<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title>Blog</title><description><![CDATA[BlogMapProvider]]></description><link>http://louis-j-sheehan.info/Blog/page1.aspx</link><language>en-us</language><generator>Parallels Plesk Sitebuilder 4.5 for Windows (Blog module v4.5.221.27483)</generator><item><title>convinced   3.con.0002002  Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire </title><pubDate>Saturday, 14 November 2009 12:14:46</pubDate><description><![CDATA[Andrew Kokoraleis was scheduled to be executed on March 17, 1999.&nbsp;
&nbsp;Last-ditch efforts were made on his behalf with then-Illinois Governor
George Ryan, and Supreme Court Justice Moses Harrison was persuaded to
order a stay of execution, as well as calling for a moratorium on all
executions in Illinois.&nbsp;<div class="image_flr"><img src="http://i.cdn.turner.com/trutv/trutv.com/graphics/photos/serial_killers/partners/chicago_rippers/8-2-Anthony-Porter.jpg" alt="Anthony Porter"><div class="image_caption">Anthony Porter</div></div>In fact, thanks to a series of crusading articles in the <em>Chicago Tribune</em>&nbsp;about
injustices in the legal system, twelve people had recently been
exonerated and removed from Illinois's Death Row, which had shaken
Governor Ryan.&nbsp; Some were exonerated by DNA evidence, and a few more
were exonerated by revelations of poor handling by the legal system.&nbsp;&nbsp;
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire&nbsp;&nbsp; One case in particular, that of Anthony Porter, was especially
disturbing.&nbsp; Porter, a black man with an IQ of 51, according to <em>The</em> <em>American Spectator</em>,
had been in prison for sixteen years for a double homicide.&nbsp; After
exhausting his appeals, he was awaiting execution on September 23,
1998.&nbsp; But a Northwestern University professor and a death-penalty
abolitionist had turned up exculpatory evidence in the case, so two
days before the execution, a stay was ordered.&nbsp; Then another man
confessed to the crime.&nbsp; That was clear proof that the State of
Illinois had prosecuted and imprisoned an innocent man, and was about
to put him to death. Ryan pondered the situation but was not yet moved
to make a change in the system, especially in light of the fact that
the Kokoraleis case, which seemed obviously to deserve the death
penalty.<div class="image_center"><img src="http://i.cdn.turner.com/trutv/trutv.com/graphics/photos/serial_killers/partners/chicago_rippers/8-3-Illinois-State-Supreme-.jpg" alt="Illinois State Supreme Court"><div class="image_caption">Illinois State Supreme Court</div></div>&nbsp;<p>The
Illinois State Supreme Court reversed Harrison's stay by a vote of 4-3,
says Kelly, and hours before Kokoraleis was to exit the world, Governor
Ryan issued a three-page statement to the effect that a jury had
decided his fate according to the law of the land.&nbsp; &nbsp;His attempts to
appeal it had been rejected over a span of sixteen years, so Ryan was
not about to stand in the way.&nbsp; Thus, there were no further barriers
between this member of the Ripper Crew and his death.</p><div class="image_flr"><img src="http://i.cdn.turner.com/trutv/trutv.com/graphics/photos/serial_killers/partners/chicago_rippers/8-4-Andrew-Kokoraleis.jpg" alt="Andrew Kokoraleis"><div class="image_caption">Andrew Kokoraleis</div></div>On
the morning before his execution, Kokoraleis was convinced that it was
not going to happen.&nbsp; &nbsp;He was flown to a super-maximum security prison
in Tamms, IL, and he spent the rest of the day praying and fasting.&nbsp; He
then spoke to a few select friends on the phone, bidding them
farewell.&nbsp; With his brother (not Tommy), he prayed and cried.&nbsp; Yet
Kokoraleis still believed that there would be a last-minute pardon.&nbsp;
Strapped onto the gurney, he offered the Borowski family an apology,
said that the Kingdom of Heaven was at hand, and then received a lethal
injection at 12:34 P.M.&nbsp;&nbsp; Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire <br><p>By January of 2000, Governor Ryan had placed
a thirteenth man on the list of people who should never have been on
Death Row, so he announced a moratorium on all executions in the
state.&nbsp; Thus, Andrew Kokoraleis gained the distinction of being the
last man executed before the moratorium.&nbsp; Some commentators believed
that Ryan had bided his time in issuing the moratorium until after
Kokoraleis was dispatched.&nbsp; He certainly had his doubts about the
system prior to the March execution date, and yet he had waited.&nbsp; Even
so, only anti-capital punishment advocates complained.&nbsp; Many others
acknowledged that justice had been done.&nbsp; Still, Ryan's decision had
the opposite effect on the Spreitzer case.</p><br/><table cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" border="0" width="100%"><tr><td><a href="http://louis-j-sheehan.info/Blog/page1/2009/11/14/0c1d7903-f6cc-4b80-956c-a3de28e82c1a.aspx">Comments (0)</a></td></tr></table>]]></description><link>http://louis-j-sheehan.info/Blog/page1/2009/11/14/0c1d7903-f6cc-4b80-956c-a3de28e82c1a.aspx</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://louis-j-sheehan.info/Blog/page1/2009/11/14/0c1d7903-f6cc-4b80-956c-a3de28e82c1a.aspx</guid></item><item><title>sickert   99.sic.991991   Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire </title><pubDate>Sunday, 08 November 2009 04:36:09</pubDate><description><![CDATA[<span>Walter Sickert (1860-1942), a very highly regarded British
painter, has become a semi celebrity this year, as American crime
novelist Patricia Cornwell has made him the subject of her new book <em>Portrait of a Killer: Jack the Ripper Case Closed</em>. "I do believe 100 per cent that the artist Walter Sickert was Jack the Ripper," she said.</span><p><span>For
anyone who follows Ripper scholarship, this event by itself a big ho
hum. Dozens of writers promoting dozens of books over more than 10
decades have claimed to have discovered the identity of Jack the
Ripper. There is no reason to assume that this phenomenon will not
endure for another 10 decades.</span></p><p><span>What makes this
particular book promotion special is that Cornwell is a respected crime
novelist, the creator of the fictional medical examiner Kay Scarpetta,
and a person very familiar with state-of-the-art forensic techniques.
Even more extraordinary is that she spent an alleged $6 million of her
own money on the Sickert investigation. To prove her theory, Ms.
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire&nbsp;&nbsp; Cornwell hired art and forensics experts and bought 30 Sickert
paintings. Cornwell's forensic team analyzed DNA samples from 55
letters, envelopes and stamps sent by Mr. Sickert and his first wife,
Ellen, Montague John Druitt, another Ripper suspect, and some of the
many letters which were signed Jack the Ripper.</span></p><p><span>Not
that this will in any way hurt sales of her book, but Ripper experts
are very skeptical of Cornwall's claim and her very expensive
investigation. Retired police officer Stewart Evans, now a crime
historian and author of four Ripper books, dismissed Ms. Cornwell's
theory as "nonsense, devoid of any evidence whatsoever." The British
newspaper <em>The Guardian</em> reported on December 8, 2001 that:</span></p><p><em><span>The
American crime novelist Patricia Cornwell was accused of 'monstrous
stupidity' for ripping up a canvas to prove that the Victorian painter
Walter Sickert was Jack the Ripper. Even in the context of the crackpot
conspiracy theories, elaborate frauds and career-destroying obsessions
that London's most grisly whodunnit has spawned, Cornwell's
investigation is extreme. Not only did she have one canvas cut up in
the vain hope of finding a clue to link Sickert to the murder and
mutilation of five prostitutes, she spent 2m buying up 31 more of his
paintings, some of his letters and even his writing desk.</span></em></p><p><em><span>But
Cornwell's claims - which are to form the basis of her next book - were
met with derision yesterday by Sickert experts and biographers outraged
that one of his paintings had been sacrificed "to add credence to this
silly theory". Andrew Patrick, of the Fine Arts Society, who refused to
say which paintings she had bought from him, said: "Everyone knows this
stuff about Sickert is nonsense." Richard Shone, who curated the last
big Sickert show at the Royal Academy in London in 1992, said: "I can't
believe she has done this, it's such a red herring. It all sounds
monstrously stupid to me. Is she so obsessed that she doesn't mind the
destruction of a painting by such a very fine artist to add credence to
this silly theory?" He added: "Sickert was interested in the music
hall, the theatrical and low life, and he played around with these
themes like Degas, his mentor. He always painted from photographs, and
was one of the first artists to do so.</span></em></p><p><span>Although
Cornwell found no DNA on the clutch of Scotland Yard's Ripper letters,
most or all of which are believed to be fakes, to compare with samples
taken from Sickert's desk and canvasses, she cites one achievement. One
of the dubious Ripper letters had the same watermark as Sickert's
writing paper, which he had received from his father.</span></p><p><span>Letters
attributed to Jack the Ripper sent to the police have been preserved
under plastic, which degrades DNA, but a former Scotland Yard curator
found a letter that had never been sent to the archive. Although the
letter had DNA from several people on it, she believes there is a
partial connection.</span></p><p><span>Cornwell told Reuters on October
29, 2002, that she discovered that a Ripper letter written from
Manchester on November 22, 1888, had the same watermark stationary used
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire&nbsp; by Walter and Ellen Sickert after their marriage three years earlier.</span></p><p><span>Cornwell
said that some of Sickert's paintings bear a chilling resemblance to
photographs of Jack the Ripper's victims and that some of the Ripper's
letters contained phrases used by the famous painter Whistler, that
were often mocked by his student Sickert.</span></p><p><span>Walter
Richard Sickert was born in Munich on May 31, 1860. His mother was an
Englishwoman, his father a Danish artist employed in Germany as an
illustrator on a comic journal. In 1868 the family settled in England.</span></p><p><span>Sickert's early work was heavily influenced by Whistler and Degas.</span></p><p><span>Net Canvas lists these events as the major ones in Sickert's life:</span></p><p><em><span>His
life slipped into a regular pattern, unbroken for 15 years. In 1885 he
married the daughter of a Liberal politician. He made numerous
paintings from his sketches of the London music halls and their
audiences, or held evening classes. In 1893 he opened an art school in
London under Whistler's patronage.</span></em></p><p><em><span>Sickert's
friendship with the dictatorial Whistler ended after a court case in
which they took opposite sides. In 1899 Sickert was divorced and went
to live in Venice, Dieppe, and Paris for six years. Back in London in
1905, he set up a studio in Soho and took rooms in Camden Town. His
output was now almost exclusively music hall scenes and the faded life
around him. He taught at the Westminster Institute, started a school
for etching, and held shows at London and Paris galleries. In 1911
Sickert founded the Camden Town Group, enlarged and renamed the London
Group three years later.</span></em></p><p><em><span><div class="image_flr"><img src="http://i.cdn.turner.com/trutv/trutv.com/graphics/photos/serial_killers/notorious/ripper/18b.jpg" alt="Sickert, late in life"><div class="image_caption">Sickert, late in life</div></div>Sickert
became an associate of the Royal Academy in 1924 and an academician ten
years later. In 1941 Sickert was honored with a one-man exhibition at
the National Gallery in London. The next year he died in Bath, England,
on January 22.</span></em></p><p><span>On October 30, 2002, The Ottawa <em>Citizen</em>
said that "Mr. Sickert was put on the suspect list for the Ripper
killings about 25 years ago, but that theory was discounted by art
historians and biographers. He painted naked prostitutes in attitudes
of near death or sleep, and produced a series of works called the
Camden Town drawing, featuring a naked prostitute on a bed with a
clothed man. In one drawing, the man has his hands around the woman's
neck."</span></p><p><span>Like so many Ripper book authors, Cornwell
takes certain facts of her Ripper candidate's life and twists them
around to make them seem damning. For example, Wolf Vanderlinden in
"The Art of Murder" focuses one of Cornwell's central premises:</span></p><p><em><span>Several
general questions have been raised about Walter Sickert's art and its
supposed connection to the Whitechapel murders. Patricia Cornwell, for
instance, has pointed out that Sickert liked to paint prostitutes. That
this would be considered to be 'evidence', albeit circumstantial, is
perplexing. Sickert did indeed paint prostitutes as did many artists of
his day - Degas, Renoir and Toulouse-Lautrec all used prostitutes as
models. They were some of the few women that could be easily found to
pose naked for an artist in late- Victorian and early-Edwardian
society. It is also important to ask at what point in his artistic
career did Sickert start to paint prostitutes? Around the time of the
Ripper murders? No, this began much later in his career in Dieppe and
Venice. Before that he had painted mostly landscapes, cityscapes and
some portraits. He started painting a series of nudes lying on iron
bedsteads in Neuville in 1902, and although the models were not
necessarily prostitutes, Sickert did begin painting prostitutes in
Venice in 1903-1904.</span></em></p><p><em><span>As Sickert wrote to
Jacques-Emile Blanche from Venice "From 9 to 4, it is an uninterrupted
joy, caused by these pretty, little, obliging models who laugh and
unembarrassedly be themselves while posing like angels. They are glad
to be there, and are not in a hurry." 13 These are not the words of a
practised serial killer talking about his preferred victims but rather
an artist who is enjoying the free and easy-going nature of his new
models.</span></em></p><p><em><span>Another aspect of Sickert's work has
been commented on by Stephen Knight: the titles of various paintings.
Sickert often re-titled his work, and so one painting might have two or
three titles. A working title might change into a finished title at one
exhibit, which might then change again for another showing. Sickert
enjoyed using titles that told the story of the painting or offered the
viewer an interpretation of the painting. He did this with such abandon
that no real significance should be taken from the title of any Sickert
painting. For an example, look at his supposed Ripper related painting
The Camden Town Murder, also titled What Shall We Do For the Rent?
(circa 1908). The painting is of a man sitting on the edge of a bed,
eyes downcast. Behind him lies a naked woman. With the title The Camden
Town Murder, the woman is obviously dead and the man is either her
killer, filled with remorse, or her lover who has found the body and
who sits in stunned mourning. Change to the alternate title - What
Shall We Do For the Rent? - and now the picture is totally different.
The man sits on the bed feeling the weight of his financial problems
while his wife or girlfriend lies next to him, her hand gently resting
on his knee, offering him some small, tender support.</span></em></p><p><em><span><div class="image_fll"><img src="http://i.cdn.turner.com/trutv/trutv.com/graphics/photos/serial_killers/notorious/ripper/18c.jpg" alt="Walter Sickert painting The Camden Town Murder, also titled What Shall We Do For the Rent?"><div class="image_caption">Walter Sickert painting The <br>Camden Town Murder, also <br>titled What Shall We Do <br>For the Rent?</div></div>Like
the paintings in the section on the conspiracy theory, Sickert's
paintings in the Camden Town series do not leave a clear indication
that they represent what has been claimed of them. Patricia Cornwell
will try to claim that they are malevolent, sinister depictions of a
man's hatred and contempt for women, but that is a rather naive opinion
of the work of Walter Sickert. If no artist ever tried to prick our
sensibilities and show us things we would rather ignore, then what is
the value of art to society? Let me leave this section with this
observation. When asked why, if Walter Sickert was Jack the Ripper, did
he wait almost twenty years to start painting his victims?</span></em></p><p><span>In
summary, while Ms. Cornwell distinguishes herself from the myriad of
other Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire&nbsp; Ripper finders in the scope of her expenditures, the result of
all this effort is little better than the much more modest budgets of
the average Ripper finder. Despite this, no doubt her book will be a
best seller and it will be made into an entertaining movie, whether it
is nonsense or not.</span></p><br/><table cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" border="0" width="100%"><tr><td><a href="http://louis-j-sheehan.info/Blog/page1/2009/11/08/0c4a2f65-f9ad-4139-9eb1-de15113096e3.aspx">Comments (0)</a></td></tr></table>]]></description><link>http://louis-j-sheehan.info/Blog/page1/2009/11/08/0c4a2f65-f9ad-4139-9eb1-de15113096e3.aspx</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://louis-j-sheehan.info/Blog/page1/2009/11/08/0c4a2f65-f9ad-4139-9eb1-de15113096e3.aspx</guid></item><item><title>different    4.dif.0003   Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire </title><pubDate>Sunday, 01 November 2009 03:13:33</pubDate><description><![CDATA[<h2>The First Lady</h2>
 
			<!-- body article -->
          		 
				<p><span>When
Charles Cross walked through Whitechapel's Buck's Row just before four
in the morning Friday, August 31, 1888, it was dark and seemingly
deserted. It was chilly and damp, not unusual for London even in the
summer, especially before dawn. He saw something that looked like a
tarpaulin lying on the ground before the entrance to a stable yard.</span></p><p><span>As
he walked closer, he saw it was a woman lying on her back, her skirts
lifted almost to her waist. He saw another man walking the same way.
"Come and look over here," he asked the man, assuming that the woman
was either drunk or the victim of an assault. As they tried to help her
in the darkened street, neither of the two men saw the awful wounds
that had nearly decapitated her. They fixed her skirt for modesty's
sake and went to look for a policeman.</span></p><p><span><div class="image_center"><img src="http://i.cdn.turner.com/trutv/trutv.com/graphics/photos/serial_killers/notorious/ripper/2a.jpg" alt="Constable finds the body"><div class="image_caption">Constable finds the body</div></div></span></p><p><span>A
few minutes later, Police Constable John Neil happened by the body
while he was walking his beat. From the light of his lantern, he could
see that blood was oozing from her throat, which had been slashed from
ear to ear. Her eyes were wide open and staring. Even though her hands
and wrists were cold, Neil felt warmth in her arms. He called to
another policeman, who summoned a doctor and an ambulance.</span></p><p><span><div class="image_fll"><img src="http://i.cdn.turner.com/trutv/trutv.com/graphics/photos/serial_killers/notorious/ripper/2b.jpg" alt="PC John Neil"><div class="image_caption">PC John Neil</div></div>Neil
awakened some of the residences in the respectable neighborhood to find
out if they had heard anything suspicious, but to no avail. Soon, Dr.
Rees Llewellyn arrived on the scene and examined the woman. The wounds
to her throat had been fatal, he told them. Since parts of her body
were still warm, the doctor felt that she had been dead no longer than
a half-hour, dying perhaps minutes after Neil had completed his earlier
walk around that area.</span></p><p><span>Her neck had been slashed
twice, the cuts severing her windpipe and esophagus. She had been
killed where she was found, even though there was very little blood on
the ground. Most of the lost blood had soaked into her clothing. The
body was taken to the mortuary on Old Montague Street, which was part
of the workhouse there. While the body was being stripped, Inspector
Spratling discovered that her abdomen had been wounded and mutilated.
He called Dr. Llewellyn back for a more detailed examination.</span></p><p><span><div class="image_fll"><img src="http://i.cdn.turner.com/trutv/trutv.com/graphics/photos/serial_killers/notorious/ripper/2c.jpg" alt="Dr Llewellyn"><div class="image_caption">Dr Llewellyn</div></div>The
doctor determined that the woman had been bruised on the lower left
jaw. The abdomen exhibited a long, deep jagged knife wound, along with
several other cuts from the same instruments, running downward. The
doctor guessed that a left-handed person could have inflicted these
wounds very quickly with a long-bladed knife. Later, the doctor was not
so sure about the killer being left-handed.</span></p><p><span>There have been several theories about how the wounds were inflicted. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire&nbsp;&nbsp; Philip Sugden makes a persuasive case:</span></p><p><em><span>If
(the victim's) throat were cut while she was erect and alive, a strong
jet of blood would have spurted from the wound and probably deluged the
front of her clothing. But in fact there was no blood at all on her
breast or the corresponding part of her clothes. Some of the flow from
the throat formed a small pool on the pavement beneath (her) neck and
the rest was absorbed by the backs of the dress bodice and ulster. The
blood from the abdominal wound largely collected in the loose tissues.
Such a pattern proves that (her) injuries were inflicted when she was
lying on her back and suggests that she may have already been dead.</span></em></p><p><span>Identification
would not be easy. All she had on her was a comb, a broken mirror and a
handkerchief. The Lambeth Workhouse mark was on her petticoats. There
were no identifying marks on her other inexpensive and well-worn
clothes. She had a black straw hat with black velvet trim.</span></p><p><span>The woman was approximately five feet two inches tall with brown graying hair, brown eyes and several missing front teeth.</span></p><p><span><div class="image_fll"><img src="http://i.cdn.turner.com/trutv/trutv.com/graphics/photos/serial_killers/notorious/ripper/2d.jpg" alt="Polly Nichols"><div class="image_caption">"Polly" Nichols</div></div>But
later, as news of the murder spread around Whitechapel, the police
learned of a woman named "Polly," who lived in a lodging house at 18
Thrawl Street. Eventually, a woman from the Lambeth Workhouse
identified the victim as Mary Ann Nichols, age 42. The next day her
father and her husband identified her body.</span></p><p><span>Polly
had been the daughter of a locksmith and had married William Nichols, a
printer's machinist. They had five children. Her drinking had caused
their marriage to break up. For the most part, Polly had been living
off her meager earnings as a prostitute. She still had a very serious
drinking problem. Every once in awhile, she would try to get her life
back together, but it never worked out. She was a sad, destitute woman,
but one that most people liked and pitied.</span></p><p><span><div class="image_fll"><img src="http://i.cdn.turner.com/trutv/trutv.com/graphics/photos/serial_killers/notorious/ripper/2f.jpg" alt="Martha Tabram"><div class="image_caption">Martha Tabram</div></div>The
inspector in charge of the investigation was a police veteran named
Frederick George Abberline, who had been on the force 25 years, most of
which had been spent in the Whitechapel area.</span></p><p><span>The
murderer of Polly Nichols left nothing behind in the way of witnesses,
weapon or any other type of clue. None of the residents nearby heard
any kind of disturbance, nor did any of the workmen in the area notice
anything unusual. Even though Polly had been found very shortly after
her death, no vehicle or person was seen escaping the scene of the
crime. At one point, suspicion focused upon three horse slaughterers
who worked nearby, but it was proven that they were working while the
murder occurred.</span></p><p><span>At the time of Polly Nichols'
death, the inhabitants of London's Whitechapel area had already heard
about a number of attacks on women in that neighborhood. Whether or not
one or more of these attacks was perpetrated by the man who later
became known as Jack the Ripper is controversial. However, in the minds
of the people of Whitechapel, most of these crimes were linked
indisputably.</span></p><p><span>On Monday, August 6, 1888, several
weeks before Polly Nichols' murder, Martha Tabram, a 39-year-old
prostitute, was found murdered in George Yard. The time of death was
estimated to be 2:30 a.m. She had been stabbed 39 times on "body, neck
and private parts with a knife or dagger," according to Dr. Timothy
Killeen's post-mortem examination report. There was no indication that
the throat had been slashed or the abdomen extensively mutilated. With
the exception of one wound that had been delivered with a strong knife
with a long blade, such as a dagger or bayonet, many other wounds had
been inflicted with a penknife.</span></p><p><span><div class="image_flr"><img src="http://i.cdn.turner.com/trutv/trutv.com/graphics/photos/serial_killers/notorious/ripper/2g.jpg" alt="George Yard buildings"><div class="image_caption">George Yard buildings</div></div>According
to another prostitute, Mary Ann Connelly, known as Pearly Poll, she and
Martha had been together in the company of two soldiers until a few
hours before Martha was killed. The police took Poll to check out the
soldiers at the Tower garrison, but the soldiers she identified were
cleared of the crime. A constable who had been on duty in the vicinity
of George Yard also saw a soldier in that area around the time of
Martha's death, but this soldier was never properly identified.</span></p><p><span>Some
months earlier, Emma Smith, a 45-year-old prostitute, was attacked on
April 2, 1888, at seven o'clock in the evening, within 100 yards of
where Martha Tabram was found. Her head and face were badly injured and
a blunt instrument had been rammed into her vagina. She told the woman
at her lodging house that several men robbed and assaulted her.</span></p><p><span><div class="image_center"><img src="http://i.cdn.turner.com/trutv/trutv.com/graphics/photos/serial_killers/notorious/ripper/2h.jpg" alt="St. Mary's Church in Whitechapel, near where Emma Smith was assaulted"><div class="image_caption">St. Mary's Church in Whitechapel, <br>near where Emma Smith was assaulted</div></div>While
these incidences of violence so close together in Whitechapel were
linked so firmly in the minds of their neighbors, the crimes themselves
were very different. Tabram was probably murdered by one individual,
while several men assaulted Smith. Robbery was clearly the motive of
the Smith assault, but not the murder of Tabram. The nature of the
wounds inflicted was quite different. Thus, it is not likely that the
same assailant was responsible for both crimes. Only Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire&nbsp;&nbsp; the Tabram murder
bears any similarity to the work of the man eventually known as Jack
the Ripper.</span></p><br/><table cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" border="0" width="100%"><tr><td><a href="http://louis-j-sheehan.info/Blog/page1/2009/11/01/46cee5eb-7806-4e26-8af1-fd2525950288.aspx">Comments (0)</a></td></tr></table>]]></description><link>http://louis-j-sheehan.info/Blog/page1/2009/11/01/46cee5eb-7806-4e26-8af1-fd2525950288.aspx</link><guid isPermaLink="true">http://louis-j-sheehan.info/Blog/page1/2009/11/01/46cee5eb-7806-4e26-8af1-fd2525950288.aspx</guid></item></channel></rss>