
Episode 635: Gordon Cummins: The Blackout Ripper (Part 1)
In response to the onset of German bombing raids during World War II, many of England’s most vulnerable citizens evacuated or were temporarily evacuated out of urban areas to safer, more rural parts of the country. Those who remained in the cities would ultimately spend years enduring wartime blackouts, periods where the city was plunged into complete darkness in order to prevent German bombers from easily identifying their targets. The blackouts were a significant inconvenience and safety risk for everyone, but for at least one Londoner, they offered a perfect opportunity to enact his darkest fantasies.
Thank you to the Incredible Dave White of Bring Me the Axe Podcast for research and Writing support!
References
Bolton News. 1942. "Is 'killer' at large?" Bolton News, February 14: 1.
Campbell, Duncan. 2010. "London in the blitz: how crime flourished under cover of the blackout." The Guardian, August 28.
Driscoll, Margarette. 2022. "Ranmpage of the Blackout Ripper." Daily Mail, November 24.
Evening Standard. 1942. "Accused of murder of 4 women." Evening Standard (London, England), March 26: 8.
Evening Telegraph. 1942. "'Killer' theory in wave of London murders." Evening Telegraph (Derby, England), February 14: 8.
Herald Express. 1942. "Cadet's defense in murder trial." Herald Express (Devon, England), April 28: 1.
Hull Daily Mail. 1942. "London murders." Hull Daily Mail, February 11: 1.
Imperial War Museum. n.d. Imperial War Museum. https://www.iwm.org.uk/history/the-nation-at-a-standstill-shutdown-in-the-second-world-war.
Liverpool Daily Post. 1942. "Another London murder." Liverpool Daily Post, February 14: 1.
Storey, Neil. 2023. The Blackout Murders: Homicide in WW2. South Yorkshire, England: Pen and Sword.
The Citizen. 1942. "Cadet sent for trial." The Citizen (Gloucester, England), March 27: 1.
—. 1942. "'Evidence was overwhelming'." The Citizen (Gloucester, England), June 9: 8.
—. 1942. "Fresh Jury to be sworn in." The Citizen (Gloucester, England), April 24: 1.
The Times. 1942. "Airman charged with three murders." The Times (London, England), March 13: 2.
Venning, Annabel. 2017. "The Blackout Ripper; under cover of the Blitz." Mail on Sunday, January 29.
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Full Transcript
Hey, weirdos. Elena here.
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Hey, weirdos. I'm Elena.
I'm Ash. And this is Mor morbid.
And it's 2025.
It's 2025.
Yeah, it's been 2025 for like a episode, I think.
Yeah.
Like our last couple episodes, maybe. Like, you know, we don't know.
I was going to say it's a trend. I have no idea where we are.
You know what? You know where I'm at. Where are you at? Do you know where I'm at? I'm in a bad place.
Oh, no. I'm in a bad, bad place.
What place is this? It's the place of, I don't have any more of my frosted sugar cookie holiday creamer. I am also in that place.
So I commiserate. That creamer from International Delight, International Delight, if you're listening, please help me get to a good place because they're gone.
They're gone. They're absolutely gone.
And do you know what happened to me the other day, actually? Oh, I have a feeling I know what happened to you because it might have happened to me as well. I ordered two on DoorDash and I gave a nice little tip and everything.
And I said, if not available, just refund me because I don't want some other bullshit. No.
They didn't want to refund me. So the Dasher brought me two random ass fucking creamers which like they were international delight and actually i shouldn't complain because one of them is like italian sweet cream oh i love the sweet cream that one's really good that one's really good so i'm not super mad but anyways international delight please send me a whole entire stock of the frosted sugar cookie creamer and i second that please wear a show that that requires it please i've only had one bottle of it because that's the only bottle i've been able to find this season me too and it's making me upset and you know we got to shoot our shot here that's the thing we got to shoot it miss 100% of the shots that you don't take.
Wayne Gretzky, Michael Scott. There you go.
I just off- Nailed it. I did just realize that this is going to come out after the holidays and maybe it won't be available at all.
No, they still have it. I'm sure they do.
Okay. I believe you.
What do they do with it? I trust you. Then they have the recipe.
Yeah, give me a- I don't even care if it's in that fancy bottle you can just send it to me in a jug in a jug please in a vat if you would send it to me in a barrel just place just place in a keg if you send me a cow that makes that send me a keg of the frosted sugar cookie i would i would i would keg stand that i would do a keg stand on that that That's horrifying. One thing I never did is a keg stand.
Me neither. Yeah.
I mean, I know that. I was gonna say, is that shocking? I used to, but I just didn't do that.
Yeah. Anyways, I just really want that.
My life is hard without it. Today I did the...
My life is hard without it. My life is hard without it.
I did this sweet cream today and I made it through.
It's only like 2 o'clock.
We're really proud of you.
Thanks.
Everybody, keep asking your thoughts.
It's hard.
Thank you.
She's using sweet cream instead of frosting.
You're keeping in your thoughts.
What am I going to do?
Thoughts and prayers.
Thank you.
Those are useful.
So to gain some much needed perspective we're gonna shift we're gonna shift into something that's honestly gonna shock you i believe everyone listening um the case that i am covering today i it was so i'm gonna be covering the blackout ripper oh i haven't heard of this one uh his name is gordon cummins and that's so unassuming yeah just gordon i just always think of gordon ramsay yeah he's very assuming he's pretty assuming but he's definitely assuming uh but this guy i knew i had heard of this case but I didn't know the details. And when I looked further into it, I was like, whoa.
So he, this happened after Jack the Ripper. Okay.
Also happened over in Europe, though. And many Rippers in Europe.
Many Rippers. We have a few over here, too.
But these ones are rough and the thing is i'm i'm i hesitate to say any any ripper is worse than the other because they're all fucking terrible that's why they are literally called rippers yeah um but the thing with the blackout ripper that we're going to cover today this is going to be a two-parter by the way because it's a lot but he is like with jack the ripper sorry i'm like everywhere my thoughts are all over the
place because you didn't have the right coffee i didn't that's very true so jack the ripper
was pretty methodical about the way he went about things seemed like he had almost like a plan like
when he went into each murder he did it quick he. He did it relatively, you know, clean isn't the word, but like very quick and smooth.
He also did his mutilation post-mortem for the most part. Really the only one that you can point to is Mary Kelly at the end that was like frenzied and out of control and totally off the map which some people even wonder if it's obviously we went into that if that's all connected and all that but we won't go into that but the blackout ripper gordon cummins he does he's a mutilator that's why he's called a ripper yeah but he is like sadistic because his mutilation is not done post-mortem okay it seems like he enjoys hurting women and he enjoys hurting women when they can feel it like torturing yeah he mutilates and tortures while they are alive and it's so well i hesitate to say he is worse, because obviously it is all awful.
Yeah.
He's different.
He's a different for sure.
He's a different level of Ripper, I would say.
It's very upsetting.
I'm giving you a trigger warning up front.
This is very graphic, and there is a lot of really fucked up, gruesome things that he does to his victims.
So please be aware of that. Good news is though they caught him that's good he's not a jack the ripper he's a gordon he's gordon he got caught he's gordon the idiot so let's take it back shall we let's take it back back back we're going back into you know when german bombing raids were happening during world War II.
That's far back. Taking it back.
We're going back into, you know, when German bombing raids were happening during World War II. That's far back.
Taking it back. We're in the 30s, late 30s, early 40s.
So in response to the onset of German bombing raids during World War II, a lot of England's most vulnerable citizens were evacuated. And temporarily, they were, you know, they were taken out of like the urban areas to be safer in the more rural parts of the country.
Because it was a really, really dangerous time and very unprecedented and very unpredictable time. But those who stayed in the cities would spend years enduring blackouts.
So scary. And these were periods where the city was intentionally plunged into darkness to prevent German bombers from easily identifying urban areas to bomb.
That's so sad that they even had to do that to avoid being bombed. Oh, and that in and of itself is an awful, awful thing.
If you research into these blackouts, horrific. And they were a huge inconvenience and obviously tough to deal with in a myriad of ways, but they were also a safety risk for everybody.
But for at least one person, they offered the perfect opportunity to enact what was clearly his darkest fantasies. This man clearly had been thinking about this.
You don't just go and do this. And he didn't have a criminal record.
So he went straight. He must have been thinking about this for a long time.
And this gave him the opportunity. So when the German army invaded Poland in September 1939, like we said, countries all over Europe were forced to take a position and develop a strategy just in case they were drawn into the conflict.
In England, where attacks from Germany were kind of everybody was just waiting for it. It was imminent, essentially.
The war secretary just quickly mobilized the British armed forces and began evacuating 1.5 million citizens. Wow.
Those citizens were mostly like women, children, the elderly, the most vulnerable, like I said. Taking them out of the cities, bringing them to the countryside.
That's where they were going to be safer. But these would end up being super traumatic for a lot of people because they ended up being relocated to the homes of strangers often.
And they also wouldn't know what happened to the people that they left behind.
Oh, my God.
I can't imagine.
Like fathers, you know, brothers, all like husbands, all kinds of people.
Yeah.
And that was for like many years they dealt with this.
Under those circumstances, when the bombs began falling a few months later, many of these people chose to just return home instead of being separated from their families and just dealt with the chaos that was about to ensue. Now, in addition to the relocation of honestly the most vulnerable people in the nation, the government also implemented those widespread nightly blackouts.
It was every night. During this time, all lights, electric or natural, were to be extinguished.
Oh my God. Straight up blackness.
So scary. I don't think any of us can truly appreciate how dark that was happening here.
Because we are, no matter what, there's lights around us at all times. Always.
It's like when we we covered jack the ripper we talked about how i don't think people take into account how wild it is that he did what he did with such precision in that darkness in how dark it was there wasn't street lamps there weren't they were he was doing this by the light of a small flame up in a corner right Like, that's insane. And then here, there's no light whatsoever.
It is a black that you can't even conceive of. Oh, God.
And that just adds to the feeling. Oh, my God.
Because it takes away all your senses. It totally, like, it puts you in a place of, like like just complete vulnerability in every way.
Like there are so many people who have genuine,
like people say, oh, I'm scared of the dark,
but there are people who have literal phobias of the dark.
Can you imagine having to deal with that?
I don't think I, I feel like it would make me crazy.
Yeah, I feel like.
Not having any kind of like perception of what was around you.
That's what would scare me the most.
That would fuck you up. Listen, I don't know about you guys, but obviously I have some bad habits that I want to shrug off.
You know, we've all got bad habits that we try to shake off. And even though I'm not going around doing shady stuff like some of the people that we'd be talking about on this podcast, it's always a good idea to make moves towards good habits.
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And it's not like this was something you could just like not do because if you violated this blackout, you were going to be subject to fines of various amounts. And it was as simple as like lighting a match would get you a fine.
Wow. And these people couldn't afford this stuff and they couldn't afford to be thrown in jail.
And also you don't want to be the person who fucks it up. Fucks it up, exactly.
Yeah. And like puts everybody in danger.
Yeah. And obviously, like you said, like, you don't want to be the person who fucks it up.
Exactly. And like puts everybody in danger.
Yeah.
And obviously, like you said, like you don't want to be the one to fuck this up because what they were doing was trying to stay hidden from German bombers identifying them as targets during air raids.
But while it was like strategically made sense for the time because like what else are they going to do?
It had obviously added risks with it. It's like, yeah, yeah you were safe from air raids you're not safe from each other right and that's a problem in the first month alone traffic deaths doubled and by the by january 1942 one in five people had sustained some form of injury from the blackouts one in five people now as all this chaos was unfolding the question that came about was what do we do with the nation's countless prisoners that are now yeah unlike the free british citizens who could evacuate or hide during an air raid people in prison and youth detention centers were just sitting targets it's like what do you do to just let them be sitting not all of them are in there for like killing people you know what i I mean, like, It's like, what do you do? Do you just let them be sitting? Not all of them are in there for like, killing people.
You know what I mean? Like, it's like, petty crimes are there. Right.
And it's like, they're just sitting there waiting to be bombed now. So in response, the government implemented a policy where any inmate with less than three months left on their sentence and boys who completed at least six months of their sentence would be released.
That's a little bit scary. You understand why that happened, but that's definitely a little scary.
Well, the result was a massive, massive uptick in criminal activity at a time when law enforcement was already overworked and their attention was understandably in many other places. So during this period, police relied on support from civilian volunteers who were instrumental in coordinating air raid precaution efforts and could be identified now, like these volunteer citizens, they could be identified by their helmets and air raid precautions armband.
So you could know who you could trust could trust quote unquote but unfortunately as people are going to do they're going to people so petty criminals quickly realized those armbands gave the wearer considerable power and according to an article by duncan campbell criminals began to kit themselves out with an arp warden's helmet and armband and smash their way into shops when no one was looking. So they just started using it.
It's like Ted Bundy carrying around a police badge. Exactly.
Under the circumstances, law enforcement and the public had to make distinctions between what was and what wasn't behavior worth prosecuting because they can't go after everybody now. In simple terms, stealing a blanket from a shop would ordinarily be considered theft.
But during wartime, most people would probably agree with you that stealing a blanket from a shop to cover a body in the street was probably not criminal behavior. Yeah, fair enough.
So things were, lines were being blurred, which makes it very scary. Now, in wartime England, looting and shoplifting alone were such huge, massive problems that the court set aside two days each week just to prosecute those charged for those crimes.
Wow. But they were not the only crimes that were clogging up the courts.
The less scrupulous business owners, for example, were known to exploit the rationing of wartime goods by selling additional products at, like, crazy over,, like price gouging, essentially. And even some doctors were more than happy to disqualify a young man from military service just for a few extra bucks.
So everybody's suddenly tilting in the wrong direction on the moral scale here. With the British justice system just so bogged down with additional crime and a dramatic increase in public need, other crimes were kind of ignored.
Like sex work, for example, was a big crime back then, considered a big crime. And it flourished during the wartime years, in part because it was obviously like way less important of like, who is it really?
Like, what are we doing here? You know? But also because these women provided what some were arguing was a valuable service to the military men. Yeah.
So, what are you? You gotta prosecute them? Like, come on. Just let everybody live.
There's a lot of way worse shit happening in here. In London's Piccadilly Circus, for example, the so-called Piccadilly Commandos, as the area's sex workers were known, catered to thousands of young men about to ship off to the front lines, all of which went largely ignored by the police.
They just let it happen. You know, they're going off to work.
Yeah, you know, whatever. With that said, the lax attitudes around sex work at the time and law enforcement turning a blind eye to the whole thing allowed for at least one man to quickly and easily find victims with who he could get very close to very easily and act out his murderous fantasies that he had very clearly been having for a long time.
Yeah. So it's like, it's a double-edged sword for real.
Now, given the tensions and frustrations being felt across Britain in those days, murder seemed like an inevitable thing that was going to happen. In fact, within just two weeks of the announcements of the nightly blackouts, the report of the first murder came in from Edinburgh on September 15th, 1939.
And this victim, in this case, 52-year-old Isabella Ralph, had no fixed address and did make her living sometimes doing sex work. Now, in the case of Isabella Ralph, the press reported the death and gave like a brief overview of the circumstances.
That was really it. Just a quick little mention.
You know, with cities being ripped apart by german air raids and families being separated by evacuations and displacement it seemed like everyone just kind of moved on from this murder of this woman this you know like nomadic woman in scotland right fortunately edinburgh police got lucky and a few days later they arrested john henry a 24-year-old bricklayer that was living in Edinburgh. Damn, 24.
Yeah. Upon being arrested, Connell told police he'd taken a room at a boarding house, and the next day, he realized that he had some money that was stolen.
So he confronted Isabella Ralph, with whom he'd had relations with the previous evening. Okay.
And he managed to retrieve his stolen money. But in the process of this whole thing, the two got physically aggressive with each other.
They started struggling. And he said he grabbed her throat in order to stop her from screaming.
And oops, he killed her. I think we all know by now how long it takes to manually strangle someone.
Uh-huh. So that's uh you you don't just go oh oh i tried to make her stop scream it's so crazy i held it there for like you know many many minutes at the very least it's three minutes right at least like four i think it is yeah and it's and it's consistent pressure right too it's like if you let off just meeting for a second it starts the clock again yeah now at trial Connell's lawyer claimed his client had never intended to kill Isabella, and he had only wanted to get his stolen money back.
Despite the evidence showing that several of Isabella Ralph's ribs had been crushed in the process, indicating a very much higher degree of violence than he was talking about, the judge accepted the lesser plea of culpable homicide and sentenced Connell to three years of penal servitude. Wow.
In handing down the sentence, Lord Justice Clerk told him, I am satisfied that the result of your conduct was the very last thing you anticipated, but you took this woman's life through violence, which you inflicted upon her. So he's like, I'm confident that you didn't mean't mean to kill her but you did essentially okay now the murder of isabella ralph which was definitely a violent homicide like yes good try illustrates two important things about the press and the judicial system's understanding of murder at the time especially of the lower class persuasion during this time period first First, regardless of the brutality or sensational nature of the crime, page space was limited, and editorial and journalistic priorities were given to coverage of the war at the time.
So they were just not going to focus on this. And second, the justice system, particularly the resources of the police and the court system, had very limited bandwidth and were eager to process what they considered lesser crimes as quickly and with as little attention as possible.
Right. These two realities are definitely going to be an important factor in why there was relatively little coverage of what would end up being a serial killer operating in London during these blackouts.
Especially when you consider the obvious comparisons to none other than England's most notorious and mysterious killer, Jack the Ripper. There's a very obvious, like, you can compare them.
Yeah, definitely. And it's like, it shows you how fucking bonkers it was at the time.
That they're not talking about like a Jack the ripper 2.0 a second jack the ripper essentially is kind of going unnoticed and not really talked about it's like that should have been literally like jack the ripper at the time was all anyone was talking about yeah literally all they were talking about all the press was talking about anybody on the street and this one which is essentially the same like mo but somehow more sadistic yeah it's not even being talked about it's very interesting and you and i have been talking about it lately how certain social climates will just desensitize people completely the worst things yeah they just and they just it wasn't being reported on now by the winter of 1942 the war had been dragging on for more than a year, and violence had honestly, for the residents of London, had just become a normal thing. They just dealt with it every day.
Violence, violence, violence. Still, even the most hardened of Londoners would have been absolutely shocked by the first discovery.
This discovery was made by plumbers William Baldwin and Harold Batchelder on their way to work on the morning of february 9th 1942 so as the two men passed through montague place in mary labone i looked this up mary labone that morning they noticed what looked to be a broken flashlight laying in the snow just out of one of these, they're basically handmade
air raids shelters.
If you look it up, it's like a little kind of a half circle, like a half sphere.
Tent.
Kind of made with, no, it's kind of made with like a tin almost, with like a little
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Then, as they got closer to it, they saw what looked like the pale leg of what they believed was a mannequin sticking out of the doorway of the shelter. It's never a mannequin.
Harold Batchelder ran to the nearest phone and called the police, and PC John Miles arrived a short time later. They discovered this was a human body, because initially they thought it was a mannequin, but they were like, let's call it in.
Yeah, just in case. With all the objects that clearly belong to a woman, we're not going to check ourselves.
So upon seeing this woman's body, Miles knew it was not an accidental death. Yeah.
So he called for additional officers and he secured the scene. Now, as far as the officers at the scene could tell, the woman in the air raid shelter had been brutalized by her attacker.
Her face and neck were badly bruised. Her clothes were torn, her skirt had been pulled up to her thighs, and she had been violently sexually assaulted.
The following day, the pathologist, Sir Bernard Spilsbury, I love this man. Sir Bernard Spilsbury.
It's a very important name. It is an important name.
He concluded his postmortem examination and he reported that aside from the bruising on her face and neck, there were, quote, a number of small abrasions to her upper, including a small amount of abrasions to her exposed right breast. The cause of death was listed as manual strangulation.
She ended up being the least brutalized of all of his victims, if you can believe it. Just to give you a heads up for what's to come.
At the scene, there was very little forensic evidence to work with. Investigators theorized that her body, which had been discovered, quote, with her legs wide open in the doorway of the shelter, had been deliberately posed to humiliate her corpse.
Later that day, PC Miles found the victim's purse a short distance away on the sidewalk. Someone had clearly gone through it and taken whatever money and valuables were inside, as well as her ID card.
Okay. The only blood found on the victim was her own, but the bruising on her neck and fingerprints found at the scene suggested that she'd been killed by a left-handed person.
Ah, interesting that they could figure that out back in the 30s. Isn't that interesting? A few days later, the victim was identified as Evelyn Hamilton, a 41-year-old pharmacist from Essex.
The outbreak of the war had all but bankrupted the pharmacy where Evelyn was working, and on the night of her death, she had been passing through London on her way to Grimsby, where she was going to start a new job at a different pharmacy. So she was just going to her job.
Detectives learned that Hamilton had been staying at a local woman's hostel that evening and was last seen at the Lion's Corner house, where she had dinner and a drink. drink but unfortunately no one at the lion's corner remembered whether she was joined by a man that evening so they couldn't really determine whether she'd been lured to the shelter or simply attacked on her way back from the hospital or the hostel detectives had only just begun investigating the hamilton murder when a report of a similar murder was reported
on February 10th.
This is just the next day.
That morning, two meter readers from the electric company were doing their rounds, you know,
just going from rooming house to rooming house.
And they were trying to go into one place in a rooming house on Wardour Street in Soho.
So the men knocked on the door of 34-year-old Evan Oatley's room, and they got no reply. The manager was like, no, she's home.
Like, I know this. I saw her.
Like, she hasn't left. So the manager was like, you know what? Did you try the door? And they were like, well, no, we can't just, like, walk into people's houses.
So we didn't. And he was like, no, I know she's home.
I'm just gonna, like if I can open it and yell for her. So he jiggled the door and it was unlocked.
So he kind of opened it a little, kind of yelled her name, didn't get an answer. And he was like, I know she's home.
Like, what the fuck? She wouldn't leave this unlocked. So they ended up going inside.
And as they entered the apartment, they found Evelyn lying face up on her bed. They later said they believe she had a red scarf around her neck, but found out it was just that her neck had been violently slashed open.
Yeah. The men ran into the street to find the nearest police officer and returned with Inspector John Hennessy.
In his report filed later that day, Hennessy described what he saw when he entered the apartment. This is rough.
I flashed my torch and saw a woman, believed to be Evelyn Oatley, on her back on a divan or single bed in a transverse position. We looked it up in a divan.
I didn't know what that was. No, me neither.
It's apparently like a chaise lounge, essentially. Her head was pointing north and was hanging down, over down the side of the bed.
She was naked except for a slender garment which covered her breasts. I saw that her throat had been cut and a hand torch was wedged in her private parts.
A tin can opener was lying near the torch and her legs were wide apart. Oh my God.
It gets worse. Additional investigators arrived at the house soon after the discovery and were shocked by the brutality of this murder.
Superintendent Fred Sherrill said she was a ghastly sight. She had been the victim of a sadistic attack of the most horrible and revolting kind.
Yeah. Now, Superintendent Fred Sherrill is kind of like a fingerprint expert as well.
Oh, wow.
So he was like really fingerprint expert as well.
Oh, wow. So he was like really big in this case.
And even he couldn't, he was the one that determined that they were probably left-handed. This person was probably left-handed and tried to run these fingerprints alongside like known offenders and couldn't find a match anywhere.
He was the one that determined. Because this person wasn't known.
Things that had been used in this murder and on Evelyn were razor blade, a can opener, parts of a broken mirror, a flashlight, and curling tongs. Oh, wow.
Yeah. It's literally unthinkable rage and sadism in this case.
That's why I was saying that there's a different element here than there was in Jack the Ripper case. Yeah.
Not worse per se, but it's a different level for sure. Curling tongs? Yeah.
there it's it's sadism and it what it it appears to be that the killer is taking a lot of time to torture and inflict pain and mutilations on these victims while they are alive.
Yeah.
Like the Hamilton murder, there was very little evidence found at the scene, and no one could think of any reason that someone would kill Oatley.
At the time of her death, Evelyn was married, but had been living apart from her husband, Harold, for some time while she pursued an acting career in London. According to Harold Oatley, Evelyn was, quote, fascinated with West End life and would not leave it.
But while it was true that she was hoping to make her way in the theater, she had worked at a nightclub for a little while, but while her husband was away, she had been supporting herself as a full-time sex worker since 1939 the last time anyone had seen her was when she was with a dark-haired airman the night before this dark-haired airman had approached her somebody said okay and according to this really cool youtuber who he's fascinating his channel he's called well i never well i never and he's just this british man who'll tell you all about these amazing things and horrifying things love it um apparently her friends and this like really will like break your heart when he said it her friends later said she had turned to sex work you know obviously for income while her husband was away but also because she was afraid of sleeping in her apartment alone because of the blackouts.
So she just wanted company. Oh, that's so sad.
She was just lonely and scared. It's really sad.
According to the medical examiner, Evelyn Oatley had been, quote, beaten and strangled to unconsciousness and then suffered extensive sexually motivated mutilations. inflicted by the killer using a safety razor, curling tongs,
a corner fragment of a broken mirror, and the tinge. Yeah.
Yeah.
Now, among the evidence that was found in the room were unidentified fingerprints on the fragment of the broken mirror and the tin can opener. And they again indicated that the killer was left-handed.
So we're relating these two cases. Even though they are very different, but, you know, otherwise it looked like there was, you know, obviously a huge struggle, but that there was also only one thing missing and this it was like um a silver cigarette case oh that was in her purse just a trophy but her bank books and her money were still there now that makes me think that in the first case the hamilton murder they said they found her purse close by but on the sidewalk and that i think somebody passing by just stole her shit possibly i don't even know if he did he maybe took her identification but i don't know if he took her money my thought was that possibly he like chased her somehow and she dropped her purse along the way and then like you said somebody else took her stuff i think someone else probably did i do wonder if like obviously there's such an escalation here if he didn't do everything that he did to his second victim to his first victim because it was a little bit more like in this case he's in an apartment tucked away he has all the time in the world yeah and he doesn't it doesn't look like he brings these things with him yeah it looks like he finds them where he is oh and he was outside available at first thing so i think he just didn't have anything available to him.
I think if he did, it probably would have been the exact same thing. Yeah.
But it was outside. Yeah.
What's even worse is a neighbor told police later that a little after midnight the night before, they had heard a radio suddenly turn up really loud from that apartment, enough that they could hear it through the walls. We always say how much we hate that.
Fucking hate that. I know.
He literally was doing it to drown out her screams. Yeah.
Now, on February 12th, a sex worker named Catherine Mulcahy nearly lost her life to this man, but didn't. Oh, God.
She got away? Yes. Apparently, a very nice-looking, clean-cut man approached her while she was soliciting on Regent Street, and she agreed to work with him.
Once they were at her apartment and the whole thing began,
he got on top of her and attacked her immediately.
He dug his knees as hard as he could into her abdomen and started trying to strangle her manually, but she fought back hard. Did you know that when your metabolism is working properly, you'll feel benefits in literally every aspect of your life? Now there's a groundbreaking tool that takes the guesswork out of metabolic health.
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Thank you, Lumen, for sponsoring this episode. And apparently she still had her boots on and she kicked him as hard as she could off of her and ran the fuck out of there to her neighbors completely nude oh he ran after her and threw money at her claiming he was drunk and he didn't mean to and then he ran away yeah sure but he left something behind what he left a belt behind a royal air force belt specifically this motherfucker's in the air force and remember the night before, Evelyn had been seen being approached by a nice, clean-cut, dark-haired Air Forceman.
Isn't it so scary how, like, somebody can look so unassuming and even charming, and then they're this. And then they're this.
They're this. Oh.
Scary. Yeah.
Now, he went right on that evening to kill again after this what he would consider a failure but that victim would not be discovered until february 13th so we're gonna get there but i'm trying to go in order of the discoveries while making the like maintaining the timeline okay because i want you to get the idea of how bloodthirsty this fucker really was Like he barely went a day, sometimes even hours between murders. It was like a spree.
And when one failed, he would immediately find another woman to kill. So he does go right to another one, but she is not found for a couple of days.
So the police and press had honestly barely begun to even process Evelyn Oatley's scene when a report of yet another body came in not 24 hours later. On the afternoon of the 13th, 15-year-old, and it's not her who died, 15-year-old Barbara Lowe went to visit her mother, Margaret, at her apartment in North Soho.
Oh, it's her mom, though. Yeah.
When Barbara's knocks, didn't get an answer, she asked a neighbor if they'd seen her mother, Margaret. But the neighbor was like, you know what?
I haven't seen her in a couple of days. And there is a package that's been sitting on the step for a couple of days.
So it was not her mom's character to go away without saying anything or to like just abandon her in any way. So Barbara called the police who dispatched an officer to the apartment.
They used a spare key and were able to get inside. But when they went inside, DS Leonard Blacktop was very surprised to see that the blackout curtains were still drawn and everything was completely dark.
And he was like, are you sure she's in here? And he switched on his flashlight and started making his way through the place. And in the kitchen, he saw a woman's purse was laying on the floor and everything in the purse purse was strewn across the floor.
So finally, he reached the last door in the apartment, which was Margaret's bedroom. The door was locked, but Barbara gave the detective permission to force the door open so they could get inside.
Fortunately, he was able to stop Barbara from coming into the room, which spared her a lot of horror. Margaret Lowe's body was on the bed, completely nude,
and having probably been there for at least a day or two.
Her face and head were brutally beaten,
and beaten with what the detective assumed was the fireplace poker
that lay in two pieces on the floor beside her.
It broke.
A fireplace poker. Those things are usually like wrought iron.
Later, the autopsy would show that her jaw had been shattered by the blows. One of her stockings had been tied tightly around her neck and knotted.
It had dug into her skin. And her body had been badly, badly mutilated with, among other things, a razor, a potato peeler, and a kit and a table knife.
And, and this is horrifying, not that everything else hasn't been, there was a large serrated
bread knife protruding from a wound near her groin and a wax candle had been inserted into her vagina. Yeah, everybody is literally in this room in a state of absolute shock.
It's that when I tell you that I was not ready for this case to be as brutal as it is, I had no idea. I don't know if we've heard anything that brutal back to back.
The fact that this has gone largely kind of like under the radar even now. Yeah.
Like I've said we're going to cover the blackout ripper to a couple people and they're like, oh, what's that? No, I've literally never heard of this. You had never heard of it.
Nobody had ever heard of it. And this is what it is.
A potato peeler. That, I couldn't move.
That's the thing somehow that I was focused on. Because he's using just kitchen items.
Oh, God. Like, he's just using what is around.
This is brutal. Which is even more fucked up.
That this man is coming in. He knows he can strangle them to death.
So he's not worried about, he doesn't seem to be worried about like the end result he knows he can probably get the end result but he's just coming in there being like i'll just use what's around like potato peeler razor fucking candle i can't even begin tin can opener broken mirror to somebody like oh my god oh yeah yeah that poor poor woman thank god her daughter didn't see that's the thing that's the thing I don't know how you would ever go on no even just hearing what had happened to her mother to like oh my god like how do you even I'm speechless right now 15 that's the other thing 15 in the middle middle of the war, like motherless. Yeah.
And her mom had been like, you know, just trying to make ends, like just trying to keep her in boarding school. Yeah.
Like pay to keep her in boarding school. Oh.
Because, so fingerprints were found in the apartment and again, left-handed. So they're connecting it now.
Yeah. But that wasn't, and obviously she had some commonalities with the other victims.
But until the early 1930s, Margaret and her husband had been relatively wealthy, living off an income from the dry goods store and boarding house that they had owned together. But her husband died in 1932, and the income quickly went away.
And Margaret found herself desperate to support herself and her daughter so she turned to sex work this was not in again she was her daughter was going to boarding school and she wanted to keep her in boarding school so she did this to keep her daughter where she was safest yeah now this was not the first time that she'd relied on sex work for income but and but she was kind of hoping to have left it behind when she met her husband and started a family. Yeah.
And she did until he died. Right.
Which is really just heartbreaking. It feels so bad because you know she didn't want to.
No. Now, the similarities between the victims weren't lost on the press.
One reporter wrote, the three West End murders have all been discovered within an area of just over one square mile. As each woman was strangled, the possibility that all three were the victims of the same person cannot be ruled out.
There were, of course, other details about the cases that the press hadn't made even been aware of at the time, and it probably would have only strengthened their belief that the women were victims of the same man. But there was really not a lot of time to consider all the connections between the cases.
Because another victim was discovered just hours after Margaret Lowe's body had been found. My God, I can't imagine the police just going from scene to scene like this.
Yeah, just one after the other after the other. Yeah.
And that's where we're going to end part one. Just because I think there's a lot in here.
And it's very heavy. Seriously.
But this is, I mean, luckily, you know, he gets caught. That's a good thing.
He will get caught. It's shocking when he's caught.
Because he's not a walking monster on the outside.
He's obviously like.
Yeah.
Good looking enough to have charmed these women.
Normal looking enough and normal seeming enough to.
That no one's batting an eye.
And he's in the Air Force.
Like he had to have passed some kind of.
Well, I don't know how that worked back then, actually.
I don't either.
I know now you have to pass so many tests to be cleared to be part of the military. I think he still needed to pass.
I was going to say. So it's like I think he still needed to pass certain tests.
So it's like.
So he passed some of those tests and it's like, geez, Louise.
It's just, the Jack the Ripper case is so brutal and like so vicious. And like, it's shocking when you go through a bit by bit and find out the injuries to these women.
And then like, this is just like because you can't you
can't help but compare the two because they're in the same you know relative you know corner of the world sure not like you know too far away in time well it's the same like and it's the same kind of victim profile it's the same motive for almost like frenzy when it comes to like how quickly in how many victims he was ranking up here.
But it's like, there's just like so you he has to be such an evil fuck yeah like he has to be such an evil to use a potato peeler on somebody to stab somebody with a bread knife i mean to kill anybody obviously but the length that he's going to and, like, you know, assaulting, sexually assaulting them with these objects. Yeah.
Oh, my God. I think this is definitely up there with some of the most brutal cases that you have covered.
I agree. I was shocked.
I am shocked right now. I think it's good that we're ending here for part one because I think, oh, damn, should we bring back palate cleansers? I know.
Seriously. I think everybody needs a quick palate cleanser.
So go listen to the rewatcher for that. Yeah.
And part two, there's more. He's not done.
So part two is not, you know, just the arrest and all that. It's he's not done.
Right. And he's as brutal.
I'm very excited to hear the part where he gets caught and sentenced to so many years in prison. I hope all the years.
All the years. He'll be still there.
Yeah. Well, fuck.
Yeah. Okay.
Well, thanks for listening. And we hope you keep it weird.
Oh, but not so weird that this, I'm so shocked that i can't actually even speak right
now am i supposed to say something not that weird no not that weird never that
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