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Ripperologist 159
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While I was pleased to see Adam Wood address William Bury’s retrial, I need to correct a mistake he made in his editorial. Adam suggests that the evidence against Bury (for the Ripper murders) isn’t “firm.” Signature evidence, which is the key evidence linking Bury to the murders, is firm enough to be admissible in court, and so it’s reasonable to suggest that it should be firm enough for Adam and others in the Ripper community. Also, the information being used to map the Ellen Bury murder to Jack the Ripper’s signature is coming from police records, medical records and court records—all firm sources. People shouldn’t have any illusions about what’s been going on with Bury. The evidence against him is the real deal.
In general, I thought this was a strong issue of Ripperologist, the best I’ve seen in a long time. The article about Hendrik de Jong was a gem, well-researched and well-written.Last edited by Wyatt Earp; 03-07-2018, 05:32 AM.“When a major serial killer case is finally solved and all the paperwork completed, police are sometimes amazed at how obvious the killer was and how they were unable to see what was right before their noses.” —Robert D. Keppel and William J. Birnes, The Psychology of Serial Killer Investigations
William Bury, Victorian Murderer
http://www.williambury.org
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Originally posted by Wyatt Earp View PostWhile I was pleased to see Adam Wood address William Bury’s retrial, I need to correct a mistake he made in his editorial. Adam suggests that the evidence against Bury (for the Ripper murders) isn’t “firm.” Signature evidence, which is the key evidence linking Bury to the murders, is firm enough to be admissible in court, and so it’s reasonable to suggest that it should be firm enough for Adam and others in the Ripper community. Also, the information being used to map the Ellen Bury murder to Jack the Ripper’s signature is coming from police records, medical records and court records—all firm sources. People shouldn’t have any illusions about what’s been going on with Bury. The evidence against him is the real deal.
In general, I thought this was a strong issue of Ripperologist, the best I’ve seen in a long time. The article about Hendrik de Jong was a gem, well-researched and well-written.
Presumably by "signature" you mean the use of the knife to mutilate rather than handwriting. Well, yes, William Bury did use a knife on his wife, and some have compared the abdominal mutilations done to his wife in Dundee in 1889 to those done to Mary Ann Nichols in late August 1888 in Whitechapel. But does that make him Jack the Ripper, absent any other evidence that might tie him to the Whitechapel crimes? I would say not. Yes Bury is in the queue as a possible suspect to have committed the murders in the East End of London but he is hardly at the head of the queue.
Cheers
ChrisChristopher T. George
Organizer, RipperCon #JacktheRipper-#True Crime Conference
just held in Baltimore, April 7-8, 2018.
For information about RipperCon, go to http://rippercon.com/
RipperCon 2018 talks can now be heard at http://www.casebook.org/podcast/
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Originally posted by ChrisGeorge View PostHello Wyatt
Presumably by "signature" you mean the use of the knife to mutilate rather than handwriting. Well, yes, William Bury did use a knife on his wife, and some have compared the abdominal mutilations done to his wife in Dundee in 1889 to those done to Mary Ann Nichols in late August 1888 in Whitechapel. But does that make him Jack the Ripper, absent any other evidence that might tie him to the Whitechapel crimes? I would say not. Yes Bury is in the queue as a possible suspect to have committed the murders in the East End of London but he is hardly at the head of the queue.
Cheers
Chris
A signature match by itself is not of course sufficient to conclude that Bury was the Ripper. We have to be able to reasonably rule out the possibility that the Ellen Bury murder was a copycat or Ripper-inspired murder, which we can do, and we have to be able to reasonably rule out the possibility that the close signature match was a coincidence, which we can also do. I deal with both of these concerns in my article, “The Bury ID,” which is available on the Bury website. The handwriting links are of course inconclusive, but they’re also not part of the signature analysis.“When a major serial killer case is finally solved and all the paperwork completed, police are sometimes amazed at how obvious the killer was and how they were unable to see what was right before their noses.” —Robert D. Keppel and William J. Birnes, The Psychology of Serial Killer Investigations
William Bury, Victorian Murderer
http://www.williambury.org
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Originally posted by Wyatt Earp View PostWhile I was pleased to see Adam Wood address William Bury’s retrial, I need to correct a mistake he made in his editorial. Adam suggests that the evidence against Bury (for the Ripper murders) isn’t “firm.” Signature evidence, which is the key evidence linking Bury to the murders, is firm enough to be admissible in court, and so it’s reasonable to suggest that it should be firm enough for Adam and others in the Ripper community. Also, the information being used to map the Ellen Bury murder to Jack the Ripper’s signature is coming from police records, medical records and court records—all firm sources. People shouldn’t have any illusions about what’s been going on with Bury. The evidence against him is the real deal.
I have read your article and I note that the authority for your claim that "Signature evidence is admissible in court" is a 2005 article by four American academics who say, "Signature analysis is a widely used crime scene assessment practice in the United States, and is the only crime scene assessment technique that is accepted in court testimony and appellate decisions". They refer to a number of US decisions in support of this but what about the legal position in the relevant jurisdiction of the criminal courts of England?
In any event, it is clear that Bury's actions did not match all the 11 signature characteristics listed by the authors of the 2005 article. The authors of that article claim that those 11 characteristics created a "unique signature" by which, they say, it is possible to link "the six victims of one killer". Amongst these were (no. 5) that "the victims’ bodies were left open and on display" but this was certainly not the case with Ellen Bury whose body was placed in a trunk. Then we have this (no.7): "the victims were left in sexually degrading positions with their legs spread and genitalia exposed to illustrate their vulnerability after death and the killer’s". This does not apply to Ellen Bury. Then (no. 8) "the killer mutilated his victims and showed increased postmortem mutilation from one victim to the next". Yet, you accept in your article that the mutilations in the case of Ellen Bury were "relatively minor". And we have (no. 9):"the killer evolved to the removal of their organs and body parts, and removed some of them from the crime scenes". Once again this does not apply to Ellen Bury (and I don't accept that all the rest apply either).
Furthermore the authors of the 2005 article state: "murderers who stab and kill female prostitutes, leave their bodies in unusual positions, and probe, explore, or mutilate body cavities are extremely rare. It would be extremely unusual to find more than one of these killers, exhibiting that combination of signature characteristics, operating in the same area at the same time." Ellen Bury was not a prostitute and was not murdered in or around the Whitechapel area of London. One might add that her throat was not cut like a number of the victims of the Whitechapel murderer.
I am aware that you have an answer for the fact that the Ellen Bury murder does not display the same "unique signature" comprising the 11 "signature characteristics" because you say that Bury "needed to modify his behavior as a murderer in order to conceal his identity as Jack the Ripper" and you point out that Modus Operandi can change from crime to crime and signature characteristics can be "reduced". While this may be so, you fail to consider what a devastating impact this has on your argument about admissibility. Once characteristics from one murder to another do not match perfectly, and there are, on the contrary, significant differences, then there is no chance, either in the USA or the UK, or in any proper criminal court of law, that any signature, or similar fact, evidence is going to be admissible evidence to prove a connection between those murders. It's just not going to happen.
Even worse is that you tell us that the signature evidence is the "key evidence" against Bury. Given the admitted differences between the signatures, I fail to see how you think it would be possible to secure a conviction on the basis of the signature evidence.
In short, your argument seems to amount to a claim that because there were some relatively minor mutilations to the body of Ellen Bury and/or some cuts and stabs in the abdominal and genital areas, that she had been strangled and that in your view her body was posed inside the trunk (something which is really only argument and by no means established fact) that these similarities with the Ripper murders are so strong that the case against Bury is so compelling that no-one could plausibly describe that case as anything less then firm. I suggest, however, that Adam and others in the Ripper community would be perfectly entitled to conclude that the case against Bury is not firm and the admissibility or otherwise of signature evidence is neither here nor there and makes no difference to that conclusion whatsoever.
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David, when I say that signature evidence is firm enough to be admissible in court, it should be clear to you that I am referencing the reliability status of this class of evidence and not suggesting that because the evidence is admissible that this makes it conclusive of guilt. As I’ve already pointed out, signature evidence by itself is insufficient to establish guilt. My stance is based not only on the position of signature evidence within the U.S. legal system, but also on its position within the legal systems of other countries, such as the U.K., Australia and South Africa (see the 2015 book by Woodhams, Crime Linkage: Theory, Research and Practice, pp.200-1). If Adam Wood is using the word “firm” in some other sense, that would be for him to clarify.
You spend a good deal of time questioning the legitimacy of the mapping of the Ellen Bury murder to Jack the Ripper’s signature as described by Keppel et al. The substance of your critique is that certain signature characteristics vary in how they’re expressed, vary in the degree of their expression or are entirely absent at the Ellen Bury crime scene. However, as I noted in my article, the research on serial killers informs us that a given signature characteristic can vary in how it’s expressed, vary in the degree of its expression or be entirely absent at a given crime scene in connection with the specific circumstances of that murder, and as I have explained, we do indeed possess a ready and obvious explanation for why we should observe variation at the Ellen Bury crime scene. All you’ve produced, then, is a set of irrational objections to the mapping. You compound your mistake by declaring that a court would exclude signature evidence on the basis of variation, when this is actually an established characteristic of this type of evidence.
Bury was living in the East End throughout the period of the Whitechapel murders. It is ridiculous to suggest that because he committed another murder shortly after he moved from the area, that this should discount him as being the author of the Whitechapel murders.
You seem to be confident that Bury could never be convicted of the Ripper murders, however William Beadle spoke to an attorney in Dundee who offered a very different assessment of the evidence against him: “Based on the evidence presented here, a Crown Prosecution of William Bury for the Ripper murders would have had every chance of success” (see “Where We Are With Bury,” available through a link on the Bury website). This attorney’s assessment was made prior to the publication of my article, and so the case against Bury has only strengthened since he delivered his opinion. We now possess forensic evidence placing William Bury at the crime scenes in the case, and I maintain that this would go a long way toward securing his conviction.“When a major serial killer case is finally solved and all the paperwork completed, police are sometimes amazed at how obvious the killer was and how they were unable to see what was right before their noses.” —Robert D. Keppel and William J. Birnes, The Psychology of Serial Killer Investigations
William Bury, Victorian Murderer
http://www.williambury.org
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Originally posted by Wyatt Earp View PostDavid, when I say that signature evidence is firm enough to be admissible in court, it should be clear to you that I am referencing the reliability status of this class of evidence and not suggesting that because the evidence is admissible that this makes it conclusive of guilt. As I’ve already pointed out, signature evidence by itself is insufficient to establish guilt. My stance is based not only on the position of signature evidence within the U.S. legal system, but also on its position within the legal systems of other countries, such as the U.K., Australia and South Africa (see the 2015 book by Woodhams, Crime Linkage: Theory, Research and Practice, pp.200-1). If Adam Wood is using the word “firm” in some other sense, that would be for him to clarify.
You spend a good deal of time questioning the legitimacy of the mapping of the Ellen Bury murder to Jack the Ripper’s signature as described by Keppel et al. The substance of your critique is that certain signature characteristics vary in how they’re expressed, vary in the degree of their expression or are entirely absent at the Ellen Bury crime scene. However, as I noted in my article, the research on serial killers informs us that a given signature characteristic can vary in how it’s expressed, vary in the degree of its expression or be entirely absent at a given crime scene in connection with the specific circumstances of that murder, and as I have explained, we do indeed possess a ready and obvious explanation for why we should observe variation at the Ellen Bury crime scene. All you’ve produced, then, is a set of irrational objections to the mapping. You compound your mistake by declaring that a court would exclude signature evidence on the basis of variation, when this is actually an established characteristic of this type of evidence.
Bury was living in the East End throughout the period of the Whitechapel murders. It is ridiculous to suggest that because he committed another murder shortly after he moved from the area, that this should discount him as being the author of the Whitechapel murders.
You seem to be confident that Bury could never be convicted of the Ripper murders, however William Beadle spoke to an attorney in Dundee who offered a very different assessment of the evidence against him: “Based on the evidence presented here, a Crown Prosecution of William Bury for the Ripper murders would have had every chance of success” (see “Where We Are With Bury,” available through a link on the Bury website). This attorney’s assessment was made prior to the publication of my article, and so the case against Bury has only strengthened since he delivered his opinion. We now possess forensic evidence placing William Bury at the crime scenes in the case, and I maintain that this would go a long way toward securing his conviction.
I see bury as a credible suspect as you know. I see that hes a known murderer of a woman with knife involved and the post mortem mutilation as a significant similarity.
I also find that he was in the area at the time important also.
But what is this forensic evidence placing him at crime scenes?"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
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View PostHi Wyatt
I see bury as a credible suspect as you know. I see that hes a known murderer of a woman with knife involved and the post mortem mutilation as a significant similarity.
I also find that he was in the area at the time important also.
But what is this forensic evidence placing him at crime scenes?“When a major serial killer case is finally solved and all the paperwork completed, police are sometimes amazed at how obvious the killer was and how they were unable to see what was right before their noses.” —Robert D. Keppel and William J. Birnes, The Psychology of Serial Killer Investigations
William Bury, Victorian Murderer
http://www.williambury.org
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Originally posted by Wyatt Earp View PostDavid, when I say that signature evidence is firm enough to be admissible in court, it should be clear to you that I am referencing the reliability status of this class of evidence and not suggesting that because the evidence is admissible that this makes it conclusive of guilt.
"I need to correct a mistake he made in his editorial. Adam suggests that the evidence against Bury (for the Ripper murders) isn’t “firm.” Signature evidence, which is the key evidence linking Bury to the murders, is firm enough to be admissible in court, and so it’s reasonable to suggest that it should be firm enough for Adam and others in the Ripper community."
You were saying that because signature evidence is admissible in court then it was a "mistake" for Adam Wood to say that the evidence against Bury isn't firm.
It's a pure non-sequitur. The admissibility or otherwise of signature evidence does not affect whether the evidence against Bury is firm or not.
As I said, it is perfectly possible and reasonable for Adam Wood to conclude that Bury was not guilty despite the signature evidence. It's a reasonable view to hold. Yet you call it a "mistake" as if Adam has made some kind of error of fact.
That Bury was Jack the Ripper is no more than an opinion. To disagree with that opinion cannot properly be described as a "mistake".
Originally posted by Wyatt Earp View PostAs I’ve already pointed out, signature evidence by itself is insufficient to establish guilt. My stance is based not only on the position of signature evidence within the U.S. legal system, but also on its position within the legal systems of other countries, such as the U.K., Australia and South Africa (see the 2015 book by Woodhams, Crime Linkage: Theory, Research and Practice, pp.200-1).
Originally posted by Wyatt Earp View PostIf Adam Wood is using the word “firm” in some other sense, that would be for him to clarify.
Originally posted by Wyatt Earp View PostYou spend a good deal of time questioning the legitimacy of the mapping of the Ellen Bury murder to Jack the Ripper’s signature as described by Keppel et al.
Originally posted by Wyatt Earp View PostThe substance of your critique is that certain signature characteristics vary in how they’re expressed, vary in the degree of their expression or are entirely absent at the Ellen Bury crime scene. However, as I noted in my article, the research on serial killers informs us that a given signature characteristic can vary in how it’s expressed, vary in the degree of its expression or be entirely absent at a given crime scene in connection with the specific circumstances of that murder, and as I have explained, we do indeed possess a ready and obvious explanation for why we should observe variation at the Ellen Bury crime scene.
If you look at the US authorities that were cited in the 2005 article you will see that the signature evidence needs to be virtually identical for it to be admitted.
Originally posted by Wyatt Earp View PostAll you’ve produced, then, is a set of irrational objections to the mapping.
Originally posted by Wyatt Earp View PostYou compound your mistake by declaring that a court would exclude signature evidence on the basis of variation, when this is actually an established characteristic of this type of evidence.
Firstly, where is your authority that variation is an established characteristic of signature evidence? It will make a nonsense of the word "signature" if that's true.
Secondly, and far more importantly, do you have even one example of a legal case where signature evidence has been admitted in evidence in a murder case (or even another serious crime) where there are significant variations between the signatures in different crimes?
Originally posted by Wyatt Earp View PostBury was living in the East End throughout the period of the Whitechapel murders. It is ridiculous to suggest that because he committed another murder shortly after he moved from the area, that this should discount him as being the author of the Whitechapel murders.
Originally posted by Wyatt Earp View PostYou seem to be confident that Bury could never be convicted of the Ripper murders
Originally posted by Wyatt Earp View Posthowever William Beadle spoke to an attorney in Dundee who offered a very different assessment of the evidence against him: “Based on the evidence presented here, a Crown Prosecution of William Bury for the Ripper murders would have had every chance of success”
Originally posted by Wyatt Earp View PostWe now possess forensic evidence placing William Bury at the crime scenes in the case
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I would agree with your use of 'supposed' there, David, as it's not quite the same as a fact. Jack may or may not have cared if his victims were actively soliciting, former prostitutes, or neither, when he struck each one, if he was merely looking for easy female targets. There have been various suggestions that he was thinking of a female relative when killing these women, so nothing is clear cut.
If he was only interested in murdering prostitutes because he had a thing about them, then it was his signature - no question - but then it would presumably have involved an assumption on his part that a victim was in the 'oldest profession' unless she made that crystal clear before he whipped out his weapon.
Love,
Caz
X"Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostAre you seriously suggesting that when Adam Wood referred to the "lack of firm evidence" against Bury he specifically meant the lack of admissible evidence? He was just saying that he doesn't think the evidence against Bury is strong enough to conclude he was Jack the Ripper. That's an opinion. You may disagree with it but it's ridiculous to categorize it as a mistake on the basis that signature evidence is admissible evidence in some jurisdictions in some historical periods.
My simple point was that where there are significant differences between signatures in different murders a prosecutor will have literally no chance of getting the signature evidence admitted. A defence lawyer would tear the argument to shreds. You don't even consider this. It doesn't matter how many reasons you put forward as to why there might be significant differences, those differences kill any admissibility argument. At the very least, one cannot say that signature evidence will be admissible in every single case and, therefore, you cannot say for certain that signature evidence would be admissible in a case against Bury for the JTR murders. So your whole point about admissibility of signature evidence gets you nowhere.
There are two separate questions we need to consider. First, can we, as an investigative body, satisfy ourselves that William Bury was Jack the Ripper? The answer to that is “yes.” No one in this field has been able to put forward an effective criticism of the ID that I’ve published. It’s a solid ID—the evidence is there and the reasoning is sound. Second, could we obtain a conviction of William Bury for the Jack the Ripper murders in a hypothetical trial? That is an open question. It is possible that the signature evidence linking Bury to the Ripper murders would be excluded at a trial, which would obviously lessen the likelihood of obtaining a conviction. It's also possible that it would be included at a trial, which would obviously increase the likelihood of a conviction. You seem preoccupied with the second question, but I’d suggest that in 2018 the more important question is the first one. Bury confessed to murdering Ellen, and we have no compelling reason to disregard his confession, but he was recently acquitted of her murder in the mock trial held in Dundee. Should that acquittal cause us as a community to declare him innocent of Ellen’s murder? Of course not. A negative result from a legal proceeding against Bury for the Ripper murders would not “sink” the identification of William Bury as Jack the Ripper.
Firstly, where is your authority that variation is an established characteristic of signature evidence? It will make a nonsense of the word "signature" if that's true.
Don't be silly.Last edited by Wyatt Earp; 03-09-2018, 10:46 AM.“When a major serial killer case is finally solved and all the paperwork completed, police are sometimes amazed at how obvious the killer was and how they were unable to see what was right before their noses.” —Robert D. Keppel and William J. Birnes, The Psychology of Serial Killer Investigations
William Bury, Victorian Murderer
http://www.williambury.org
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Originally posted by Scott Nelson View PostWasn't Ellen allegedly a former prostitute?“When a major serial killer case is finally solved and all the paperwork completed, police are sometimes amazed at how obvious the killer was and how they were unable to see what was right before their noses.” —Robert D. Keppel and William J. Birnes, The Psychology of Serial Killer Investigations
William Bury, Victorian Murderer
http://www.williambury.org
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