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  • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post

    No need to take my word for it... You can Google it.

    Yaffa is a feminine name of Hebrew origin well-suited for the flower bud ready to bloom. With the graceful meaning of “beautiful,” baby Yaffa can bask in compliments whenever their name is mentioned. Yaffa is also an African surname whose meaning remains a mystery for now.Jan 18, 2024


    A few months ago I highlighted that the name 'Yaffa' when used as a forename, is a girl's name meaning Beautiful, the equivalent of the name Bella.

    However, as a surname, it applies to both male and female, so the individual named Yaffa, could have been either.

    I would assume that Yaffa was a man. just with a feminine surname.


    RD

    "Great minds, don't think alike"

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post

      Eagle does not refer to a watch or the club clock, but his times are estimates - he returned to the club "about" 12:40, he thinks he had been singing in the club 20 minutes, we might ask how was he so sure of the time? Without reference to a timepiece we must assume this was another estimate.
      Times version of the Inquest, Eagle the witness:

      Witness. - I think the policeman touched it, but the other persons appeared afraid to go near it. When I first saw the body of deceased, I should say it was about 1 o'clock, although I did not look at the clock.

      He refers to a clock in the Club that he didn't look at. His times were pure estimates based on an uncertain starting point

      Cheers, George
      The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or the one.

      Don't allow his interactions with the Roadrunner dissuade you from the self proclamation of Wile E Coyote as a (stable?) genius.

      ​Disagreeing doesn't have to be disagreeable - Jeff Hamm

      Comment


      • Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post
        Ive been remiss not discussing the other witness of this thread, Lawende. Am I missing something here...he said within 2 weeks that he doubted if he could identify the man again, he said so at the Inquest, ...yet he is sequestered at their expense, his suspect description is used a few times by different investigators and papers, he is probably the man they called in to try and ID Grant in 1895, and he is rumoured to be Andersons so called Seaside Home reluctant witness.....all this attention, for what? He couldnt ID the man again...he said so....so why would they continues to haul him out for ID's or use his suspect description?
        Curiously, the Pall Mall Gazette dated 7 May 1895 reported that Grainger had been unhesitatingly identified by the one person whom the police believe saw the murderer with a woman a few moments before her mutilated body was found.

        Cheers, George
        The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or the one.

        Don't allow his interactions with the Roadrunner dissuade you from the self proclamation of Wile E Coyote as a (stable?) genius.

        ​Disagreeing doesn't have to be disagreeable - Jeff Hamm

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Michael W Richards View Post

          I think its possible that they werent being tested about their loyalty to one another, but more tangibly by the threat of income, and perhaps housing loss. Do they protect the club from potential catastrophic consequences if the general public decides that these Jewish Immigrants were the likely culprits? The mere fact that Israels altercation takes place off the property..when in all probability the truth is she was on the property and never left it after Smith left, leaves open the question of whether he is actually recounting a personal experience or placing a prime suspect off site.
          You're right, it's not just about personal loyalties. The threat to the club of one of their own becoming a suspect is not insignificant.

          Stride's location post-Smith's witnessing of her could arguably come down to Eagle's whereabouts. If Morris arrived back earlier than he supposed, Stride and her current companion may be yet to arrive. On the other hand, how could Eagle have missed seeing Stride, unless she had gone deeper into the yard?
          Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing

          Comment


          • Originally posted by The Rookie Detective View Post

            A few months ago I highlighted that the name 'Yaffa' when used as a forename, is a girl's name meaning Beautiful, the equivalent of the name Bella.

            However, as a surname, it applies to both male and female, so the individual named Yaffa, could have been either.

            I would assume that Yaffa was a man. just with a feminine surname.


            RD
            Thanks for the info.

            Here's a theory for you to ponder. The short version is; The Juwess is the man who will not be blamed for nothing.

            The long version...

            After Smith passes, Stride and Parcelman go down the passageway and into the backyard. Their probable purpose is theft of costermonger goods, and whatever they can get their hands on. He has a bag to put things in - she will hold whatever she can in her hands. Krantz and Yaffa hear the theft occurring, and confront the man and woman, who attempt to retreat from the yard. The man manages to escape - the woman does not. Remember Stride's bad leg. Stride's is captured and killed by Yaffa, with the aid of Krantz. The man is pursued by another club attendee, who is on the street at the time. Probably it's Joseph Lave. Lave returns to learn of the murder and forms the impression that the man he pursued was the killer.

            Wess's comments to an Echo journalist resulted in this report:

            In the course of conversation (says the journalist) the secretary mentioned the fact that the murderer had no doubt been disturbed in his work, as about a quarter to one o'clock on Sunday morning he was seen- or, at least, a man whom the public prefer to regard as the murderer- being chased by another man along Fairclough-street, which runs across Berner-street close to the Club, and which is intersected on the right by Providence-street, Brunswick-street, and Christian-st., and on the left by Batty-street and Grove-street, the two latter running up into Commercial-road. The man pursued escaped, however, and the secretary of the Club cannot remember the name of the man who gave chase, but he is not a member of their body.

            ​So, this is not a 'garbled' version of the Schwartz incident. On the contrary the Echo report is quite close to the truth, and the account given by Schwartz is the heavily distorted version.

            You might want to think about how many questions this theory has an answer for. For example, consider the various pressure marks on the victim's body, the very tight scarf, and the lack of audible screams. How many hands were involved in the murder?

            The other obvious issue to consider is the switch from the man pursued being the supposed murderer, to him being an innocent passer-by. Why the switch?
            Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing

            Comment


            • Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post

              Thanks for the info.

              Here's a theory for you to ponder. The short version is; The Juwess is the man who will not be blamed for nothing.

              The long version...

              After Smith passes, Stride and Parcelman go down the passageway and into the backyard. Their probable purpose is theft of costermonger goods, and whatever they can get their hands on. He has a bag to put things in - she will hold whatever she can in her hands. Krantz and Yaffa hear the theft occurring, and confront the man and woman, who attempt to retreat from the yard. The man manages to escape - the woman does not. Remember Stride's bad leg. Stride's is captured and killed by Yaffa, with the aid of Krantz. The man is pursued by another club attendee, who is on the street at the time. Probably it's Joseph Lave. Lave returns to learn of the murder and forms the impression that the man he pursued was the killer.

              Wess's comments to an Echo journalist resulted in this report:

              In the course of conversation (says the journalist) the secretary mentioned the fact that the murderer had no doubt been disturbed in his work, as about a quarter to one o'clock on Sunday morning he was seen- or, at least, a man whom the public prefer to regard as the murderer- being chased by another man along Fairclough-street, which runs across Berner-street close to the Club, and which is intersected on the right by Providence-street, Brunswick-street, and Christian-st., and on the left by Batty-street and Grove-street, the two latter running up into Commercial-road. The man pursued escaped, however, and the secretary of the Club cannot remember the name of the man who gave chase, but he is not a member of their body.

              ​So, this is not a 'garbled' version of the Schwartz incident. On the contrary the Echo report is quite close to the truth, and the account given by Schwartz is the heavily distorted version.

              You might want to think about how many questions this theory has an answer for. For example, consider the various pressure marks on the victim's body, the very tight scarf, and the lack of audible screams. How many hands were involved in the murder?

              The other obvious issue to consider is the switch from the man pursued being the supposed murderer, to him being an innocent passer-by. Why the switch?
              I like the way your mind thinks, in that you are trying to look at things from as many different angles as possible and working through countless scenarios to try and make sense of what transpired.
              I think there are other elements that need to be included into the mix;


              Stride could allegedly speak Yiddish, despite not being Jewish

              Stride suffered from fits, just like her brother

              Stride was multilingual and able to translate

              Stride worked within the Jewish community (not including her life as an unfortunate)

              Stride had only walked out of a tempestuous relationship with Michael Kidney just days before she was murdered.

              Stride was present in the kitchen of the lodging house, when Dr Barnardo walked in and gave a speech to convince them to walk away from their life of vice. Stride was murdered a few days later.

              Stride was witnessed being intimate with the man outside the Bricklayers Arms less than 2 hours before she was murdered. Her behaviour with this man does not suggest she was soliciting, but had more of a connection.
              This man wasn't Kidney.

              Stride's interaction with this man and the subsequent witness accounts all imply that on the night she was murdered, Stride was not soliciting.

              Stride was murdered outside a club that comprised of relatively radical Jews; it is well documented how the club was not popular with the more orthodox or politically moderate Jews.

              Stride was murdered in the dark by a solitary cut and placed down on the ground. The murder would have taken under 30 seconds.

              Stride holding the Cachou without dropping them indicates her brain reacted instantaneously through seizing up her muscles. There is a scientific phenomenon that can explain why she didn't drop the Cachou.

              Stride's likelihood as a Ripper victim relies entirely on whether the killer was disturbed. This is evidenced by the lack of cutting and mutilation. The Ripper's signature double cut to the throat was also absent.

              Strides face was muddied and yet her clothes showed no signs of having been dragged or scuffed.

              Stride was alleged to have been seen talking to at least 2 different men shortly before she was murdered.

              ​​​​​​
              ​​​​​​These elements need to be taken into consideration.

              RD
              Last edited by The Rookie Detective; 02-09-2024, 01:26 PM.
              "Great minds, don't think alike"

              Comment


              • Originally posted by GBinOz View Post

                Curiously, the Pall Mall Gazette dated 7 May 1895 reported that Grainger had been unhesitatingly identified by the one person whom the police believe saw the murderer with a woman a few moments before her mutilated body was found.

                Cheers, George
                I had read that one George, Im wondering though where this "one person" came from, in another reports it says her screams brought the "first Constable" who catches the man still over Ms Graham. In an article he is referred to as " Police Constable Frazer". Yet in another report it says "some people" were first on that scene, having heard the screams.... "The screams of a woman attracted a crowd to a lonely thoroughfare, and the people arriving first upon the scene caught a man red handed in the act of butchering a woman of the unfortunate class."

                Not that Im terribly troubled by the attribution to the PC Frazer instead of a group of people, its a little misleading as to who was the first to actually catch Grainger over the woman. Would this imply though that PC Frazer did the ID for the Graham crime but Lawende might have also been called in based on the Ripperesque style of the kill?

                Comment


                • Originally posted by The Rookie Detective View Post

                  I like the way your mind thinks, in that you are trying to look at things from as many different angles as possible and working through countless scenarios to try and make sense of what transpired.
                  Thanks for the compliment, but please also try to pick holes in the theory - that should be easy enough....

                  I think there are other elements that need to be included into the mix;


                  Stride could allegedly speak Yiddish, despite not being Jewish

                  Stride suffered from fits, just like her brother

                  Stride was multilingual and able to translate

                  Stride worked within the Jewish community (not including her life as an unfortunate)

                  Stride had only walked out of a tempestuous relationship with Michael Kidney just days before she was murdered.

                  Stride was present in the kitchen of the lodging house, when Dr Barnardo walked in and gave a speech to convince them to walk away from their life of vice. Stride was murdered a few days later.

                  Stride was witnessed being intimate with the man outside the Bricklayers Arms less than 2 hours before she was murdered. Her behaviour with this man does not suggest she was soliciting, but had more of a connection.
                  This man wasn't Kidney.

                  Stride's interaction with this man and the subsequent witness accounts all imply that on the night she was murdered, Stride was not soliciting.

                  Stride was murdered outside a club that comprised of relatively radical Jews; it is well documented how the club was not popular with the more orthodox or politically moderate Jews.

                  Stride was murdered in the dark by a solitary cut and placed down on the ground. The murder would have taken under 30 seconds.

                  Stride holding the Cachou without dropping them indicates her brain reacted instantaneously through seizing up her muscles. There is a scientific phenomenon that can explain why she didn't drop the Cachou.

                  Stride's likelihood as a Ripper victim relies entirely on whether the killer was disturbed. This is evidenced by the lack of cutting and mutilation. The Ripper's signature double cut to the throat was also absent.

                  Strides face was muddied and yet her clothes showed no signs of having been dragged or scuffed.

                  Stride was alleged to have been seen talking to at least 2 different men shortly before she was murdered.

                  ​​​​​​
                  ​​​​​​These elements need to be taken into consideration.

                  RD
                  Some of these relate to why Stride ended up near the club, whereas I'm focused on the murder right at this moment. However, I agree these are important points to consider. How do people suppose Stride was thrown down on the footway, yet ended up inside the gates without being dragged and without her making audible screams for help? That alone is enough to suppose that Schwartz might have lied.
                  Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post

                    Thanks for the info.

                    Here's a theory for you to ponder. The short version is; The Juwess is the man who will not be blamed for nothing.

                    The long version...

                    After Smith passes, Stride and Parcelman go down the passageway and into the backyard. Their probable purpose is theft of costermonger goods, and whatever they can get their hands on. He has a bag to put things in - she will hold whatever she can in her hands. Krantz and Yaffa hear the theft occurring, and confront the man and woman, who attempt to retreat from the yard. The man manages to escape - the woman does not. Remember Stride's bad leg. Stride's is captured and killed by Yaffa, with the aid of Krantz. The man is pursued by another club attendee, who is on the street at the time. Probably it's Joseph Lave. Lave returns to learn of the murder and forms the impression that the man he pursued was the killer.

                    Wess's comments to an Echo journalist resulted in this report:

                    In the course of conversation (says the journalist) the secretary mentioned the fact that the murderer had no doubt been disturbed in his work, as about a quarter to one o'clock on Sunday morning he was seen- or, at least, a man whom the public prefer to regard as the murderer- being chased by another man along Fairclough-street, which runs across Berner-street close to the Club, and which is intersected on the right by Providence-street, Brunswick-street, and Christian-st., and on the left by Batty-street and Grove-street, the two latter running up into Commercial-road. The man pursued escaped, however, and the secretary of the Club cannot remember the name of the man who gave chase, but he is not a member of their body.

                    ​So, this is not a 'garbled' version of the Schwartz incident. On the contrary the Echo report is quite close to the truth, and the account given by Schwartz is the heavily distorted version.

                    You might want to think about how many questions this theory has an answer for. For example, consider the various pressure marks on the victim's body, the very tight scarf, and the lack of audible screams. How many hands were involved in the murder?

                    The other obvious issue to consider is the switch from the man pursued being the supposed murderer, to him being an innocent passer-by. Why the switch?
                    The only question that I have about this theory is, why would Krantz and Yaffa kill Stride? Because they're so angry with her for stealing that they lose control of themselves?

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by NotBlamedForNothing View Post

                      Thanks for the compliment, but please also try to pick holes in the theory - that should be easy enough....



                      Some of these relate to why Stride ended up near the club, whereas I'm focused on the murder right at this moment. However, I agree these are important points to consider. How do people suppose Stride was thrown down on the footway, yet ended up inside the gates without being dragged and without her making audible screams for help? That alone is enough to suppose that Schwartz might have lied.
                      That could be. Another possibility is that the killer came along just after she was thrown down. He may have even seen it, and acted like he wanted to console her, and so she went through the gates with him voluntarily.

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by Lewis C View Post

                        The only question that I have about this theory is, why would Krantz and Yaffa kill Stride? Because they're so angry with her for stealing that they lose control of themselves?
                        Perhaps Yaffa also took offence at the man shouting 'Lipski' at him. We could suppose it was not Krantz's intention to kill her - only to retrieve the stolen items and give her a good scare - unfortunately Yaffa took things too far. Is it still too much of a stretch? How does the motive compare to the man described by Schwartz - why didn't he just shove her to the ground and go and find another prostitute?

                        Regarding the Echo report, I'm wondering how people suppose Wess came to be told the name of the pursuing man?

                        I also find it interesting that Krantz makes no mention of Yaffa, at the inquest. This is the relevant section in Der Arbeter Fraint ...

                        From excitement he [Comrade Louis Dimshits] jumped off the cart, ran through the back door into the club and raised an alarm. Immediately Comrade Gilyarovsky ran into the printing shop and editor’s office that are located in the same building as the club, but separated in the back by the yard.
                        There was no one in the printing shop. Comrades Krants and Yaffa were busy in the editor’s office.
                        “Don’t you know that a murdered woman is lying in the yard?” Gilyarovsky breathlessly called out. At first the two comrades did not want to believe him. “What, don’t you believe me?” Gilyarovsky quickly asked: “I saw blood.” Yaffa and Krants immediately ran out and went over to the gate. The gate was open and it was very dark near the gate. A black object was barely discernable near the brick building. Once they got very close, they could notice that it was the shape of a woman that was lying with its face to the wall, with its head toward the yard and with its feet pointing to the gate. Comrades Morris Eygel, Fridenthal and Gilyarovsky were standing around the body. Eygel struck a match and shouted to the figure lying there: “Get up!” “Why are you waking her?” asked Yaffa, who noticed that the woman was lying in a liquid. “Don’t you see that the woman is dead?”


                        ​Gilyarovsky's immediate reaction is to run into the printing and editor's offices. Why there and not upstairs, where Eygel and many others are?

                        Another point is the paper's estimate of the murder time ...

                        The first murder occurred on Saturday night about a quarter to one.

                        What was the source of that knowledge?
                        Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Lewis C View Post

                          That could be. Another possibility is that the killer came along just after she was thrown down. He may have even seen it, and acted like he wanted to console her, and so she went through the gates with him voluntarily.
                          The Just-in-Time-Jack consoles damsel in distress theory is a bit too Hollywood for my liking.
                          Andrew's the man, who is not blamed for nothing

                          Comment


                          • We could also divide the killer's movements moments before he cut Stride's throat into the following...


                            1) He had just left the club by the side door to leave for home

                            2) He had just left the side door to get some air before returning inside the club

                            3) He had just returned back to the club

                            4) He had just arrived at the club

                            5) He was walking south past the kill site and noticed her

                            6) He was walking North past the kill site and noticed her

                            7) He has been with Stride for a longer period of time outside, having arrived at the club with her

                            8) He was looking for her specifically

                            9) He was heading to a residence in the yard and noticed her

                            10) He was leaving a residence in the yard and noticed her

                            11) She was outside, waiting for him to leave the club


                            The question then becomes...where do all of the known witnesses/persons of interest/suspects fit?


                            RD
                            ​​​​​
                            Last edited by The Rookie Detective; 02-10-2024, 10:10 AM.
                            "Great minds, don't think alike"

                            Comment


                            • How do people suppose Stride was thrown down on the footway, yet ended up inside the gates without being dragged and without her making audible screams for help? That alone is enough to suppose that Schwartz might have lied.

                              But Schwartz never said he saw Stride being murdered. He only described what he saw take place when he was at the scene. How can he be held responsible for things that took place after he left?

                              c.d.

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by GBinOz View Post
                                Curiously, the Pall Mall Gazette dated 7 May 1895 reported that Grainger had been unhesitatingly identified by the one person whom the police believe saw the murderer with a woman a few moments before her mutilated body was found.
                                Has anybody ever found another source for this story (that wasn't copied from the PMG)?

                                Comment

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