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JtR was Law Enforcement Hypothesis

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  • #76
    Originally posted by Batman View Post
    I think the idea that JtR was a cop, ex-cop or working with LE should be entertained because the reasons why JtR 'couldn't' have been a PC can be dismissed because of the recent find that EARONS was an officer and the same reasons were used to dismiss EARONS could be an officer.

    So I am thinking about it and maybe the book The Bank Holiday Murders had made be also re-think this possible explanation again.
    ok thanks for clarifying!

    The recent GSK case has made me consider this possibility.
    "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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    • #77
      Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
      Plus, there are some who believe this "half-tipsy" broad-shoulder man then staggered off towards Mitre Square to commit another murder. Or did he rapidly sober up?
      The tipsy or staggering demeanor may have been the effects of coming out of an epileptic seizure.
      Last edited by Scott Nelson; 09-28-2018, 09:15 AM.

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      • #78
        Originally posted by Batman View Post
        Personally, I don't think JtR fled Mitre Square. I think he hid in Mitre Square and then waited for a crowd to show so he could mingle with them and watch.
        Hide where? The only open door in the Square was to Kearley and Tonge's warehouse. Within minutes of the body's discovery there were policemen in the Square. It would have been impossible for the Ripper to remain outside unseen.
        Last edited by Scott Nelson; 09-28-2018, 09:16 AM.

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        • #79
          Originally posted by Scott Nelson View Post
          The tipsy or staggering demeanor may have been the effects of coming out of an epileptic seizure.
          A man seen running along Hanbury street about 6:00am the morning of the murder.

          "He was hurrying from Hanbury-street, below where the murder took place, into Brick-lane. He was walking, almost running, and had a peculiar gait, his knees not bending when he walked......... He was dressed in a dark stiff hat and cutaway coat, reaching to his knees. His face was clean shaven, and he seemed about 30 years old."

          Remember the man who accosted Lewis & Kennedy in Bethnal Green Rd?
          The same one outside the Britannia on Friday morning, Nov. 9th.

          "Further, it was stated that he was a man of medium stature, with dark moustache, and that he had an extremely awkward gait, which could at once be recognised."

          Maybe BS-man wasn't drunk at all, just an extremely awkward gait?
          Regards, Jon S.

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          • #80
            Originally posted by Scott Nelson View Post
            Hide where? The only open door in the Square was to Kearley and Tonge's warehouse. Within minutes of the body's discovery there were policemen in the Square. It would have been impossible for the Ripper to remain outside unseen.
            People were cutting through gardens and sometimes just going through someone's unlocked front door and out the back ending up in a Chapman type garden with a fence or two to hop before you are on the other side of nowhere.

            Inspector Moore ran tests like this in Whitechapel locking down an area only for scores of people to show up in a cordoned-off area. They took well-known shortcuts that even LE on the beat knew nothing about.

            The only source of light would be a PC with a battery operated lamp.
            Bona fide canonical and then some.

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            • #81
              Originally posted by Batman View Post
              People were cutting through gardens and sometimes just going through someone's unlocked front door and out the back ending up in a Chapman type garden with a fence or two to hop before you are on the other side of nowhere.

              Inspector Moore ran tests like this in Whitechapel locking down an area only for scores of people to show up in a cordoned-off area. They took well-known shortcuts that even LE on the beat knew nothing about.

              The only source of light would be a PC with a battery operated lamp.
              A battery operated lamp? I’m pretty sure they were oil/fire powered bullseye lanterns.

              Comment


              • #82
                Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
                Thats it, my take is he had 14 minutes.
                Many of these unfortunates wore dark clothes, and as Lawende was not expected to remember what one particular woman wore as he passed her when leaving the club, his "similar" was naturally the best he could do.
                Hi Jon

                Hi Jon.

                There’s a good chance Watkins never checked that corner at 1:30 due to the heavy rain occuring at that time. He was likely taking cover, somewhere. Which leads to the questions, where did the couple appear from and why were Kates clothes not wet?

                My guess on Watkins is he was sheltering with Morris and exited after the rain down St James Passage to catch up on his beat. That leaves the crime scene vacant for even a longer period of time.

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                • #83
                  Originally posted by jerryd View Post
                  Hi Jon

                  Hi Jon.

                  There’s a good chance Watkins never checked that corner at 1:30 due to the heavy rain occuring at that time. He was likely taking cover, somewhere. Which leads to the questions, where did the couple appear from and why were Kates clothes not wet?

                  My guess on Watkins is he was sheltering with Morris and exited after the rain down St James Passage to catch up on his beat. That leaves the crime scene vacant for even a longer period of time.
                  Hi Jerry.

                  You might be right about Watkins, it's human nature I guess.
                  I don't recall, but did anyone say her clothes were not wet?
                  Regards, Jon S.

                  Comment


                  • #84
                    Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
                    Hi Jerry.

                    You might be right about Watkins, it's human nature I guess.
                    I don't recall, but did anyone say her clothes were not wet?
                    Not that I recall, either. The rain and wet was mentioned in Stride and McKenzie, though. The only mention I seem to recall in Eddowes case was Lawende and crew. It must have been heavy as he said they Could not leave the club due to the rain. No mention by any of the authorities involved of wet cobblestones or clothes. No mention by the beat cops of a delay or rain hinderance of any kind. Seems strange to me. I also think the mention of Kate being found with palms up is peculiar. Either set that way by the killer or staged by someone. Hard to fall to the ground with palms up.

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                    • #85
                      Originally posted by jerryd View Post
                      Not that I recall, either. The rain and wet was mentioned in Stride and McKenzie, though. The only mention I seem to recall in Eddowes case was Lawende and crew. It must have been heavy as he said they Could not leave the club due to the rain. No mention by any of the authorities involved of wet cobblestones or clothes. No mention by the beat cops of a delay or rain hinderance of any kind. Seems strange to me. I also think the mention of Kate being found with palms up is peculiar. Either set that way by the killer or staged by someone. Hard to fall to the ground with palms up.
                      Yes I remember the rain issue in the Stride case, but not with Eddowes.
                      I suppose it could be argued that her clothes were not wet because the piece of apron found in Goulston St. was dry, only the corner being wet (with rain or blood?). Therefore, indirectly implying her clothes must also have been dry.
                      Eddowes only wore a jacket on top so the apron from her hips to her feet had to be exposed to the elements.
                      So why was it dry?
                      (I think I hear Trevor licking his lips at that)

                      If she attempted to break her fall her palms would be down, but only if she was conscious.
                      Being found with the palms up has always suggested to me that she lost consciousness while on her feet. It's more natural to lay down with palms up if you have no resistance.
                      Regards, Jon S.

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                      • #86
                        Originally posted by jerryd View Post
                        A battery operated lamp? I’m pretty sure they were oil/fire powered bullseye lanterns.
                        They had the first battery lamps. A big brick of a thing in a box.
                        Bona fide canonical and then some.

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                        • #87
                          All of JtR victims involve posing to shock who finds them. Even Stride. Kelly's left hand was placed into her mutilated cavity. Her face turned towards the room and not the wall. He brings their legs up into a sexual position. All this to degrade the woman and assault the senses of Whitechapel society which JtR has a deep hatred also for.
                          Bona fide canonical and then some.

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                          • #88
                            Originally posted by Batman View Post
                            They had the first battery lamps. A big brick of a thing in a box.
                            Sorry Batman but I have no idea what you are trying to say? The police were using a bullseye lantern in those days. What reference are you using for a big brick of a thing in a box?

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                            • #89
                              Originally posted by jerryd View Post
                              Sorry Batman but I have no idea what you are trying to say? The police were using a bullseye lantern in those days. What reference are you using for a big brick of a thing in a box?
                              I always thought it was a bullseye also but I seem to remember reading that because of the Ripper crimes, constables were issues with early types of battery powered lanterns that weighed a lot because of the size of the battery in it.

                              In the 1880s dry cell batteries were around and in 1887 they had made them safer and portable, a year before the murders.

                              I don't have a reference for this which I thought would be much easier to find.

                              Maybe I am getting old and confusing cases, or possibly it was after Kelly had been murdered this happened but I seem to remember reading on these forums that around the time PCs were issued with rubber soles they were also issued new lights.

                              Bona fide canonical and then some.

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                              • #90
                                Originally posted by Batman View Post
                                I always thought it was a bullseye also but I seem to remember reading that because of the Ripper crimes, constables were issues with early types of battery powered lanterns that weighed a lot because of the size of the battery in it.

                                In the 1880s dry cell batteries were around and in 1887 they had made them safer and portable, a year before the murders.

                                I don't have a reference for this which I thought would be much easier to find.

                                Maybe I am getting old and confusing cases, or possibly it was after Kelly had been murdered this happened but I seem to remember reading on these forums that around the time PCs were issued with rubber soles they were also issued new lights.

                                The police standard issue in 1888 was a bullseye. Watkins says he had his in use that night. Battery lamps weren’t used by the police until the 1930’s.
                                Last edited by jerryd; 09-29-2018, 10:16 AM.

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