I'm just kidding of course but I've come to the realization that after a 40 year fascination with this case, I'm driving myself to the asylum, oh I'm sorry, treatment centre.
My first post and last, will let you in on what I've learned in 40 years (I was fifteen when I started). My father happened to mention to me at fifteen that my great-grandfather had emigrated to Canada from Whitechapel in 1889. My dad threw in the JTR part that I had not heard of until that point. And so it began. I've been fortunate enough to have toured Whitechapel and the Black Museum, my police officer status getting me in.
Here's my take on all this. Barring some miracle of some sort, this will not be solved which is what I was hoping for. The study of incidentals, happenstance, and coincidence can take me no further.
The M'Naghten rules of 1843 clearly show JTR (imo) as not knowing the difference between right and wrong. He was clearly both legally and criminally insane. If we look at other famous serial killers over the last century, we can clearly see an attempt by those killers to conceal their crimes and avoid apprehension. I cannot see this by JTR. Although the act of serial killing is beyond the comprehension of normal human understanding, presumably *they* understand. Those killers wanted to keep killing and being apprehended would stop that. The only answer was to conceal the crime. JTR did not do this. You can't continue to leave bodies that are going to be found in a relatively short period of time, with any any reasonable expectation that you'll continue to get away with this.
It took 20 years and 48 victims to catch Gary Ridgway and even then it was through DNA. There is absolutely no evidence that JTR ran, fled or in any way whatsoever, demonstrated that he knew that what he was doing was wrong and attempted to avoid apprehension.
If we take the east end of London's population at the time, and use commonly accepted serial killer profiles, we're left with about what, 250,000 suspects? I believe it was Donald Rumbelow who once said and I'm paraphrasing, "At the end of the day, when all is said and done, and JackThe Ripper is asked to step forward we will ask, who are you?"
We also know that serial killers don't just stop killing on their own, ever. No folks, JTR either died, was incarcerated for another crime or institutionalized shortly thereafter. There really is no other alternative. The prostitutes were simply easy prey.
As long as my rambling may have been, it was actually quite short considering how long I've been following this case, and now it's your turn. If the identity of JTR is ever learned via some miracle, someone shoot me an email. Happy hunting!
My first post and last, will let you in on what I've learned in 40 years (I was fifteen when I started). My father happened to mention to me at fifteen that my great-grandfather had emigrated to Canada from Whitechapel in 1889. My dad threw in the JTR part that I had not heard of until that point. And so it began. I've been fortunate enough to have toured Whitechapel and the Black Museum, my police officer status getting me in.
Here's my take on all this. Barring some miracle of some sort, this will not be solved which is what I was hoping for. The study of incidentals, happenstance, and coincidence can take me no further.
The M'Naghten rules of 1843 clearly show JTR (imo) as not knowing the difference between right and wrong. He was clearly both legally and criminally insane. If we look at other famous serial killers over the last century, we can clearly see an attempt by those killers to conceal their crimes and avoid apprehension. I cannot see this by JTR. Although the act of serial killing is beyond the comprehension of normal human understanding, presumably *they* understand. Those killers wanted to keep killing and being apprehended would stop that. The only answer was to conceal the crime. JTR did not do this. You can't continue to leave bodies that are going to be found in a relatively short period of time, with any any reasonable expectation that you'll continue to get away with this.
It took 20 years and 48 victims to catch Gary Ridgway and even then it was through DNA. There is absolutely no evidence that JTR ran, fled or in any way whatsoever, demonstrated that he knew that what he was doing was wrong and attempted to avoid apprehension.
If we take the east end of London's population at the time, and use commonly accepted serial killer profiles, we're left with about what, 250,000 suspects? I believe it was Donald Rumbelow who once said and I'm paraphrasing, "At the end of the day, when all is said and done, and JackThe Ripper is asked to step forward we will ask, who are you?"
We also know that serial killers don't just stop killing on their own, ever. No folks, JTR either died, was incarcerated for another crime or institutionalized shortly thereafter. There really is no other alternative. The prostitutes were simply easy prey.
As long as my rambling may have been, it was actually quite short considering how long I've been following this case, and now it's your turn. If the identity of JTR is ever learned via some miracle, someone shoot me an email. Happy hunting!
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