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Casebook: Jack the Ripper - Message Boards » Letters and Communications » From Hell (Lusk) Letter » The Lusk Kidney » Nephrology « Previous Next »

This discussion has been copied over from the old message boards. It was originally begun on 21 January 2000 by Dr. Thomas Ind, a registered gynaecologist.

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Thomas Ind
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Posted on Wednesday, March 05, 2003 - 9:16 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

I thought that some people might want to continue the chat about the Lusk kidney here.

To recall my last post on the 'JTRs hysterectomies' thread I queried whether the kidney was genuine, if it was human, and whether or not the kidney or some slides might still exist today.
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Christopher-Michael
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Posted on Wednesday, March 05, 2003 - 9:17 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

I think it would be fascinating if slides of the LK were still in existence. It would, at least, settle the question of whether the loathsome thing was human, though I doubt we should ever be able to prove it was or was not torn from Catherine Eddowes (that is, not unless a future PM happens to be a Ripperologist! Stewart, your country needs you. . .)

As I have said, my admittedly limited examination into the matter leads me to believe the LK might have been human, but it's doubtful it was from Eddowes. The only person who ever said so was Major Smith, and since his passage on the kidney contains misstatements (and one possible outright lie) and he is not necessarily to be believed, he must be taken with a large grain of salt. But I'm willing to debate the question!

A question to the company: Tom and I have been e-mailing over this very subject. He believes he saw a report of either Openshaw or Brown carrying out a microscopic examination of the LK. I do not remember this reference. Does it strike a chord with anyone else?

CMD
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Jon Smyth
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Posted on Wednesday, March 05, 2003 - 9:17 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

The Daily Telegraph, October 19th, 1888

.....he thought it best, however, to submit the kidney to Dr Openshaw, the pathological curator at the London Hospital, and this was done at once. By the use of the microscope, Dr Openshaw was able to determine that the kidney had been taken from a fullgrown human being, and that the portion before him was part of the left kidney.

Regards, Jon
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Thomas Ind
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Posted on Wednesday, March 05, 2003 - 9:18 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

CMD
I have just e-mailed you a similar quote to Jon's from the star.

Jon (I'm getting confused now as to who is the butcher but if it is you, can you answer this question?)

In a definitive textbook of pathology published in 1901 that I found in the store room of the library at Barts I found a description of a normal human kidney's shape and size. This is it;

'The kidneys measure each from 10 to 12 cm in length, from 5 to 5.6 cm in width and 3.38 cm in thickness, the left being slightly larger than the right. The weight, according to Thoma[1], is: for the right kidney, 152 grams in men and 144 grams in women; for the left 164 grams in men and 148 grams in women. Baduel[2] gives the following weights and measures: for the right 110 to 120 grams, and for the left 120 to 130 grams in men, and 110 to 115 grams for the right and 115 to 120 grams for the left in women.'

Do these weights and sizes have any cross-over with animal kidneys weight and sizes that you have removed in your capacity as butcher?
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Bob Hinton
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Posted on Wednesday, March 05, 2003 - 9:18 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

Dear everyone,

I thought it might be of some use to reproduce the section of testimony where Dr Brown talks about the knowledge required to remove the kidney from Eddowes. He states:

'It required a great deal of (medical) [the word medical is deleted] knowledge to have removed the kidney and to know where it was placed such a knowledge might be possessed by someone in the habit of cutting up animals....'

all the best

Bob Hinton
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Thomas Ind
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Posted on Wednesday, March 05, 2003 - 9:19 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

I have just bought 4 pigs kidneys from my local butcher. I thought that 1 pound 38 pence was quite good value! I got the butcher to select them so I didn't bias my experiment.I have analysed them using a ruler. I measured the longitudinal distance from the two furthest ends longitudinally, the width at the level of the renal pelvis, and the bredth at the level of the renal pelvis. Having recently looked at specimens in a path museum I have given my impression of whether or not they had the appearance of a human kidney.

APPEARANCE
Kidney 1
Looked similar to a human kidney by my eye.
One incision on it presumably made by the butcher or slaughterer.
Kidney 2
Looked similar to the human kidneys I saw in the museum. Again, had knife damage.
Kidney 3
Perculiar looking with mounds on. Not really like those I saw in the museum. Again, knife damage.
Kidney 4
Again, similar shape to a human kidney and knife damage.

WEIGHT
Using not very precise kitchen scales
Kidney 1 - 140g
Kidney 2 - 140g
Kidney 3 - 125g
Kidney 4 - 150g

LONGITUDINAL measurement
Kidney 1 - 14cm
Kidney 2 - 13.5cm
Kidney 3 - 11.5cm
Kidney 4 - 12.5cm

WIDTH
Kidney 1 - 6.5cm
Kidney 2 - 6.5cm
Kidney 3 - 7 cm
Kidney 4 - 6cm

THICKNESS
Kidney 1 - 2.5cm
Kidney 2 - 2.5cm
Kidney 3 - 3cm
Kidney 4 - 3.5cm

A longitudinal incision laterally to medially through kidney 4 demonstrated a cortex and medulla similar to the kidneys I saw in the museum.

CONCLUSIONS
The macroscopic appearance and measurements of four pig's kidneys randomly bought from a butcher were no different from a human's to the untrained eye of a gynaecologist.

DISCUSSION
The above experiment needs to be repeated by a pathologist including a slide preparation to determine any differences in microscopic architecture.
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Yazoo
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Posted on Wednesday, March 05, 2003 - 9:19 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

Hey All!

I've been trying to follow these discussions since they began and I'd like to make a few points that I hope will help explain my perspective on the issues involved, possibly expressing the same concerns felt by others interested in this case.

1) Can modern medical perspectives/opinions help us determine that an 1888 (or beyond) observation is valid?

a) The issues here are evidentiary; meaning, can this "new" opinion or validation of an older one point to a type of suspect or a specific one? I doubt we can "prove" the kidney was or wasn't human -- we haven't discussed the theory that the kidney was human but came from a fairly recent autopsy or medical student cadaver. I doubt we (anymore than the 1888-era police) could "prove" that the "Lusk kidney" was absolutely from Eddowes and that it meant i) a doctor did it; ii) anyone with ____ experience did it; iii) anyone could have done it; iv) it was a hoax.

b) What is at stake in finding out more about the kidney and the type and quality of the wounds and mutilations inflicted on the victims? Again we are attempting to focus a century-old investigation. Do we spend our resources looking at men with XYZ medical qualifications or can we broaden the scope to men without any set of medical qualifications? Can any modern opinions absolutely sway our efforts in any given direction?

c) Can the older and current opinions shed light on the murderer's methods and purpose? Going beyond medical knowledge, was JtR totally and absolutely motivated by the old term "lust murder?" Or are there aspects of the wounds and mutilations, the other effects observed (or not!) at the crime scenes, and in the newspapers, the mail to Lusk's office, the writings of a graffitist that can reasonably tell us something more about JtR? Could he have had a wider agenda than so-called simple sexual/homicidal motivations? Can medical opinions then and now sway us in any one direction?

2) While the medical evidence is probably the most vital element of our understanding of this case (or series of cases), it is not the only evidence we have. How do we integrate any current consensus or series of opinions with other evidence -- whether that other evidence is objective (as in time and place and dates of death) and more subjective "evidence" such as the opinions of coeval police officers, political appointees serving on the police force, public opinion (especially from among the victim class, such as the prostitutes' belief that a "Leather Apron" person did the murders), and medical opinions both close to and at a distant from the acrtual autopsies?

a) Can the medical evidence be used to definitively say that the Lusk kidney was or was not Eddowes' and/or that the murderer did not send it? My point in this example is not that the answer would help name a suspect or identify a professional type from which we might extract a suspect; but rather my point is does the possibility of the kidney being genuine (i.e., Eddowes' kidney, not just a human kidney suffering from similar diseases identified by contemporary medical opinion) and was sent by the murderer?

b) The answers to the Eddowes' identification and the possibility of the kidney's having been sent by the murder open up avenues of investigatory possibilities. If it was Eddowes' kidney and was sent by the murderer (or we cannpt absolutely rule out either possibility), what could these details tell us about the murderer: what was his purpose in sending this item; how close was he to official channels of communication; how closely did he otherwise follow the case in more public forums?

c) This medical debate and its results have a wider meaning (or the conclusions are given such meanings) by many of us with our own existant knowledge/feelings/intuitions about the case. Many dismiss the Lusk kidney out of hand as being an act of the genuine murderer using logic that can and should be evaluated by our own Casebook staff physicians, but also by a continuous influx of qualified or logically-fashioned opinions. The question of whether JtR sent the kidney to Lusk means more than simply adding an "exotic" element to these grisly murders. An avenue of investigation can be debated and possibly pursued if the weight of qualified/logical opinion says, "We cannot definitively conclude that the kidney did not come from Eddowes' body." The avenue that opens is not necessarily one of occupation (meaning either experience to extract/preserve the kidney or have access to another human but non-Eddowes' kidney -- no, I don't think those who don't want to consider the possibility of the murderer communicating in this manner will ever give up their negative ideas).

The present discussions are valuable and important. I especially commend our two doctors for attempting to grapple with 1888-era (or near contemporary) understanding of the medical evidence. I also thank the many contributions made by the non-specialists.

Let's just not lose perspective on the entirety of the case (or cases). The issues being debated may influence our understanding of these murders beyond the scope of medical expertise. They should, in fact, be taken with the rest of our limited knowledge and used to answer the basic who/what/when/where/why/how questions that may -- may! -- lead to a more universally accepted suspect or suspects for the murders.

Yaz

BTW: to throw a small amount of gasoline on this friendly but still controversial fire, we know that the anatomy of, say, human beings and pigs hasn't radically changed in 112 years. But we have heard, though most or all have no direct knowledge, of changes/improvements in diet and, in the case of the pigs, genetic manipulation (via breeding techniques at the least). Could these changes affect Dr. Ind's experiment in swine nephrology? Have we bred a "bigger and better" pig, causing perhaps significant increases in sizes and weights? (We could say the same about humans -- I think we've been estimated to average about a foot taller than people from the distant past?)
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Thomas Ind
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Posted on Wednesday, March 05, 2003 - 9:20 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

Yazoo

Lawyers hate it when doctors appear in court and they never answer 'Yes' or 'No' but use 'maybe' and 'probably' and 'indicated that'. It is instilled from medical school where we are taught that the words 'always' and 'never' rarely exist. Note that I use the word 'rarely' rather than 'never'!

I will answer as best I can but using words that I am used to using, not those that lawyers would prefer.

1)Yes. (How about that?). Help but not prove. With a knowledge of the scientific resources available at the time it may help to cast doubt on what was previously considered fact but was theory based on the 'best evidence available' at that time. For example; we may have said that Openshaw examined the kidney macroscopically and microscopically. His conclusion was that it was human. However, we may now know that (I use the word may)it is difficult to distinguish between a human and pig's kidney on the basis of these examinations and that this puts Openshaw's conclusions into doubt. That is why it is so important that we try and understand why Openshaw, Brown and the like came to these conclusions.

a) Don't know. I agree that we cannot prove that the kidney was human. I also agree that we cannot prove it was from Eddowes. The best evidence available to us suggests that it was human. If we can discredit this evidence which we should attempt to do it repositions this balance of evidence. With respect to it being from Eddowes I don't even think that the best evidence available suggests that is has but only that it could have come from Eddowes. As you may have seen in a recent post on Bright's disease I am challenging this as well.
I agree with all points i-iv but baring in mind that if we could put forward a strong argument that it was not from Eddowes or from a human then yes we could conclude that it was a hoax.

(I personally believe that it was and will prepare an argument to that fact when my knowledge of JTR facts can come near to that of the people contributing to this site).

b) I'm not quite sure what you mean by 'what is at stake?'. Are you saying does it matter? If that is what you are saying then the answer must be yes. The fascination with JTR for those who study it is not just who he was but also the smaller unresolved mysteries of which this is one. I personally don't feel that we should be looking for any specific medical qualifications and don't believe that modern opinions can sway our efforts in any given direction. However, as I am sure you are aware, many disagree with me.

c) I think so. Forensic medicine is now a specialty in it's own right. People in that area of medicine would understand the MO much greater now than in 1888.
'Lust murder'or other? I don't know but would ask the advice of a forecnsic psychiatrist. Again, I think that the medical understanding of specialists in their field would be much greater now that in 1888.

2) Interesting point and the answer is that I don't know. However, I think that the evidence has to be given independantly to avoid bias but with enough facts to ensure adequate analysis.

a) Possibly. If we found the kidney we could tie it up with Eddowes now with almost 100% certainty (99.99999% certainty)if we had relatives. To identify it with the murderer is theorectically possible but 100 years after the event very difficult indeed. If there was a large amount of the murderers own blood on it, we could then chase the genetic code of suspects through relatives. However, we know that the kidney is likely to have been badly contaminated by all the people who have handled it.

b) Yes, I think someone with experties in forensic psychiatry would be able to furnish us with the most likely details using current thinking.

c) I cannot agree with you more. However I and I'm sure Dr Villon would be very uncomforatble about our own medical opinions being used in this manner and neither of us have the experties to give a vaild opinion. I agree that it would be very interesting to approach a forensic psychiatrist and get their opinion as to what new conclusions can be made in a psycological profile if we assume that the kidney was genuine.

BTW
Yes I agree but the measurements for a human kidney I gave you were from 1901. My pigs kidneys (injected with steroids and fattened up by the farmer) were if anything at the upper end of this range.

PLEASE DON'T RIDICULE MY EXPERIMENT AS I KNOW IT WASNT GOOD SCIENCE. The point I was trying to make was that the assumption that it was human may not be true. Not that it was not human.

If analysis was made by measurement and a microscopic examination of which both could not distinguish between the 2 species then we would be back to square 1. What we need to determine now is a) how the analysis was made - either by written reports or from historical texts of the day. b) can with our modern day knowledge determine if it was possible to make a diagnosis of 'human' or 'Bright's' with methods of the day. I am not qualified to answer this but am to question it. Furthermore, I am in the position to ask people more qualified to know.

With respect to your question about how the psychological profile would change if we assumed that it was genuine, then Ripperologists need to sit down and think how the information should be presented to an expert without causing bias.
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Yazoo
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Posted on Wednesday, March 05, 2003 - 9:20 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

Hey Doc!

Very nice reply. Though not a lawyer myself you seemed to me to have presented your opinions in an acceptably cautious, judicious manner (Mike does the same, I might add). And no, I am not and never would ridicule what you and Mike and others are doing here...even the swine nephrology experiment (who could laugh when none of us actually went out and did what you did...you scientists! Honest admiration from me, always!!!)

I'm sorry if I left the impression that I thought any of the medical evidence could help identify a suspect. At this late date, I'm afraid that is highly unlikely (never say never). But you are correct if you surmise that I think a forensic psychiatrist would find the medical evidence fruitful, and any further certainty or consensus we "moderns" can manage would be a greater benefit...to them if not us (though I know a few dozen armchair forensic psychiatriasts on the Casebook that could give it a go!).


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Don't let me interrupt what you all are doing but when you have the time, could you also take up the sticky (pardon the pun) issue of whether 1888-era physicians/medical examiners could tell how old (or how fresh? or how long the kidney had been out of the body?) and when it was immersed in whatever preservative various parties claim was used? Can we, at this great distance, evaluate their findings, or even improve upon them?

To me, this issue has the possibility of being of even greater bearing on whether the kidney could have come from Eddowes. I find it hard to accept that, without any of us seeing the actual tissue examined in 1888, we can satisfactorily rebut or sustain 1888 opinions on the matters of diseases present (or not! Hard to keep everyone happy, ahve you noticed?) etc.

Thank you, all, once again for a marvellous discussion on this most important aspect of the JtR series of murders.

I go now.

Yaz


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


BTW 2: Spell check? "I doan need no stinkin spellcheck!" I'm underfunded on my Mavis Beacon speed typing savings account and thus overdrawn on my spell checking acccount at the local branch of the Spelling B National Bank of Misusslipee...er, or something like so.
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The Viper
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Yazoo asks:-
"Have we bred a 'bigger and better' pig, causing perhaps significant increases in sizes and weights?"

Most pigs bred for the U.K. market today are Large Whites and Landraces. They have been subject to a lot of inbreeding. The size of pigs has increased dramatically, even in the past 25 years. Cases of poor husbandry have been exposed where indoor pig farmers have been keeping pigs in steel-framed cages manufactured in the 1970s which are too small for their livestock.

Fortunately, recent years have seen an increasing interest in both organic meat and in old breeds. It should not be difficult for Dr. Ind to obtain kidneys from traditional breeds such as Saddlebacks, Tamworths and Gloucesters if he feels it would be worthwhile to repeat his experiments.
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Thomas Ind
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Posted on Wednesday, March 05, 2003 - 9:21 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

Yazoo
Thanks. Perhaps that accounts for my 4 pigs kidneys being just slightly larger than those reported for humans in 1901. The hypothesis to be tested probably doesn't need that thorough examination. I have shown that the variation in size is so large that interms of measurements, there COULD be some cross-over. If we wish to examine the macroscopic and histological differences between the species, then we should get an expert to do it. I know some but I'm not quite sure how I would approach it with them. I must confess to not wanting to approach them but I may find the courage in the future.

Mike
What we really need is a forensic pathology book from that era. Once I have posted this I will go to the RSM website to see if I can locate one that they may have on their catalogue. I also have 40 pages photocopied from a pathology book of 1901 (40 of 75) unfortunately the librarian at Barts stopped me claiming I was breaching copyright! From 1901!!!
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Christopher-Michael
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fferent people before reaching Brown, and there was every chance the artery could have been purposefully or inadvertently trimmed up.

Smith tells us Eddowes had Bright's Disease. N.P. Warren has confirmed this from Brown's post-mortem notes, and his conclusion has been generally accepted. However, recent discussion has thrown some doubt on his diagnosis, and this point may very well have to be rethought. In any event, whether Eddowes really did have Bright's Disease or not, we cannot presume the LK did as well. There are no comprehensive medical descriptions of it extant beyond the nebulous "distinct signs of disease." We are not justified in automatically assuming this to have been Bright's Disease.

Finally - and I am actually a little surprised that this point never seems to have been made before - Smith is the ONLY person to mention Sutton. He is not mentioned in contemporary police records, not in any newspaper articles I have seen and not in any surviving correspondence of Brown that I have seen. Even the "A-Z" only repeats what Smith has to say on Sutton, without any indication that this really happened.

The limited investigation I have put into this matter persuades me that what has been put forth on the LK is a result of misunderstanding, shoddy press reports and a too-great reliance on Major Smith. I may very well be off-base on this, but if there is support for the kidney really being from Eddowes, it is very weak. We cannot ABSOLUTELY beyond all matter of doubt say no, unless microscopic slides happen to turn up. The weight of evidence, however, appears to me to be against the kidney being real, and efforts to use it and the "From Hell" letter as a jumping-off point for pointless psychological theorising to be wasted effort.

Having said all this, of course, I also realise that this is rather a tempest in a tea-pot. Whether the LK was real or not will not appreciably bring us closer to Jack the Ripper. But I do think that proving (or believing beyond reasonable doubt) it to be fake at least spares other researchers and students from chasing phantasms down a dark alley.

Thus my rationale for spouting off the above. Apologies for the rant.

____________

haelally being from Eddowes, it is very weak. We cannot ABSOLUTELY beyond all matter of doubt say no, unless microscopic slides happen to turn up. The weight of evidence, however, appears to me to be against the kidney being real, and efforts to use it and the "From Hell" letter as a jumping-off point for pointless psychological theorising to be wasted effort.

Having said all this, of course, I also realise that this is rather a tempest in a tea-pot. Whether the LK was real or not will not appreciably bring us closer to Jack the Ripper. But I do think that proving (or believing beyond reasonable doubt) it to be fake at least spares other researchers and students from chasing phantasms down a dark alley.

Thus my rationale for spouting off the above. Apologies for the rant.

As ever,
Christopher-Michael
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ChrisGeorge
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Posted on Wednesday, March 05, 2003 - 9:22 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

Hi, Tom:

Here are some medico-legal texts that may prove useful having been published near the time period we are interested in:

Atlas of legal medicine, by Dr. E. von Hofmann... authorized translation from the German, ed. by Frederick Peterson... assisted by Aloysius O. J. Kelly... 56 plates in colors, and 193 illustrations in black. Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders, 1898.

Apropos of a theory that Jack may have been a somnambulist as apparently proposed by a Dr. George Henry Roque Dabbs (1846-1913), I thought I would post the following citation :-)

L'hypnotisme et les etats analogues au point de vue medico-legal, les etats hypnotiques et les etats analogues les suggestions criminelles cabinets de somnambules et societes de magnetisme et de spiritisme l'hypnotisme devant la loi, par le docteur Gilles de la Tourette ... preface de m. le dr P. Brouardel. Paris: E. Plon, Nourrit et cie, 1887.

Legal medicine, by Charles Meymott Tidy. New York: W. Wood & Company, 1882-84. This is the same Dr. Charles Meymott Tidy (1843-1892) who testified at the trial of Florence Maybrick.

The principles and practice of medical jurisprudence, by Alfred Swaine Taylor. 2nd ed. Philadelphia: Henry C. Lea, 1873.

Principles of forensic medicine, by William A Guy. 3d ed. London: H. Renshaw, 1868.

I hope these references may be of some use.

Best regards

Chris George
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Thomas Ind
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Posted on Wednesday, March 05, 2003 - 9:22 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

Thanks Chris

CMD
Here are three of the other arguments I have thought of against the LK being genuine.

1) JTR took away 2 uterii at the time the LK was submitted. Why only submit a kidney? JTR had 2 uteri in his collection so he could spare one. He had only one kidney. If as I propose an animal kidney may look similar to a human one then it is convenient that he submitted this one organ and not the other 2. Uteri are formed embryologically by 2 streaks of tissue fusing together in the middle (Mullerian ducts). In humans the only part of the Mullerian ducts that stay separate are the Fallopian tubes (although sometimes this does not happen). I understand that most animal species do not have such a central fusion and it is therefore easy to distinguish between a human and an animal uterus. Not so for the kidney.

2) I remember reading (although like my microscope I forget where) that the kidney had been prepared. For this I interpret that perinephric fat and adrenal glands had been removed. Why bother doing this? The only conclusion I can come to is that he bought it in a butcher and butcher's prepare their kidneys.

3) I wish I knew what was mean't by cut longitudianlly. Mike you may be able to help remind me by remembering descriptions from your anatomy days. From this I assume that it was cut from top to bottom in a front to back plane or would this be called 'saggitally'. This is important. (I have a radiology meeting on Tuesday and my radiology colleagues use these terms so I will ask them if Mike, like me, has forgotten the answer) If it was cut through halving it's thickness (leaving the front and back parts in different pieces) and thus displaying the renal pelvis and medullary rays, then this would not be the most ovious way to prepare a kidney for eating. Get a kidney and cut it in half, there are three ways in doing it. One through the middle from left to right. The other from up to down but to cut through it's thinest thickness is only done in postmortem specimens to display the anatomy. So if it is cut this was, then it supports the theory that it had been taken from a PM specimen but only after the pathologist had looked at it. If it was cut the other way then I have a question for Jon. When I bought my kidneys, they had knife marks in them. 2 of them had an incision from up to down (in a back to front manner) in such a way that if the incision was complete the left and right portions of the kidney would be seperate. Why is this? Did the butcher do it on purpose? If so, then I propose that if the LK was cut that way, then it could have been bought from a butcher.

Now I know these arguments are not objective when giving them on their own and I do wish to be objective. However, the more I read the more I doubt it being from JTR. It's time to put a table together preparing the argument for and against it being a human kidney, having Bright's disease and being from Eddowes.

Heres a medical saying, 'When you hear hooves think horses not zebra'.

Goodnight

Tom

____

PS. VIPER. How come you know such much about pigs? Do you have some specialised knowledge on this area? Perhaps you are a farmer or from a farming family?

I forgot to ask my one final question (and your probably gathering that I intend another experiment). If I were to preserve a pig's kidney in 'wine' or 'spirit' as was the Lusk Kidney. What should I buy from the supermarket to repeat this?
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Chris George
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Posted on Wednesday, March 05, 2003 - 9:23 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

Hi, Tom:

It would seem that you would need "spirits of wine" to repeat the experiment of preserving the kidney as the Lusk kidney was preserved. Might I suggest some cheap Spanish or French plonk? :-)

I would say that brandy might make a better preservative except that the word "wine" seems to suggest that actual wine was used, doesn't it? Unless, that it is, if the operative word here is "spirits" in which case brandy or cognac would indeed be indicated.

Chris George
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Jon
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Posted on Wednesday, March 05, 2003 - 9:27 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

Tom
Re: Your Kidney's
My oppologies I must be having a slow day, I cannot picture the cuts you are trying to describe.
Whenever I removed a kidney it was torn out while within the fatty membrane. Then it was a simple matter to remove the kidney from within the fatty tissue, just nick it with a knife and crack it open.
All I can suggest, if the kidney has knife marks, is that a novice (apprentice) was less than carefull when slicing the fatty tissue to remove the kidney.
Otherwise, without fully understanding your description, I would suggest you ask your butcher who sold them to you.

As far as cutting a kidney in two equal halves....
We should all know what a kidney shaped swimming pool looks like, we all know the profile of a typical kidney. Then to cut one longdidtudinally(?) I would slice it so that both halves still show the kidney profile, slicing it along its line of maximum circumference.
Thats my interpretation of a longditudinal cut.

Also, I have said this before but I dont expect any agreement from the group, ....I feel that when the Doctor described the kidney as 'removed with care', I think he was implying that the kidney was removed from within the membrane, while still within the body.
This was not necessary, if Jack was in a hurry. It therefore appears to me that Jack was making a statement to the authorities, by removing it from the membrane.
"I'm experienced, I'm dangerous, I'm no nutcase"
And he even facially mutilated Eddowes, so he wasn't rushed.

(which indicates the definition of 'nutcase' is very broad)
:-)

Regards, Jon
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Christopher-Michael
Unregistered guest
Posted on Wednesday, March 05, 2003 - 9:29 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

The basic thrust of my post was that I wasn't quite following Yazoo's argument. The validity of the LK needs to be established before making cockeyed theories as to what the Ripper might have "meant" by sending it. It seems to me that the three main presumptions people have for presuming the LK to be real are that the "From hell" letter said so, the press said so and Major Smith said so. I think each of those presumptions is flawed.

In any event, I think all of the worthy company here are familiar (ad nauseam) with my arguments. You might, however, wish to check out the February issue of "Ripper Notes," which will carry my essay on the bona fides of the LK.

CMD
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R.J. Palmer
Police Constable
Username: Rjpalmer

Post Number: 8
Registered: 2-2003
Posted on Thursday, March 06, 2003 - 10:47 am:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

The Lusk kidney appears to me to be a hoax. If the miscreant was making a statement, why the long delay in mailing it? Why preserve the specimen at all? The piece sent to Lusk is precisely what one would expect had it been an anatomical specimen. 1) Preserved in spirits of wine [the common preservative in anatomical museums]; and 2) cut longitudinally [to show the interior and the disease]. The correspondent probably only had accesss to half a kidney to begin with, and offered up 'the tother half I fried and ate' as an imaginiative, if ghastly, excuse for not sending the entire specimen.

Tom asks an interesting question. 'Why only submit a kidney?' Why not a uteri? Well, if this is an anatomical specimen [as I suspect] then the answer is that after Wynne Baxter's publicity at the Chapman inquest at the beginning of October, anyone seeking such a specimen would be highly suspect, and a kidney would be easier to obtain.
Regardless, the sender of the kidney is one sick puppy, and it would be damned interesting to know his motive. I see a faint trace of pomp in Mishter Lusk's photograph. Someone who had a 'run in' with the Committee?
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Diana
Police Constable
Username: Diana

Post Number: 7
Registered: 2-2003
Posted on Thursday, March 06, 2003 - 8:02 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

Dr. Ind. I'm so glad to see you back on the boards.
BTW I've been having this back pain . . . oh well, never mind.

We had a poster a few months back who said he had studied graphology for thirty years. He looked at the Lusk letter and said it gave him the creeps. He had never seen such mental sickness before. I don't remember how he put it exactly but he said the writer had something seriously wrong.
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Diana
Police Constable
Username: Diana

Post Number: 10
Registered: 2-2003
Posted on Friday, March 07, 2003 - 9:33 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

Hey, the Lusk kidney had brights disease. Do pigs get brights disease?
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Leanne Perry
Sergeant
Username: Leanne

Post Number: 39
Registered: 2-2003
Posted on Sunday, March 09, 2003 - 2:38 am:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

G'day,

What are the signs of 'Bright's Disease'? Could the fact that it had been preserved in spirit, have added to these signs?

'tother piece I fried and ate it was very nise', was written to add to the horror to the correspondence. The author wasn't a cannibal, because everyone knew that the other half was apparently still inside the victim. But if it really was a pigs kidney.....

LEANNE PERRY
Sib-Editor of 'Ripperoo'.

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Leanne Perry
Sergeant
Username: Leanne

Post Number: 40
Registered: 2-2003
Posted on Sunday, March 09, 2003 - 3:18 am:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

G'day,

In the message board 'Nephrology: Bright's disease', it is written that such a kidney would have 'red dots on the surface' and 'non suppurative inflammation'.

Way down underneath someone wrote: 'the organ looking as if it has been cooked'. I wonder did this hoaxer start to fry or boil a whole pigs kidney, then had the sudden thought of playing a practicle joke, and cut half off? He could have been just lucky when he cut between inches 1 and 3 of the renal artery.

As early as Catharine's inquest, it was made public knowledge that, (according to Dr. Brown), 'The peritoneal lining was cut through on the left side and the left kidney carefully taken out and removed - the left renal artery was cut through...' Yes, I'd say the hoaxer was a medical student!

LEANNE!
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Brian W. Schoeneman
Sergeant
Username: Deltaxi65

Post Number: 31
Registered: 2-2003
Posted on Sunday, March 09, 2003 - 2:01 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

Leanne,

Or you could say that the Ripper was a medical student. :-)

B
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Leanne Perry
Sergeant
Username: Leanne

Post Number: 41
Registered: 2-2003
Posted on Sunday, March 09, 2003 - 5:07 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

G'day Brian,

Good point!

The age and height of the strange man who asked Emily Marsh for Lusk's address the day before 'From Hell' was received, was too similar to the description of Schwartz's 'Pipeman'. Remember that the police never bothered to trace 'Pipeman'!

LEANNE PERRY!
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thomas schachner
Unregistered guest
Posted on Thursday, May 22, 2003 - 7:00 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

hi leanne,

maybe i don't have the full description of the man as described by schwartz. but i see no similarities between emily's description and the pipeman.

marsh:
Man of some forty-five years of age, fully six feet in height, and slimly built. He wore a soft felt black hat, drawn over his forehead, a stand-up collar, and a very long black single-breasted overcoat, with a Prussian or clerical collar partly turned up. His face was of a swallow type, and he had a dark beard and a moustache. The Man spoke with what was taken to be an Irish accent.

schwartz:
Aged 35, 5'11", fresh complexion, light brown hair, dark overcoat, old black hard felt hat with a wide brim, clay pipe.

greetings from germany-
thomas.
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Saddam
Unregistered guest
Posted on Friday, May 23, 2003 - 1:41 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

"His face was of a swallow type..."

Funny, I always felt he must have looked a bit like a thrush.

SHTD
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Gary Weatherhead
Unregistered guest
Posted on Monday, May 26, 2003 - 6:25 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

Hello Dr. Ind and All

After reading the comments of the Doctor I believe it may be possible for a good criminal defense attorney(which I do not claim to be) to have the kidney, if presented as evidence of a human kidney with Brights' Disease, thrown out of court. At the very least the kidney could be shown to be considered a hoax to the reasonable man/woman. This would make it very doubtful evidence indeed.

Best Regards
Gary
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Josh Paulsen
Unregistered guest
Posted on Wednesday, September 10, 2003 - 10:15 pm:   Edit PostDelete PostView Post/Check IPPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

ok, I havnt read everyones post. So dont get made at me if this has already been mentioned.
Personally, I think that this is the only letter that is true. I base it on one observation. Jack the Ripper never ever called himself "Jack the Ripper" He sighed in this letter "catch me when you can Mr Lusk" all of the other letters are sighed "Jack the Ripper" The Media called him that. Not himself though.

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