commotion outside, and immediately ran out thinking that there was another row at the Socialists' club close by.

    That sound like she is locking up a few minutes before 1am. If the 10-minutes commences right after Smith passes, the timeline is stretched to breaking point.
    I wasn't taking a position either way about whether Fanny's two different accounts were based on a single interview or two different interviews. My main point was that we can't assume that an account that the writer chose to state in the first person is necessarily a more reliable account than one that the writer chose to state in the third person. A secondary point is that I wouldn't refer to either account as the earlier account or the later account. They were published the same day.

    IIRC, there is at least one suggested timeline where Fanny's time at her door is estimated as slightly less than 10 minutes.

    Leave a comment:


  • The Rookie Detective
    replied
    Originally posted by c.d. View Post
    Generally speaking, if a person is assaulted and they manage to survive, they tend to go for help, or to seek another location where they can feel safer.

    Technically it could have been an assault but in reality might have been just a little street hassle. Something she was used to. She might have been more pissed then scared, not really hurt, and told herself she'd be damned if she was moving. So consider it an act of defiance.

    c.d.

    I accept your point and can envisage a scenario whereby Stride was defiant and chose not to move.

    A little street hassle is not indicative of a man who then cuts a woman's throat and then leaves her to die.

    So based on the idea of a little street hassle, we can be fairly certain that Bs man was not the killer, and certainly not the Ripper.

    The body of evidence from Stride's murder shows that the killer made one clean cut (not jagged) across her throat and dispatched her cleanly and quickly.

    Her death was more akin to a professional killer, than a drunken man throwing her to the ground and shouting racial slurs.

    There was no evidence of a struggle, apart from some blood on her right hand, and it is clear that Stride's murder occurred extremely quickly.

    One clean cut. Controlled rage, but not the work of a drunken thug; as per eluded to by Schwarz's sighting of a little street hassle.

    It is also important to note that the very first report of Schwartz's story that appeared in the newspaper, did indeed mention about the witness believing it was a domestic between a couple.

    So on that basis it would seem that IF Schwartz was correct with what he saw and his timings, then Stride was the most unfortunate woman in having been assaulted and then less than 10 minutes later being murdered by a stealthy one-cut killer who acted in complete silence and then disappeared without trace.


    Leave a comment:

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