Originally posted by Ben
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Ep. 38- Killers on the Loose: Eliminating the Suspects
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Well, Ben, we are getting close to some sort of agreement but we have a few dents to "hammer out" yet.
First of all, I obviously meant Sept 8 in my earlier post, not 9, which just goes to show how easily mis-statements can enter the record.
As to the cricket performance on Sept 8, let me make a few observations. We agree that there is not a logistical problem. The issue is whether Druitt would be able to compete or would choose to compete after being out all night. Several things here as I try to speak from personal experience. I will admit that I have never played a game of cricket competitively but I have watched it and I have "fooled around" with it. It strikes me as being somewhat less physically demanding than baseball or softball, which I have a great deal of experience playing. While at age 48 I have difficultly playing any sport competitively I fervently believe that at age 31 (Druitt's age) I could have competently performed in a game of softball after being out all night. I might not perform well but I could perform. I direct your attention to the scorecard of the Sept. 8 cricket match and you will see that Druitt in fact did not perform at all well. As to whether or not he would choose to play, I don't think he had much choice. He had an obligation to his club and he would have fulfilled that obligation, not to mention that sitting it out could arouse suspicion.
Regarding movements that are likely or unlikely I think we just completely disagree. But what I hope to persuade you of it that there is a middle ground where movements are merely possible and plausible but neither likely nor unlikely. For example, Druitt is playing cricket in Dorset on August 11 and then again on Sept 1. Does that make it unlikely that he made the three hour rail journey back to London and returned to Dorset in between those dates? I see nothing "unlikely" about that whatsoever. And when it is remembered that Druitt had a law practice in London and the courts were in session in August, it becomes all the more plausible. Does this make it "likely?" No. But neither is it at all "unlikely."
You do seem to misunderstand my position on Druitt, however. I hold that he is more that a merely "interesting" suspect. I think he is a "likely" suspect but I have to define what I mean by "likely" because that is a relative term.
I believe that the chances of Druitt being Jack the Ripper are far less than 50% because I believe the far most likely scenario is that JtR was a completely unknown individual. However, I believe Druitt is the "most likely" of all the named suspects to be JtR. I say this, however, with the caveat that my preoccupation with Druitt in recent years has precluded me from being well-read on the more recent suspects to emerge.Last edited by aspallek; 01-14-2009, 06:51 PM.
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Originally posted by Ben View PostThe timing as it impacts on the plausibility of Druitt murdering Chapman, Chris. For reasons outlined, we wouldn't be having this conversation if the cricket match took place two days after the murder.
On the current railway timetable, there would be more than 5 hours to spare. In fact, Druitt could clearly have walked all the way home without using public transport at all, and he would still have had a couple of hours to spare.
What you seem to be saying (though I admit I find it difficult to make sense of it) is that psychologically speaking you find it difficult to believe Druitt would have played cricket 6 hours after killing Chapman. That may or may not be true, but it is nothing to do with the timing being "tight" or otherwise.
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If you say timing is "very tight", it means there is very little time to spare.
On the current railway timetable, there would be more than 5 hours to spare
When we take into account the time required to murder, eviscerate, escape, conceal any trophies, compose onesself (presumably), walk a not inconsiderable distance, wait for train, return home on the train, walk to his home from the station, divest himself of any bloodstained garments, eat, stash his organs, get into his cricket whites, go to cricket and so forth and so on, that's a significant amount of "spare" time being consumed. So no, I wouldn't agree that he have five hours "to spare".
So no, my views on the implausibility of Druitt killing Chapman do not primarily concern "psychology".
Regards,
Ben
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Not to be all argumentative, and with all due respect to Ben, but need Monty have been out prowling around all night? Travel time aside, I'm not sure it necessarily would have taken that long to find a victim, and the murder itself would have most likely been over fairly quickly.
As for great exertion - a brief grapple with a weak, unwell and possibly drunk woman, followed by a few minutes of hacking and chopping? Putting aside the fear factor, from that much exertion, the heart rate would be back to level in no time. Then, if he was really tired from being up browsing, a nap on the train on the way home...
Not being pro-Druitt here (nor anti for that matter), but it struck me during the podcast and again when reading Ben's comment, that perhaps the up all night and tired thing is possibly not much of a factor at all.
However, I'm currently in one of my insomnia mornings, running on less than five hours sleep, about to hit the gym, with a full day of work and a staff party after - let's see how well I get on today, and maybe I'll disagree with myself tomorrow...
Cheers,
B.
Edit: It seems that to some degree Ben has inadvertantly addressed my point while I was typing...Last edited by Bailey; 01-14-2009, 07:22 PM.
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Hi Andy,
While at age 48 I have difficultly playing any sport competitively I fervently believe that at age 31 (Druitt's age) I could have competently performed in a game of softball after being out all night
Given the number of reserves in an average village or town cricket club match, one man's absence is very unlikely to present an obstacle to the completion of the match, nor would it have been a loyalty issue. I can speak from personal experience as both my brothers play for similar cricket clubs. As for arounsing suspicion, I'm strongly disinclined to think so as few people would infer a paralell between an absent cricketer and a series of murders of prostitutes in Spitalfields.
For example, Druitt is playing cricket in Dorset on August 11 and then again on Sept 1. Does that make it unlikely that he made the three hour rail journey back to London and returned to Dorset in between those dates?
I think he is a "likely" suspect but I have to define what I mean by "likely" because that is a relative term. However, I believe Druitt is the "most likely" of all the named suspects to be JtR. I say this
Best regards,
BenLast edited by Ben; 01-14-2009, 07:54 PM.
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Originally posted by Ben View PostIndeed, little time to spare in the context of Druitt killing Chapman and playing cricket shortly afterwards being considered a plausible theory; not "tight" in the sense that the timing made it impossibe.
You are claiming that there was "little time to spare" in the sense that it would have been difficult for Druitt to do all that he would have had to do between the time of the murder and the time of the cricket match?
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Hi Bailey,
Not to be all argumentative, and with all due respect to Ben, but need Monty have been out prowling around all night?
The later time of death, in contrast to the other victims, may also hint at an initial lack of success on the part of the killer. The ripper fear-frenzy occasioned by the Leather Apron factor (which was almost at its peak around this time) may have led to many rejections on the part of the prostitutes, which in turn would have resulted in more "walking around" in search of a more willing victim.
As for physical exertions, it was observed by Dr. Bond that the killer would have been possessed of great physical strength, a view borne out by the nature of the mutilations to Kelly's corpse. As we learn from the Chapman crime scene, she suffered rather more than hacking and chopping. I doubt very much that any killer interested in self-preservation would allow himself to fall asleep on the train after mutilating a corpse and stashing away freshly extracted human viscera.
Best regards,
BenLast edited by Ben; 01-14-2009, 07:53 PM.
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You are claiming that there was "little time to spare" in the sense that it would have been difficult for Druitt to do all that he would have had to do between the time of the murder and the time of the cricket match?
Again, not impossible, just not very plausible.
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Originally posted by Ben View PostAgain, not impossible, just not very plausible.
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Not very plausible for a whole host of reasons, to be honest, Chris - those ones included. As I mentioned on the podcast, none of this gives him an abili, and I expressed the (possibly) forlorn hope that one may be uncovered in the fullness of time.
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Uhm..again, we must pay attention not merely to the fact that Druitt played cricket on Sept 8 but also how well or poorly he played. Did you even look at that? Druitt's performance is consistent with one who had been out all night. Oh, and in my younger days I would sometimes spend the night partying and drinking and then play softball -- or work at a physically demanding job (or both!) -- the next day. Though I confess that I was a bit younger than 31 then.
You keep mentioning Druitt's "popping back and forth" between London and Dorset as being unlikely. In fact, it would require only one such round trip in a three week period. I simply fail to see where this is unlikely merely because we have no record of it. Particularly so when we consider Druitt's law practice.
And your argument regarding Salisbury is to me similarly insipid. If that is Montague who appeared on Aug 22 in Salisbury, and I stress that there is really no reason to believe it is, I see no particular unlikelihood to his making the trip from London to Salisbury, particularly if the Blackheath club was on hiatus. Your reasoning seems to be that traveling a distance of 25 miles (Bournemouth to Salisbury) to play a game is completely likely but traveling an additional 70 miles (London to Salisbury = 95 miles), an additional two hours at most on a train to a destination at which he has a relative living, to play a game is completely unlikely. I just don't see the logic here.
Regarding Tabram, I've made that the caveat all along. The prevailing opinion, however, remains that she is probably not a Ripper victim.Last edited by aspallek; 01-14-2009, 08:29 PM.
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Hi Andy,
Uhm..again, we must pay attention not merely to the fact that Druitt played cricket on Sept 8 but also how well or poorly he played. Did you even look at that?
I simply fail to see where this is unlikely merely because we have no record of it.
Your reasoning seems to be that traveling a distance of 25 miles (Bournemouth to Salisbury) to play a game is completely likely but traveling an additional 70 miles (London to Salisbury = 95 miles), an additional two hours at most on a train to a destination at which he has a relative living
The prevailing opinion, however, remains that she is probably not a Ripper victim.
The majority of contemporary police officials were inclined to include, rather than exclude her (Anderson, Abberline, Reid etc), and the same is true of the majority criminologists who have studied the case. As for "ripperologists" I've seen no evidence that Tabram-excluders are in the majority, far from it. I'm personally very wary of any theory that is too strongly dependent on the exclusion (or inclusion) of certain victims.
Regards,
BenLast edited by Ben; 01-14-2009, 08:46 PM.
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Originally posted by Chris View PostBut "not very plausible" because the amount of time Druitt would have had to spare would have been so short - not because of the psychological factor or because of other considerations that make Druitt an unlikely suspect?
You are not talking about the psychology of playing cricket so soon after committing a murder, or the fact that he would have been tired after being up all night?
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