Tumblety's THIRD? - Complicity in the Murders
Greetings all,
The October 2010 issue of Whitechapel Society Journal has an article written by Joe Chetcuti where he contends that a THIRD arrest of Francis Tumblety took place on Saturday afternoon November 17, 1888 at the Euston train station in London. As he stepped off the train from Birmingham, he was immediately arrested. Why is this significant? Many have argued that Francis Tumblety was arrested twice, once for “gross indecency” and once for a violation of the rules of police bail, but he was never arrested for complicity in the Whitechapel murders, thus, not considered by Scotland Yard as a JTR suspect. The Euston arrest was specifically in regards to the Whitechapel crisis, thus, further evidence that Scotland Yard considered him a suspect at the peak of the murders. It also conforms quite nicely to him jumping bail so fast and to his comments in February 1889.
Sincerely,
Mike
Greetings all,
The October 2010 issue of Whitechapel Society Journal has an article written by Joe Chetcuti where he contends that a THIRD arrest of Francis Tumblety took place on Saturday afternoon November 17, 1888 at the Euston train station in London. As he stepped off the train from Birmingham, he was immediately arrested. Why is this significant? Many have argued that Francis Tumblety was arrested twice, once for “gross indecency” and once for a violation of the rules of police bail, but he was never arrested for complicity in the Whitechapel murders, thus, not considered by Scotland Yard as a JTR suspect. The Euston arrest was specifically in regards to the Whitechapel crisis, thus, further evidence that Scotland Yard considered him a suspect at the peak of the murders. It also conforms quite nicely to him jumping bail so fast and to his comments in February 1889.
Sincerely,
Mike
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