My claim is that JtR would have been caught quite easily were he operating today. Here are some of my reasons.
(1) Crime scene: in contemporary police investigations it is no longer compulsory to completely denude the crime scene of all available evidence. Bodies would be photographed in place (perhaps by a tabloid journalist); chalk would be left on walls etc. Unless of course the victim happens to be a black teenager from Eltham.
(2) Eye witness reports: these are now taken very seriously. So seriously in fact that in the (comparatively contemporary)case of Yorkshire Ripper Peter Sutcliffe more than 100 eye witness statements were taken. These resulted in a set of identikit images all of which had two things in common: (i) they showed the same face and (ii) that face was Peter Sutcliffe's. The fact that Sutcliffe was arrested, by chance, for driving a car with false plates proves the value of contemporary eye witness testimony.
(3) The Ripper letters: there's no way these would be taken seriously today; unless, of course, they were accompanied by a dodgy tape recording.
(4) DNA analysis: this was not universally available in 1888. Thanks to recent DNA advances we now know that a prostitute in 1888 might well have had sex with more than one person in the course of an evening.
(5) Lighting: Commercial Rd is far better lit than in 1888. Those, such as Queen guitarist Brian May, who have campaigned against ambient lighting are arguably demonstrating an unacceptable degree of social irresponsibility.
That's the bones of it. I'm beginnning, however, to think that as things now stand this guy(?) might never be caught.
(1) Crime scene: in contemporary police investigations it is no longer compulsory to completely denude the crime scene of all available evidence. Bodies would be photographed in place (perhaps by a tabloid journalist); chalk would be left on walls etc. Unless of course the victim happens to be a black teenager from Eltham.
(2) Eye witness reports: these are now taken very seriously. So seriously in fact that in the (comparatively contemporary)case of Yorkshire Ripper Peter Sutcliffe more than 100 eye witness statements were taken. These resulted in a set of identikit images all of which had two things in common: (i) they showed the same face and (ii) that face was Peter Sutcliffe's. The fact that Sutcliffe was arrested, by chance, for driving a car with false plates proves the value of contemporary eye witness testimony.
(3) The Ripper letters: there's no way these would be taken seriously today; unless, of course, they were accompanied by a dodgy tape recording.
(4) DNA analysis: this was not universally available in 1888. Thanks to recent DNA advances we now know that a prostitute in 1888 might well have had sex with more than one person in the course of an evening.
(5) Lighting: Commercial Rd is far better lit than in 1888. Those, such as Queen guitarist Brian May, who have campaigned against ambient lighting are arguably demonstrating an unacceptable degree of social irresponsibility.
That's the bones of it. I'm beginnning, however, to think that as things now stand this guy(?) might never be caught.
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