Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1
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Maybe you're having comprehension difficulties today, like every other day, but I thought I had made my position perfectly clear that Anderson did NOT genuinely think that the CSG and the broken clay pipe were "key pieces of evidence" and that he put forward feeble excuses in 1908 to try and explain his department's failure to arrest and convict Jack the Ripper.
Just humour me a moment and assume for the sake of argument, that Kosminski was always Anderson's prime suspect. He would have known full well in 1908 that he didn't have any good excuse for the failure of the CID to arrest and convict Kosminksi in 1888. It was an abject failure by his own department and thus by him personally. But he could hardly say this.
And let's also assume for for the sake of argument that he was frustrated by the failure of a Jewish witness to give evidence against Kosminski. Well, sure, he could have said this in 1908 but not only would that have been highly controversial (as it would prove to be two years later) but he might have wanted to save this exclusive (and possibly commercially lucrative) story for Blackwoods magazine and for his book. Why give away that big story to the Daily Chronicle?
So what I'm saying is that the Daily Chronicle article is irrelevant and not worthy of this extended discussion. It goes to a different point whereby he was trying to excuse his department's failure without having to controversially blame a Jewish person for that failure. This would come later and would be corroborated by Swanson.
But I have to add - because you compel me to do so - that it is entirely possible that Kosminski wrote the CSG and smoked a clay pipe because we don't have any evidence to assist us either way, so that part of your sentence remains as utterly ridiculous as it was when you first wrote it.
Now if you don't understand any of this, there is very little I am able to do for you.
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