Boy, if I am not letting my imagination running away with me!!

Moderator: Adminlizzieborden
If Lizzie had ANY kind of a criminal mind, she'd have left the house as soon as she did away with Abby, and make it look like an intruder had come in and killed Abby while Bridget was outside washing windows. Instead, she hung around the house waiting for Andrew to come home. She obviously had plenty of time to get away from the house before anyone returned. That makes me feel that she intended to kill Andrew as well. She wanted them both dead!shakiboo wrote:Lizzie didn't really have much of a criminal mind, if she had, she'd of sent Bridget out to look for Abby right away. And just let nature take it's course as to when her body was found. Wonder why she was in such a big hurry"?
Oh, that's too funny !!!Yooper wrote:The entire problem with the intruder scenario is the fact that Lizzie, or both Lizzie and Bridget, were spared. Why would an intruder, who had no connection to either Lizzie or Bridget and bent on mayhem, do that? It would be far simpler to have the run of the house without having to hide in a closet riding a broom handle. Lizzie would have done better to smack herself on the melon with the blunt end of the hatchet, then go staggering down the driveway hollering for the cops after stashing the hatchet.
I have to agree with you on that. I think she needed to have a little privacy. Must have been pretty shook up.shakiboo wrote:I thought he did it so Lizzie could have some privacy, and could be more comfortable. Wasn't she being tended to by Alice and Mrs. Churchill in the kitchen?
That's true she did say that, but have you never been upset or not alright but still insisted that you were fine? You don't have to be visibly shaken up to be internally a mess. Weather she was guilty or not she couldn't have been calm, cool and collected, not on the inside. Would Dr.Bowen have given her something to help calm her if she was?Yooper wrote:From the witness statements, August 4th, Harrington:
During this conversation with Lizzie, I cautioned her about what she might say at the present time.
I said owing to the atrociousness of the crime, perhaps you are not in a mental condition to give as clear
a statement of the facts as you will be tomorrow; and also by that time you may be able to tell more
about the man who wished to hire the store. You may recollect of having heard his name, or of seeing
him, and thereby be enabled to give a description of him, or may recollect of something said about him
by your father; so I say it may be better for you not to submit to an interview until tomorrow, when you
may be better able to recite what you know of the circumstances.” To this she replied “no, I think I can
tell you all I know now, just as well as at any other time.” This conversation took place in Lizzie’s
room, on the second floor, in the presence of Miss Alice Russell, who sat in a chair by the door which
leads to the front hall, by which I entered Lizzie’s room.
Lizzie was not overwrought, according to Lizzie.
No, not so much that she would have been a good actress, she would also have been a product of her upbringing. Those days were so diiferent then they are today. She would have been taught from a very early age to act like a lady, not make a scene, to not do anything that would bring unwarrented attention to herself. She would then do all in her power to not make a scene, to not show her emotions, to remain the lady of the house, if you can see what I mean? I guess I do arque for her defence, I know what the facts are, for as much as we can know, but alot of those facts were based on opinion, someone's take on what they heard or saw, or felt. How many of the people thought her guilty after the trial, for no other reason then "if she didn't do it, who did"? I know, she more then likely did it, But darn, what if she didn't and we really are missing a big piece of the puzzle?Yooper wrote:If we want Lizzie to be innocent, we have to be careful here. You're alluding to the fact that she was a good actress!
Dr. Bowen prescribed Bromo-Caffeine as a sedative initially, followed by a minimum dose of morphine, later increased to a maximum dose. Whether Lizzie was sedated at the time she made the statement, I don't know.
An intruder would almost certainly have to be familiar with whatever patterns existed in the Borden household. I'm not well versed in forms of mental illness, but it would have to be a form which allows the individual to make sense of patterns observed, as well as the acuity to seek the patterns in the first place. The illness would also have to be debilitating enough to allow for the lack of a real motive, other than whatever dementia existed. Maybe there is such a condition, one which accounts for just the right amount of dementia, and the right amount of lucidity, I don't know. All of that implies purpose, the intent to commit the murders. In the case of a neighbor, the patterns might be realized without consciously seeking them, over the course of several years by more or less unconscious observation. That person could possibly just snap one day and perhaps instinctively have the timing right. Again, I have no idea if any of this is possible, it is simply conjecture. To me, it makes more sense than someone just arbitrarily walking in off the street, killing two people an hour and a half apart while dodging two other people, then simply walking out without being seen or heard by anyone.Angel wrote:What if? OK, what if Arthur Buffington was one of those weird fellas who lived next door to two "maidens" and did his share of snooping, stalking or peeping? No one ever mentions him, what he was like, if he was questioned, and where he eventually went after the murders. Don't forget that Lizzie told of some shadowy figure around the house not once, but twice. Maybe he was not playing with a full deck and did in the Bordens when he was able to see from next door that no one was around when he could sneak in. Don't know why he would have done it, but sczhiophrenics march to their own drummers.