Originally posted by Trevor Marriott
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There are more reasons than avoiding libel for a serving police officer not naming an uncharged suspect who hasn't been proved to be guilty in a court of law. Consideration for the family, respect for the rule of law and, in the case of a Jewish suspect, the obvious fear of racial violence are just three that spring to mind. And after retirement, police officers weren't supposed to be revealing secrets from their employment in the force, hence the controversy when they published memoirs.
In any case, the whole point is that Swanson DID name Kosminski in private in his marginalia.
I know that Kosminiski didn't die until 1919 but Swanson clearly believed that his suspect, who he named as Kosminski, died shortly after April 1984. That is reflected in his much earlier quote in the 1895 article. It's all consistent.
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