In my book I now argue that Macnaghten knew everything about Druitt, and never made a 'mistake'.
This is because I have access to sources I did not have a few years ago.
I think that Macnaghten's problem, after solving the case, was that he did not want to confide in his SY colleagues about Druitt.
So when things became sticky, as with William Grant in 1895, he handed Anderson 'Kosminski', the fictional variant of a real person named Aaron Kosminski. He told his sexually repressed boss the Polish madman was a chronic masturbator, sectioned soon after Kelly's murder and deceased soon after that (from exhaustion?) Two of those bits of data were lies--and we know this from other sources that Mac knew Aaron was sectioned much later and was still alive.
Now both chiefs, who hated each other, had a deceased Ripper, but only one actually was and only one chief knew this.
This is because I have access to sources I did not have a few years ago.
I think that Macnaghten's problem, after solving the case, was that he did not want to confide in his SY colleagues about Druitt.
So when things became sticky, as with William Grant in 1895, he handed Anderson 'Kosminski', the fictional variant of a real person named Aaron Kosminski. He told his sexually repressed boss the Polish madman was a chronic masturbator, sectioned soon after Kelly's murder and deceased soon after that (from exhaustion?) Two of those bits of data were lies--and we know this from other sources that Mac knew Aaron was sectioned much later and was still alive.
Now both chiefs, who hated each other, had a deceased Ripper, but only one actually was and only one chief knew this.
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