Thursday, January 23, 2020
Jack The Ripper Essay -- Papers
 Jack The Ripper       In August 1888, the first of a series of murders was committed by a     killer who became known as Jack the Ripper. To this day the identity     of the killer remains a mystery. Five women were brutally killed in     the East End of London, by a maniac who appeared to kill without     warning and with no remorse.       1)What can you learn from Source A?       Source A tells us that the two murders were aimed directly at the     poorest people in East End at the time, and usually because of the     poverty at that time, the women had to revert to prostitution so this     tells us that the murderer had a great dislike for poor people or     mainly prostitutes, but there was no clear motive for him to do it. It     also tells us that these two murders had been done with an extra     amount of effort, which later becomes his signature way of murdering,     so that this informs us that the killer may not have had a motive, but     he knew what he was doing, so he wasn't totally insane.       2)Does Source C support the evidence of Sources A and B?       Sources B and C strongly support each other, while source A differs a     little. Source B is the Coroner's report on the death of Polly     Nicholls. In this, it says "No unskilled person could have known where     to find the organs, or to have recognized them when they were found.     No mere slaughterer of animals could have carried out these     operations" and in Source C the report describes how Elizabeth Stride     was killed and it shows that is was done in a professional way, taking     care in all the way s that she was laid out to be found and the slice     across the throat "cutting the windpipe completely in two" They agree     with each other becau...              ...them on wild goose chase. The detective methods were also slowly     evolving, so no fingerprints, DNA tests or anything could be used as     they were all in the early stages of their development. There were     also differences in opinion. For example Mary Kelly- Dr. Bond though     her time of death was between 1:00 AM and 2:00 AM, and Dr. Phillips     thought that is was between 5:00 AM and 6:00AM. This didn't help the     police with the evidence of the witnesses either. The primitive ways     of the police and the fact that the Metropolitan Police didn't get     along with the City of London police, they were un-cooperative so this     slowed down things even further.       When the first victim was killed, the commissioner of the Metropolitan     police was out of the country, so the officers were left to figure     things out for themselves whit no guidance.                        
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