I remember the Simpsons Episode when Maude Flanders died, and Homer tries to console Ned by telling him she probably wasn't lonely in heaven without him because of all the famous dead men up there, including Sherlock Holmes. Ned says, "Sherlock Holmes is a (fictional) character", and Homer replies "Your telling ME he's a character!" and then does the sexy growl. Okay...
@MinisteroftheLeft "No Shit, Sherlock." And I mean it. It's just how Sherlock really works his ways to the prime suspect, always minding the tiniest of details, and I guess that's how close the makers of this game got to make gamers to feel it like Sherlock can.
It is possible to draw some of the conclusions they did with those facts, such as which hand the attacker used by looking at the wound. But surprisingly, after looking at a forensics book, I have to call out an error. The wound on her neck is long and starts higher on the right and lower on the left. A knife wound to the neck with that kind of angle is made when you attack from behind. But the conclusion is that the attacker is right handed...
@xihakuix Look up Dr. Joseph Bell. He is the man who Conan Doyle based Sherlock Holmes on. Scotland Yard sent him all the information they had on the Jack the Ripper case. Bell named who he thought was Jack the Ripper in a letter he sent to Scotland Yard. The letter and the file containing the information was "lost" soon afterwards
...but if the wound were inflicted with the right hand, the wound would be higher on the LEFT side of the neck and descend on the right. Going that way, it indicates a left handed strike from behind.