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Lechmere was Jack the Ripper

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  • Richardson left the door shut closed, but it was found open - WIDE open - at the time the body was discovered forty-odd minutes later. Also, I don't recall Richardson mentioning that he found the door open before he entered the premises to check the back yard and scrape his boot.
    Last edited by Sam Flynn; 09-06-2018, 02:09 AM.
    Kind regards, Sam Flynn

    "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
      For the last time, It is not possible to estimate, or state accurately a time of death,not then, not now, so be told, and accept it, and stop trying to suggest anything to the contrary to fit your misguided theory on Lechmere. Listen to what experts tell you !!!!!!!!!!!
      Blimey, I never expected to agree with you, Trev! But that was Fish told.

      Don't suppose he will have listened though, despite his admission that he doesn't know much about biology. [There's a song lyric there somewhere].

      Checking one of my posts from yesterday, I note a schoolgirl mistake I made. I meant to write that when [baby] it's cold outside, the skin surface feels colder because blood vessels contract to keep the core temperature stable and prevent hypothermia - not hyperthermia - which is the opposite! Sorry about that.

      Anyway, Dr Phillips did think Chapman had been dead for at least two hours, probably more, but - he expressed uncertainty regarding how much more rapidly the body may have cooled due to the outside temperature and the great quantity of blood lost. Blood regulates body temperature, so if Chapman was already freezing her whatsits off by the time she was attacked, with eight pints of the red stuff working away inside her, how cold would she feel when the flow stopped and so much had left her body? Phillips didn't appear to know, did he?

      Love,

      Caz
      X
      "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


      Comment


      • Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
        Not unlike Eddowes, then.

        Read all about it in my forthcoming Ripper book, "From Elk".
        I am Ann Elk and this was MY theory, Gareth. Hands off.

        Intelligent search from Bing makes it easier to quickly find what you’re looking for and rewards you.


        Love,

        Caz
        X
        "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


        Comment


        • Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
          Richardson left the door shut closed, but it was found open - WIDE open - at the time the body was discovered forty-odd minutes later. Also, I don't recall Richardson mentioning that he found the door open before he entered the premises to check the back yard and scrape his boot.
          Mmm. And the latter is consistent with the Ripper having left it open as he left the premises in the dark somewhere around 3.30, 3.45 - his ordinary hunting hours, justabout.

          Comment


          • Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
            Not very, no - if body heat was the term that was used as a starting point. Not otherwise either. The body was cold, end of story. I don´t think he could fry eggs on the "heatpoint" in Chapman.

            Phillips would have been acutely aware - as I have pointed out umpteen times by now - that cold skin is not he same as a cold body, Gareth.
            'It is curious, however, that as late as 1921, Vaughan (16) recommends the sense of touch as a means of determining "the approximate time of death with a fair degree of accuracy". This he estimates by gauging with the hand the temperature differences of ten imaginary segments into which he divides the lower extremities of the body.'

            I found this in a 1956 journal on Post-Mortem Temperature and the Time of Death, which immediately shows what a complex issue this can be:



            Happy reading, Fish!

            Love,

            Caz
            X
            "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


            Comment


            • Originally posted by caz View Post
              I am Ann Elk and this was MY theory, Gareth. Hands off.

              Intelligent search from Bing makes it easier to quickly find what you’re looking for and rewards you.


              Love,

              Caz
              X
              My hands are WAY off.

              Comment


              • Originally posted by caz View Post
                Blimey, I never expected to agree with you, Trev! But that was Fish told.

                Don't suppose he will have listened though, despite his admission that he doesn't know much about biology. [There's a song lyric there somewhere].

                Checking one of my posts from yesterday, I note a schoolgirl mistake I made. I meant to write that when [baby] it's cold outside, the skin surface feels colder because blood vessels contract to keep the core temperature stable and prevent hypothermia - not hyperthermia - which is the opposite! Sorry about that.

                Anyway, Dr Phillips did think Chapman had been dead for at least two hours, probably more, but - he expressed uncertainty regarding how much more rapidly the body may have cooled due to the outside temperature and the great quantity of blood lost. Blood regulates body temperature, so if Chapman was already freezing her whatsits off by the time she was attacked, with eight pints of the red stuff working away inside her, how cold would she feel when the flow stopped and so much had left her body? Phillips didn't appear to know, did he?

                Love,

                Caz
                X
                I don´t know much about biology. True.

                Phillips knew a heck of a lot about it. True. So I lean against him. And wisely so, since it transpired in Mitre Square that extensive blood loss would not make the temperature lower dramatically. Eddowes corroborates Phillips´take on things in retrospect.
                And it is not only about body temperature, it is also about rigor and food digestion. All parameters are in sync with Phillips being on the money.

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                  If I find out that Lechmere was known as a very violent man, then yes, I would certainly add that to the list of suspicions against him.

                  It is not as if I am saying that the Ripper murders were non-violent, is it? Although this is a less simple subject than it may seem!

                  The problem with your stating that he is not known to have been violent is that it equally applies that he is not known to be non-violent either. So basically, what you do is to elevate our ignorance on the matter to evidence that he was probably not the Ripper. And that´s where it goes very awry.

                  If we want to take things a little further - it is somethimes healthy to do so - we should ask ourselves what violence is. How do we define it? And in what context is it applicable in the Ripper case?

                  I would say that violence is not a simple phenomenon. Somebody who is run over by a car has met with a violent death. And so, it can be said that any infliction of physical damage is - on a ground level - violence.

                  Then there are those who are violence addicts, people who enjoy inflicting damage on others. And there are those who have a short fuse and will readily beat others up, but perhaps with no real sense of enjoyment. They simply dislike somebody for some reason, they can have been taunted and so they retaliate.

                  Look at the Ripper. What was he about? Did he enjoy inflicting pain and damage? Was he a sadist?

                  No, he apparently was not. But his victims nevertheless met with violent death. It would seem, however, that he killed as a means to procure bodies to cut up and eviscerate.

                  Would such a man be somebody who displayed violence in his everyday life? Was, for example, Jeffrey Dahmer a man who was very violent? Did he end up in street fights, did he attack people in the streets and beat them up, did he kick his parent´s teeth out as they visited him, did he engage in violent sex with his lovers? Apparently not.
                  He simply panicked when he realized that his lovers were about to leave him, and so he strangled them in order to be able to keep them with himself.

                  So he was able to use violence to reach that goal. But on the surfaace of things, he would absolutely not be known as a violent man.

                  I would submit that the Ripper may well have been somebody who had no outward tendencies to use violence at all, and that he only killed as a means to reach a goal - just like Dahmer.

                  And if this is true, then the parameter of violence becomes totally worthless.
                  Talk about taking a sledgehammer to crack a nut!

                  A very minor point. One that proves nothing on its own. Just one to mention.

                  I’ll extend it a little.

                  It’s often mentioned when discussing Tumblety as a suspect that he had a violent hatred of women. Kosminski attacked his sister with a knife. I’ve already mentioned Bury. So we can say that as far as Lechmere is concerned:

                  We have no evidence that he consorted with prostitutes like Bury.
                  We have no evidence that he had an issue with them.
                  We have no evidence that he was ever violent towards women in general or prostitutes specifically.

                  Now before you begin another rant, these points prove nothing. Lechmere was an unknown; we cannot know what type of person he was. He might have been a near saint, he might have been a violent bully.

                  It’s just a point to mention as it would be if we discovered that he was a wife-beater.
                  Regards

                  Sir Herlock Sholmes.

                  “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                    Mmm. And the latter is consistent with the Ripper having left it open as he left the premises in the dark somewhere around 3.30, 3.45 - his ordinary hunting hours, justabout.
                    My point was that Richardson didn't report finding the door OPEN when he arrived.

                    As to the Ripper's hunting hours, I should point out that he was only definitely known to have killed during those times in ONE instance only. The other definitely known times are between 1 and 2 in the morning.
                    Kind regards, Sam Flynn

                    "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by caz View Post
                      'It is curious, however, that as late as 1921, Vaughan (16) recommends the sense of touch as a means of determining "the approximate time of death with a fair degree of accuracy". This he estimates by gauging with the hand the temperature differences of ten imaginary segments into which he divides the lower extremities of the body.'

                      I found this in a 1956 journal on Post-Mortem Temperature and the Time of Death, which immediately shows what a complex issue this can be:



                      Happy reading, Fish!

                      Love,

                      Caz
                      X
                      Thank you, Caz!

                      In the summary, I found this...

                      5. The thick cotton overalls in which some of the bodies were clothed do not appear to have significantly influenced the cooling rate.


                      So much for the elk fur.

                      ...and this:

                      8. The time of death can be assessed by means of this formula with reasonable accuracy if the first observation is made within eight hours after death. Thereafter the accuracy of the estimation of the time of death diminishes.


                      Which is exactly what I said - and you doubted. The time frame is of the utmost importance, and the closer in time to death we check the temperature, the more accurate we are likely to be. And Phillis was very close in time to death, and so we can rule out that he could have been monumentally wrong.

                      Interesting reading. Thank you. It´s always good to get the views of those who DO understand biology.

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
                        My point was that Richardson didn't report finding the door OPEN when he arrived.

                        As to the Ripper's hunting hours, I should point out that he was only definitely known to have killed during those times in ONE instance only. The other definitely known times are between 1 and 2 in the morning.
                        Unless we can prove that serial killers cannot shut doors, it really doesn´t make much difference, Gareth.

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
                          Talk about taking a sledgehammer to crack a nut!

                          A very minor point. One that proves nothing on its own. Just one to mention.

                          I’ll extend it a little.

                          It’s often mentioned when discussing Tumblety as a suspect that he had a violent hatred of women. Kosminski attacked his sister with a knife. I’ve already mentioned Bury. So we can say that as far as Lechmere is concerned:

                          We have no evidence that he consorted with prostitutes like Bury.
                          We have no evidence that he had an issue with them.
                          We have no evidence that he was ever violent towards women in general or prostitutes specifically.

                          Now before you begin another rant, these points prove nothing. Lechmere was an unknown; we cannot know what type of person he was. He might have been a near saint, he might have been a violent bully.

                          It’s just a point to mention as it would be if we discovered that he was a wife-beater.
                          So expanding on a subject is a "rant". I see.

                          Well, the good thing is that you have now understood and admitted that the point of us not having it on record that Lechmere was violent is a point that proves nothing on it´s own.

                          Welcome to the real world. And now I will stop before I rant again.

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                            I don´t know much about biology. True.

                            Phillips knew a heck of a lot about it. True. So I lean against him. And wisely so, since it transpired in Mitre Square that extensive blood loss would not make the temperature lower dramatically. Eddowes corroborates Phillips´take on things in retrospect.
                            And it is not only about body temperature, it is also about rigor and food digestion. All parameters are in sync with Phillips being on the money.
                            Food digestion is known today as being another tricky area when trying to establish TOD. And it's not as if we know precisely what and how much Chapman had eaten [and ingested, rather than thrown up again due to being so unwell] in her final hours.

                            Once again, Phillips may have been 'on the money', but in 1888 that would have been more by luck than good judgement, not being based on extensive personal experience with mutilated corpses found outdoors at the crack of dawn, nor any clues about the victim's movements and activities during the several hours leading up to that point.

                            Love,

                            Caz
                            X
                            "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                              Thank you, Caz!

                              In the summary, I found this...

                              5. The thick cotton overalls in which some of the bodies were clothed do not appear to have significantly influenced the cooling rate.


                              So much for the elk fur.

                              ...and this:

                              8. The time of death can be assessed by means of this formula with reasonable accuracy if the first observation is made within eight hours after death. Thereafter the accuracy of the estimation of the time of death diminishes.


                              Which is exactly what I said - and you doubted. The time frame is of the utmost importance, and the closer in time to death we check the temperature, the more accurate we are likely to be. And Phillis was very close in time to death, and so we can rule out that he could have been monumentally wrong.

                              Interesting reading. Thank you. It´s always good to get the views of those who DO understand biology.
                              It was written back in 1956, Fish. They know now that it's even more complex than the experts thought back then, and what was then considered a 'reasonably accurate' method seems to have changed considerably over the subsequent six decades.

                              Love,

                              Caz
                              X
                              "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Fisherman View Post
                                In the summary, I found this...

                                5. The thick cotton overalls in which some of the bodies were clothed do not appear to have significantly influenced the cooling rate.


                                ...and this:

                                8. The time of death can be assessed by means of this formula with reasonable accuracy if the first observation is made within eight hours after death. Thereafter the accuracy of the estimation of the time of death diminishes.


                                Which is exactly what I said - and you doubted... Phillips was very close in time to death, and so we can rule out that he could have been monumentally wrong.
                                The experimenters also understood the importance of taking rectal temperature, which is the method they used, but which Phillips didn't. Their method also entailed allowing the bodies to cool at room temperature, not in the open air as was the case with Chapman and, unlike Chapman, the bodies in this experiment had not been out in the open for five or so hours before death.

                                It should also be noted that, since the experimental subjects had not been exsanguinated, their internal temperature would have been retained for longer owing to the initial presence of still-warm blood. The experimenters' finding that the time at which internal (rectal) cooling definitely commences can be set at 45 minutes can thus arguably be adjusted downwards for bodies where significant blood-loss has been experienced.

                                They also report that "it is necessary for the surface of the body to first drop in temperature and establish a temperature gradient before cooling can effect [sic] the internal body temperature". Therefore, internal cooling should commence sooner in bodies whose surface temperature is already cold (e.g. by having been out in the open for several hours before death). It follows that internal cooling will take place sooner where the establishment of a temperature gradient has been accelerated by the opening-up of one or more body cavities and the exposure of their contents to the open air.

                                This is borne out by the fact that the authors report that "the rate of temperature fall is dependent on the magnitude of the body surface exposed to cooling" and "the vapour pressure of moisture in the atmosphere" due to evaporation. Given that they're talking about internal (rectal) temperature, I daresay that an eviscerated body with its ripped-up abdomen exposed to the dry air of early morning would experience an even more rapid cooling of the outer layer of the body (that which Phillips, unsurprisingly, found to be "cold").

                                Finally, they also note that "rectal temperature will, however, over-estimate skin temperature", from which it follows that the skin cools at a different rate, and more rapidly, than the innards. The "remaining heat" Phillips found under the intestines may not therefore be at odds with a "cold" outer skin.
                                Last edited by Sam Flynn; 09-06-2018, 04:32 AM.
                                Kind regards, Sam Flynn

                                "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

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