The Belanger Murder
Posted: Tue Nov 15, 2005 5:07 am
Do we know about this? I ran across this snippet at the bottom of a news item page devoted to the Borden crime. It's from the Fall River Evening News, Wednesday, August 10, 1892. The snippet is supposedly from The Lowell Times.
"Strangely Coincident.
Some features of the Borden tragedy seem strangely coincident with some of those that characterized the Belanger murder in this city. In both cases a sharp instrument was used, but in neither case can the precise nature of the instrument be determined. The final conclusion was that a butcher's cleaver was used in the Lowell murder, and the same probability is suggested in the Fall River case. The perfect accuracy with which the blows were struck was something particulary noted in both cases. The blows precisely followed each other; there was no hacking, and the slashing looked like the work of a practical hand. The actual concealment of all traces was another remarkable feature, common to both cases. The assassin left no drippings from his instument, and no other traces of his retreat. Probably all this is mere coincidence, but, nevertheless, is it not strange?"
---The part about the weapon not being agreed upon, no traces of the person leaving a bloody scene and no drippings from the instrument are what got my attention. We've yet to figure out why there was no blood trail from the guest room.
"Strangely Coincident.
Some features of the Borden tragedy seem strangely coincident with some of those that characterized the Belanger murder in this city. In both cases a sharp instrument was used, but in neither case can the precise nature of the instrument be determined. The final conclusion was that a butcher's cleaver was used in the Lowell murder, and the same probability is suggested in the Fall River case. The perfect accuracy with which the blows were struck was something particulary noted in both cases. The blows precisely followed each other; there was no hacking, and the slashing looked like the work of a practical hand. The actual concealment of all traces was another remarkable feature, common to both cases. The assassin left no drippings from his instument, and no other traces of his retreat. Probably all this is mere coincidence, but, nevertheless, is it not strange?"
---The part about the weapon not being agreed upon, no traces of the person leaving a bloody scene and no drippings from the instrument are what got my attention. We've yet to figure out why there was no blood trail from the guest room.