Originally posted by S.Brett
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Packer and Schwartz
Collapse
X
-
Hello
The main problem I have with Kosminski (or anyone like him) is that he was known to be mentally unbalanced. His odd behaviour (picking up bread from the ground and eating it, possibly muttering to himself etc) would attract attention. Gossip travels surprisingly quickly, the grapevine being at least as fast as the internet, so word would have got round. He was exactly the kind of person who was suspected to be the killer. Why then would a potential JTR victim allow herself to be taken into a lonely spot with such a man?
Best wishes
C4
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jeff Leahy View PostYou've lost me...who is Happenstance?
Comment
-
Originally posted by curious4 View PostHello
The main problem I have with Kosminski (or anyone like him) is that he was known to be mentally unbalanced. His odd behaviour (picking up bread from the ground and eating it, possibly muttering to himself etc) would attract attention. Gossip travels surprisingly quickly, the grapevine being at least as fast as the internet, so word would have got round. He was exactly the kind of person who was suspected to be the killer. Why then would a potential JTR victim allow herself to be taken into a lonely spot with such a man?
Best wishes
C4
In 1888 Aaron Kozminski picking up bread from the ground and eating it, possibly muttering to himself? In 1891 he did it, maybe end of 1890 but 1888?
No one really knows...
Karsten.
Comment
-
Originally posted by curious4 View PostHello
The main problem I have with Kosminski (or anyone like him) is that he was known to be mentally unbalanced. His odd behaviour (picking up bread from the ground and eating it, possibly muttering to himself etc) would attract attention. Gossip travels surprisingly quickly, the grapevine being at least as fast as the internet, so word would have got round. He was exactly the kind of person who was suspected to be the killer. Why then would a potential JTR victim allow herself to be taken into a lonely spot with such a man?
Best wishes
C4
If Kozminski is the man described by Cox, he certainly wasn't picking up bread from the gutter at this time.1888. He was going for long walks abroad..
He was able to give evidence in Dec 1889 at his trial (Walking the dog) and say 'Kozminski is hard to spell'
Schizophrenia is a cyclicur illness hitting the suffer in waves that slow get stronger typically lasting 18-22 weeks..about the length of the 'autumn of terror'
Kozminski was admitted to the workhouse in July 1890 and released presumably because they didn't think he was mad..
We have know idea how long he had been 'eating from the gutter' in Feb 1891... He wasn't considered incurable until his transfer Leavesdon 1894
Trust that helps
Yours JeffLast edited by Jeff Leahy; 11-05-2015, 06:21 AM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by curious4 View PostHello
The main problem I have with Kosminski (or anyone like him) is that he was known to be mentally unbalanced. His odd behaviour (picking up bread from the ground and eating it, possibly muttering to himself etc) would attract attention. Gossip travels surprisingly quickly, the grapevine being at least as fast as the internet, so word would have got round. He was exactly the kind of person who was suspected to be the killer. Why then would a potential JTR victim allow herself to be taken into a lonely spot with such a man?
Best wishes
C4
also, apparently "he hadn't attempted any work for years" might say something about this, at the very least did he even have the money or werewithall to solicit a prostitute?
and I find it hard to believe someone like Mary Kelly, or stride, who were not in desperate staits, would have wasted their time with a character like kosminski.
however, its possible, and if kosminski was the ripper, I think his severe mental illness was the cause of the end of the murders and not the cause of the murders."Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
Comment
-
Originally posted by Abby Normal View Posthowever, its possible, and if kosminski was the ripper, I think his severe mental illness was the cause of the end of the murders and not the cause of the murders.
Schizophrenia typically starts in late teens early twenties. I recently posted a new study which suggests it has something to do with the point the body stops growing. Certainly scientists here in the UK claim to be analysing its causes and effects at long last, although the drugs available haven't changed in forty years and shorten life expectation.
But schizophrenics are NOT dangerous, infact more likely to be a danger unto themselves... So if Kozminski was the killer, we'd also expect underlining personality disorders...and on this analysis it would be almost impossible to include or exclude any suspect..(psychosis being the bye product of many illnesses and edictions)
However the bizarre nature of the killing suggest to me someone with a deeply disturbed mind and destorted perspective of the world..an extremely rare combination which I'd suggest fairly unique to its time frame and environment...There haven't been any such killings in a long time in the UK (Dis-embowlments on the street that is) Which is why I personally think this kind of killing more like a modern Spree killing... But thats rather off track of the witness thread..
Many thanks
Yours JeffLast edited by Jeff Leahy; 11-05-2015, 09:14 AM.
Comment
-
The schizophrenia shows the disorganized killer. It existed in the background of Jack the Ripper. He was mentally disturbed (paranoid schizophrenia/ hebephrenic schizophrenia or a mixed form).
Robert Ressler ("I Have Lived In The Monster" by Robert K.Ressler & Tom Shachtman):
"It also seemed clear to me that the Ripper had been a "disorganized" killer'..."who was mentally deranged and becoming more so with each victim"
I do not know if John Douglas and Roy Hazelwood agreed with Ressler regarding a possible suicide but in Robert House´s book "Jack the Ripper And The Case For Scotland Yard´s Prime Suspect" you will see what Roy Hazelwood, John Douglas and Laura Richards have to say.
Hello Abby!
Originally posted by Abby Normal View Postalso, apparently "he hadn't attempted any work for years" might say something about this, at the very least did he even have the money or werewithall to solicit a prostitute?
Originally posted by Abby Normal View Posthowever, its possible, and if kosminski was the ripper, I think his severe mental illness was the cause of the end of the murders and not the cause of the murders.
"If the killer was deranged and becoming progressively more so, it is likely that he might well have gone off the deep end entirely"..."so crazed that he could no longer even commit crimes"
You are correct but the Cox suspect "worked" (Cox: "very soon he removed from his usual haunts and gave up his nightly prowls") for months after the Kelly murder. Maybe, the suspect could no longer commit crimes after about March 1889. But before March 1889? The reason for this: He might have known that he is shadowed or he knew he was identified by a witness, a witness not known to the police before the second half of 1890.
Karsten.
Comment
-
Originally posted by S.Brett View PostHe might have known that he is shadowed or he knew he was identified by a witness, a witness not known to the police before the second half of 1890.
Karsten.
it would be wrong to assume that because he suffered schizophrenia he was stupid or dumb, schizophrenics can be highly intelligent and above average intelligence...
But a troubled childhood would explain much
Yours Jeff
Comment
-
All this discussion seems to me to indicate that some people have moved on to profiling a killer despite the fact that the five murders within the Canonical Group have not been linked by killer, or MO, or Victimology. Not all 5 women were killed in the same fashion, obviously. And knives are hardly a watermark for any particular signature or methodology, they were simply the cheapest and most available weapon of the period. If you study violent crimes of the era you will find that knives were involved in a high percentage of them, but clearly, they are not all not attributed to a single killer.
The Ripper legend is just a lot of hype, lots of speculation, and comes from a distinct lack of strictly independent review of each particular crime for its components and its attributes.
Liz Stride is a perfect example of that argument. There is absolutely no reason based on the evidence specific to the murder itself to surmise that Liz Stride was killed by a serial mutilator. Which by appearances is a legitimate profile for the person who killed Polly and Annie. The only reasons for surmising Liz was killed by the same man are based on geographical and calendar considerations, as well as an unsophisticated approach to evidence interpretation.
To concoct a serial killer profile using victims that fairly clearly do not fit into the legitimate established killer profile created by previous kills is much like building a house on sand. Eventually the flawed substructure will reveal itself under stress.
Cheers
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jeff Leahy View PostYes I agree
it would be wrong to assume that because he suffered schizophrenia he was stupid or dumb, schizophrenics can be highly intelligent and above average intelligence...
But a troubled childhood would explain much
Yours Jeff
Here an example of a man suffering from schizophrenia:
But a schizophrenic with homicidal tendencies and mutilation fantasies leaves such crime scenes as in the case of Jack the Ripper.
Thomas Müller:
Comment
-
Originally posted by Michael W Richards View PostAll this discussion seems to me to indicate that some people have moved on to profiling a killer despite the fact that the five murders within the Canonical Group have not been linked by killer, or MO, or Victimology. Not all 5 women were killed in the same fashion, obviously. And knives are hardly a watermark for any particular signature or methodology, they were simply the cheapest and most available weapon of the period. If you study violent crimes of the era you will find that knives were involved in a high percentage of them, but clearly, they are not all not attributed to a single killer.
The Ripper legend is just a lot of hype, lots of speculation, and comes from a distinct lack of strictly independent review of each particular crime for its components and its attributes
Cheers
What you say is none sensical
Everything we know, logically, pionts to a singular serial killer based in the area, this has been concluded by most of the great ripperologist from Begg & fido to Evans & Rumkblow...
The killer simply lived in and around the community...other theories are at least, well hogwsh
What you are choosing to ignore is the men on he ground..those who actuaully investigated the story...had several theories that solved the crime
They knew what happened!
But they appear to have come to different conclusions?
What is being purposed here is an answer why the various police officers believed what they did....
Thats not to say Kozminski was the ripper, simply that there is only one suspect based on the known evidence
'Kozminski was the suspect'
Think about it?
Yours Jeff
PS yes we've moved on because we've been studying this a lot longer than you and there is only one possibilityLast edited by Jeff Leahy; 11-05-2015, 03:30 PM.
Comment
-
"The only reasons for surmising Liz was killed by the same man are based on geographical and calendar considerations, as well as an unsophisticated approach to evidence interpretation."
Well I'll be damned. Apparently a good number of us have been using an unsophisticated approach. No wonder we are not getting anywhere. Now where can we find someone who uses a sophisticated approach? I think I can guess.
c.d.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Michael W Richards View PostAll this discussion seems to me to indicate that some people have moved on to profiling a killer despite the fact that the five murders within the Canonical Group have not been linked by killer, or MO, or Victimology.
There are sufficient commonalities between the murders of Nichols, Chapman, Eddowes & Kelly to indicate the same hand being at work. However, it is true to say that not everyone agrees.
The fact there is disagreement does not mean the commonalities do not exist.
The Ripper legend is just a lot of hype, lots of speculation, and comes from a distinct lack of strictly independent review of each particular crime for its components and its attributes.
To take this argument a step further and suggest that there was no common hand at work is becoming a little tiresome, there is really nothing to be gained by pursuing that line of argument.
Liz Stride is a perfect example of that argument. There is absolutely no reason based on the evidence specific to the murder itself to surmise that Liz Stride was killed by a serial mutilator.
The murder of Stride finds its parallel in the later murders of Coles & McKenzie, and we have no firm indication from any of those murders that they were all killed by the same person, even less that they were killed by the same hand that struck down Nichols, Chapman, Eddowes & Kelly.Regards, Jon S.
Comment
Comment