Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes
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It's also worth mentioning that direct evidence is not required to secure a conviction, let alone to designate someone as a suspect.
Thus, in Exall (1866) Pollock CB defined circumstantial evidence thus:
"It has been said that circumstantial evidence is to be considered as a chain, and each piece of evidence is a link in the chain, but that is not so, for then if any one link breaks, the chain would fail. It is more like the case of a rope composed of several chords. One strand of chord may be insufficient to sustain the weight, but three stranded together may be quite of sufficient strength. Thus it may be in circumstantial evidence- there may be a combination of circumstances, no one of which would raise a reasonable conviction, or more than a mere suspicion; but taken together may create a conclusion of guilt with as much certainty as human affairs can require or admit of."
Now we do not know if there was circumstantial evidence against Druitt or, if there was, whether it was significant. However, reading this thread I am impressed with the arguments regarding Druitt's family.
For instance, we know that the police received information regarding suspicions held against Druitt, as well as Macnaghten privately. We might reasonsbly infer that this information originated from a family member, or someone close to the family, particularly as Macnaghten states that he was in no doubt that family members considered him to have been the murderer.
Now in the Victorian era reputation was everything, particularly to a middle class family like the Druitt's. It's therefore difficult to imagine a family member, let alone several family members, would raise a suspicion, let alone make accusations, of murder, against a fellow family member, unless they believed they had substantive evidence, because quite simply, any mere whiff of suspicion, entering the public realm, that a family member could have committed such diabolic crimes would presumably have been ruinous for the family.
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