I don't subscribe to the "Royalty had the Prostitutes murdered" theory but I do wonder if the failure to catch him wasn't a matter of a master escape artist or police ineptitute, but perhaps corruption. If the Ripper had indeed turned to be have been a policemen, or an ex-policemen, or even someone with connections to the police or local officials--How would that have looked in Victorian era Britain?
I would imagine that cover ups of crimes were much easier in the 1800s than they are today, with no phones, no internet, no real video cameras and only primitive still cameras.
If he was a policemen, or ex-policemen, or something along those lines, or a well to do man who came from an influential family, it could explain why many of the files went missing, along with the failure to catch him.
Being a policemen or former policemen could lend credence as to how the Ripper knew the area so well, and was able to escape from it so easily, and evade the police--He was one, either then or previously. And certainly, I imagine, in 1888 the police would never dream of investigating one of their own--Retired, fired, active or not. I imagine the thought was simply unthinkable and even if there was someone who was "interesting", if he was a cop, they wouldn't have looked further into him.
Other alternatives I can think of--as far as the Ripper's profession--could be a stage coach driver (I don't know if they had coach equivalents of taxi drivers back then), local workman with some butcher experience, perhaps a former college student or something who thought of his "work" as "art", or perhaps a former or current postman.
I would imagine that cover ups of crimes were much easier in the 1800s than they are today, with no phones, no internet, no real video cameras and only primitive still cameras.
If he was a policemen, or ex-policemen, or something along those lines, or a well to do man who came from an influential family, it could explain why many of the files went missing, along with the failure to catch him.
Being a policemen or former policemen could lend credence as to how the Ripper knew the area so well, and was able to escape from it so easily, and evade the police--He was one, either then or previously. And certainly, I imagine, in 1888 the police would never dream of investigating one of their own--Retired, fired, active or not. I imagine the thought was simply unthinkable and even if there was someone who was "interesting", if he was a cop, they wouldn't have looked further into him.
Other alternatives I can think of--as far as the Ripper's profession--could be a stage coach driver (I don't know if they had coach equivalents of taxi drivers back then), local workman with some butcher experience, perhaps a former college student or something who thought of his "work" as "art", or perhaps a former or current postman.
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