manimanc
Well-Known Member
Ha ha sure it isn't miners from Minehead? ?Bakers from Bradford ;-)
Ha ha sure it isn't miners from Minehead? ?Bakers from Bradford ;-)
This for me is where the whole serial killer theory falls down (or in!). If he is pushing drunk people in, there must be someone who has sobered up sharpish and made it to the other bank to report someone pushing them in. The canal's only 4-5 foot deep in most places. I can't believe everyone pushed in would drown.
But how many of those 'survivors' who got out would have bothered reporting it to the police?
And of those that may have reported it, it's more than likely that the police will have treated it as drunken antics, affray or common assault at worse.. rather than immediately coming to the conclusion that it was a serial killer attempting to murder someone.
This for me is where the whole serial killer theory falls down (or in!). If he is pushing drunk people in, there must be someone who has sobered up sharpish and made it to the other bank to report someone pushing them in. The canal's only 4-5 foot deep in most places. I can't believe everyone pushed in would drown.
This for me is where the whole serial killer theory falls down (or in!). If he is pushing drunk people in, there must be someone who has sobered up sharpish and made it to the other bank to report someone pushing them in. The canal's only 4-5 foot deep in most places. I can't believe everyone pushed in would drown.
No self respecting serial killer would claim the label of 'pusher'..
A few on here need to read a little into what that actually takes and how crimes evolve...
Don't think its like falling into a heated swimming pool however shallow.
This from a rescue manual:
into cold water. Most of these deaths are probably caused by falling into docks near night clubs, driving into dykes in the Fens, or when walking back to the boat from the pub. But RYA courses are run throughout the year, so cold shock and drowning must be considered a risk for anyone falling into the water. Hypothermia may overwhelm a casualty where rescue is delayed and can dangerously reduce the capabilities of crew exposed in a dinghy or yacht cockpit. What happens during immersion? The initial response to immersion is cold shock. It only lasts a few minutes but is the cause of many deaths. On contact with cold water the blood vessels in the skin constrict and increase the blood flow back to the heart. This, together with an increased heart rate and hydrostatic squeeze from the water, raises the blood pressure dramatically. This dangerous combination can lead to death from cardiac arrest or stroke in susceptible individuals
Has anyone survived a so called "pusher" attack?
Hard to believe somebody wouldn't have.
That said I occasionally walk back from the match to Deansgate Metrolink along the canal. May think twice now.
How do we know what state they're entering that water / someone isn't preventing them from getting out.Has anyone survived a so called "pusher" attack?
Hard to believe somebody wouldn't have.
That said I occasionally walk back from the match to Deansgate Metrolink along the canal. May think twice now.
That was horrible. Clearly not the drunk accident explanation.Heartbreaking for the families involved. I turned it off after the second lad who's mum heard him scream on the phone before it went dead. Must be every parents nightmare their kid not returning from a night out.