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  • #31
    Originally posted by Phil H View Post
    Surely he would seek a MORE secure spot if possible, not a less?

    I think Eddowes led him to the fence in the corner of the square. Exits didn't seem to worry him - No 29 had none.

    Phil
    Hello Phil,

    Liz might have had her suspicions and may have felt more secure being close to the club. If Jack was intent upon killing her and she said it's here or not at all, what were his options?

    c.d.

    Comment


    • #32
      The "Serial Killer" assumptive in the case of Jack the Ripper doesnt address some of the key components of some of the Canonical murders. Its apparent that the killing of some of the Canonicals was not sufficient to satisfy the urges or desires, or needs, of the killer(s) involved. One cannot assume then that this man, one that mutilated the women postmortem, was motivated to act by a compulsion,urge or desire to commit murder. His true motive was somehow tied in with the acts that were performed after the killings.

      It would therefore be misleading to suggest that all serial killers kill because they cant stop themselves,.. the real answers can be quite individual, and often far more complex.

      Its about what we can see within the known and accepted evidence that might tell us something about WHY the killer killed this specific person. With Polly and Annie, its likely being in the wrong place at wrong time...they were probably randomly chosen that night,...because there is no real evidence which suggests anything else. We can also say that their killer, assuming we are dealing with a single individual, was not satisfied with merely committing murder. Again...the evidence dictates that position. Not someones gut instincts or some sheer speculation.

      In some cases, like the case of Liz Stride, there is no evidence that suggests her killer was not satisfied with the single act he performed....and so for categorization purposes, that murder does not match the first 2.....by motive. There is speculation that he wasnt able to show us the true nature of his intent due to some murder-interruptus, however, there is again, no evidence at all, to support that belief.

      We have what we have. A woman cut once, not nearly as severely as the 2 preceding victims both were, with no evidence that anything other than murder was contemplated or intended. She lay just as she fell, and was undisturbed after the cut was made.

      Just because a second woman is killed soon after Liz....... (and in a much more similar fashion to the first 2 women with clear evidence that the killer sought more than merely killing Kate),...doesnt mean we have to create a fantasy interruption or some explanation for Liz Stride out of thin air...without any supporting evidence at all, to address the obvious differences.

      Obvious differences.

      WHY the killings took place is the question one should ask themselves when assessing this evidence, is there potentially a MOTIVE...because WHY anyone kills anyone is the key factor in the investigatory process.

      Best regards
      Last edited by Michael W Richards; 09-02-2013, 09:59 AM.
      Michael Richards

      Comment


      • #33
        All I have to do is mention Liz and Michael appears. I feel drunk with power.

        "His true motive was somehow tied in with the acts that were performed after the killings."

        How do you know what his motive was?

        c.d.

        Comment


        • #34
          Liz might have had her suspicions and may have felt more secure being close to the club. If Jack was intent upon killing her and she said it's here or not at all, what were his options?

          I don't buy the scenario because i see not one iota of evidence that Liz was soliciting that night. All the evidence suggests she was on a "date".

          Phil

          Comment


          • #35
            Originally posted by Phil H View Post
            Liz might have had her suspicions and may have felt more secure being close to the club. If Jack was intent upon killing her and she said it's here or not at all, what were his options?

            I don't buy the scenario because i see not one iota of evidence that Liz was soliciting that night. All the evidence suggests she was on a "date".

            Phil
            All the evidence?????????????

            c.d.

            Comment


            • #36
              Originally posted by c.d. View Post
              All I have to do is mention Liz and Michael appears. I feel drunk with power.

              "His true motive was somehow tied in with the acts that were performed after the killings."

              How do you know what his motive was?

              c.d.
              We ALL know what was done to the women cd, its not an interpretation Im making, its stating the bloody obvious. If he just desired killing, then why go beyond that and risk capture? If he desired killing...why dont we see some kind of sign he prolonged the murders to fully engorge himself? If he just desired killing, then why did he stay and open the women up?

              The killer of Polly and Annie, by his actions, show us that his main preoccupation with the act he was committing was on the after kill activities...which were by timing and available light, the most risky and difficult acts to accomplish.

              Look at Strides killer.....one cut, and hes gone. No sign of him. No sign he cared one iota about the dead woman after that single cut.

              Its all there cd....or its all missing, depending on which argument you take. The evidence reads like Strides killer wanted to kill her and Nichols and Chapmans killer wanted to mutilate after committing that act.

              If you dont see that....well,......I suppose it does explain a lot of our exchanges over the years anyway.

              Cheers cd, all the best
              Michael Richards

              Comment


              • #37
                The clothes brush, the care with her appearance, the piece of velvet - the fact she seems to have been seen with a single "clerkly" man that night pretty consistently. the fact that she had left Kidney - need I go on...?

                Comment


                • #38
                  Originally posted by Phil H View Post
                  Liz might have had her suspicions and may have felt more secure being close to the club. If Jack was intent upon killing her and she said it's here or not at all, what were his options?

                  I don't buy the scenario because i see not one iota of evidence that Liz was soliciting that night. All the evidence suggests she was on a "date".

                  Phil
                  I believe the first part in bold is accurate Phil...but the end of that sentence isnt...not of the known evidence anyway.

                  Cheers
                  Michael Richards

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Originally posted by Phil H View Post
                    The clothes brush, the care with her appearance, the piece of velvet - the fact she seems to have been seen with a single "clerkly" man that night pretty consistently. the fact that she had left Kidney - need I go on...?
                    Hello Phil,

                    Per Stewart Evans - "To just put in my take on the question of whether Stride was actually soliciting or not I would make the following observations. She was a known casual prostitute of the same type as the other victims, it was well after midnight and she was 'hanging about' on the street, and there are witness reports that seem to indicate she was soliciting. Not least of all the police stated that she was a prostitute. Common sense would seem to dictate that she was soliciting. I appreciate the arguments of others who try to say she wasn't soliciting but, to my mind, they don't hold any strength."

                    My apologies to Stewart if he doesn't like someone using what he wrote since I know he doesn't like to get involved in arguments. Just thought that this was way too good not to post.

                    c.d.

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Hello Michael,

                      If a man is trying to grab a young girl on her way home from school and an adult appears and he runs off, did his motive somehow change?

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        That is Stewart's view and no doubt he finds it convincing. I do not agree. I have given you the evidence as I see it - I could go on about flowers and grapes too.

                        Sorry, but even prostitutes can have, and are entitled to, a private life.

                        Phil

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          restraint

                          Hello CD. Thanks.

                          "But if we accept the idea that Jack was a serial killer, is it really a leap to assume that his need to kill could be overpowering at times?"

                          Very well. But IF that is so, then how does one account for periodic inactivity? Surely it cannot be that he restrained himself for fear of being caught?

                          Cheers.
                          LC

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            secure

                            Hello Phil.

                            "Surely he would seek a MORE secure spot if possible, not a less?"

                            Precisely.

                            Cheers.
                            LC

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              suspicious

                              Hello CD.

                              "Liz might have had her suspicions and may have felt more secure being close to the club. If Jack was intent upon killing her and she said it's here or not at all, what were his options?"

                              More to the point, IF she were suspicious, what were HER options?

                              Perhaps to leave?

                              And suspicious of what?

                              Cheers.
                              LC

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                argument

                                Hello Phil.

                                "I don't buy the scenario because I see not one iota of evidence that Liz was soliciting that night."

                                Well, the argument is:

                                1. She was female.

                                2. She may have talked to men.

                                3. She was out late.

                                4. Jack killed her, and he killed ONLY prostitutes.

                                Cheers.
                                LC

                                Comment

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