I think anyone suggesting that Crippen might have been innocent has to come up with some kind of plausible alternative explanation of how the human remains came to be in his cellar, particularly as - to all appearances - they were accompanied by fragments of a pyjama jacket which he had bought the previous year.
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Crippen- Almost 100 Years
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I think the term is " Fitted Up".
Court Testimony On Remains
AUGUSTUS JOSEPH PEPPER . I am a Master in Surgery, London University, F.R.C.P., consulting surgeon to St. Mary's Hospital, and have been in active practice as a surgeon for about 35 years. On July 14 I went with Dew to 39, Hilldrop Crescent and met Dr. Marshall there. In the cellar I found that part of the floor had been pulled up, and in a hole in the ground I saw what appeared to be animal remains. I looked at the soil to see what it was composed of, and found it was partly loam and partly clay. Mixed with these there was lime. The remains were removed to the mortuary in a shell. They included, besides some tufts of hair, a large piece of flesh composed of skin, fat, and muscle from the thigh and lower part of the buttock of a human being, and another small piece. The head was missing, and there was no bone or part of a bone, but, except the organs of generation, all the internal organs were found. On July 15 I found a piece of skin with some fat attached to it measuring 11 in. by 9 in. that came from the upper part of the abdomen and lower part of the chest. I found another piece of skin 7 in. by 6 in. which came from the lower part, the front portion of the abdomen. A mark upon it attracted my attention, and I afterwards examined it with great particularity, spending several hours on the examination; I came to the conclusion that it was the mark of a scar. The scar would have been visible upon the skin. When that piece was in position on the human body it would be in the middle line in front; it may have been a little to the left; it began just above the pubes and extended for 4 inches or a little over. The whole scar was complete, there being a piece of flesh beyond it. It was quite an old scar. I found no trace of genitals at all; there were no certain anatomical indications of sex. There was pubic hair upon the piece of flesh. There were also found with the remains fragments of a woman's cotton combinations and a portion from the neck part of a pyjama jacket; the latter bore the maker's label, "Shirt makers, Jones Brothers (Holloway), Limited, Holloway, N." The same label appears on the jackets of the two suits (Exhibit 76). Judging by the way in which the viscera had been extracted, I think it must have been done by a person skilled in removing viscera—skilled in dissection; I do not say skilled in dissection of human beings, but in evisceration of animals; there was no cut or tear in any part, except where it was necessary for the removal; all the organs were connected together; he diaphragm or the septum between the chest and the abdomen had, of course, been cut round; such an operation would certainly require skill. There were none of the organs of generation; some of these may have been removed during life; the scar I saw was such as would be occasioned by an operation for the removal of the pelvic organs, or the ovaries, or both combined.
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Originally posted by belinda View PostIt is also fanciful to say that Crippen would so carefully dispose of the majority of the body and then ever so carelessly leave a bit behind
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Originally posted by belinda View PostIt is also fanciful to say that Crippen would so carefully dispose of the majority of the body and then ever so carelessly leave a bit behind
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They had all ready searched the house and admitted to finding nothing.
This was a very serious crime they were trying to convict him of he hadn't just been fiddling the books.
The Police had free access to the house while Crippen was on the way to Canada.
It is more than a little odd that somebody who had gone to the lengths Crippen is supposed to have to dispose of the body would leave enough behind to get himself convicted.
The amount of remains found could easily have been taken from a dissecting room.
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Originally posted by Mitch Rowe View PostIt is not...Not if normal lime were used instead of quicklime. as far as I can recall of reading the case this is what Police said happened. if quicklime were used the flesh would have decomposed. But lime was used wich actually served to preserve the flesh.
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So.. If Crippen would have used Quicklime the body parts may have decomposed. At least to an unrecognizable state perhaps. But it is my understanding that lime will preserve flesh so Crippen made a big mistake.
The fact though is that lime was found so evidently Crippen intended to rapidly decompose the body parts.
Now if it could be proved that Crippen would have known the difference, then that would be a point towards the defense.
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Not sure I agree with it being some sort of police conspiracy but it is fair to say that somebody like Crippen would have been smarter than to bury the remains in his own cellar - he could have just taken them down to the Thames one night, for instance, disposed of it there, decomposition would have taken place much quicker and then even if the police had continued to sniff around his house, there would have been nothing to find. He was a doctor, after all, he would have known about all of this.
Cheers,
Adam.
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Originally posted by Adam Went View PostNot sure I agree with it being some sort of police conspiracy but it is fair to say that somebody like Crippen would have been smarter than to bury the remains in his own cellar - he could have just taken them down to the Thames one night, for instance, disposed of it there, decomposition would have taken place much quicker and then even if the police had continued to sniff around his house, there would have been nothing to find. He was a doctor, after all, he would have known about all of this.
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Chris:
But there still has to be an explanation of the remains in the cellar - apparently accompanied by the incriminating fragments of the pyjama jacket.
Previous residents of 39 Hilldrop Crescent? No idea who they were or when they were there, though I do remember reading that Crippen took in lodgers even during his time there - as for the pyjamas, that's a pretty generic piece of evidence.
There's been a movement just recently to have Crippen post-humously exonerated, so clearly there's a strong case to be made for his innocence.
Cheers,
Adam.
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Originally posted by Adam Went View PostPrevious residents of 39 Hilldrop Crescent? No idea who they were or when they were there, though I do remember reading that Crippen took in lodgers even during his time there - as for the pyjamas, that's a pretty generic piece of evidence.
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Originally posted by Adam Went View Postas for the pyjamas, that's a pretty generic piece of evidence.
You might ask, well then why was the hair not tested for DNA, as hair gives much more accurate results than tissue? The answer depends on when you asked them. Initially they claimed to make no effort to locate anything other than a slide from the trial. Later, they changed their story for television to say that the Black Museum's price to give Trestrail access to the hair was too high.
Adam also said
"There's been a movement just recently to have Crippen post-humously exonerated, so clearly there's a strong case to be made for his innocence."
This movement, initiated by one of Saddam Hussein's former attorneys (Di Stefano) on behalf of JP Crippen, has failed.
JM
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Originally posted by Adam Went View PostNot sure I agree with it being some sort of police conspiracy but it is fair to say that somebody like Crippen would have been smarter than to bury the remains in his own cellar - he could have just taken them down to the Thames one night, for instance, disposed of it there, decomposition would have taken place much quicker and then even if the police had continued to sniff around his house, there would have been nothing to find. He was a doctor, after all, he would have known about all of this.
Cheers,
Adam.
KR Angie
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