Originally posted by Sam Flynn
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I thought AP was making the point that his example featured the name Jack, like the Sept 17th letter (albeit that the child was daring Jack Frost - Jack the Nipper?

While that may not mean a lot, it might affect the argument that the author of this letter was trying - and failing miserably - to inject some credibility by combining two major elements from Dear Boss and From Hell: the name 'Jack the Ripper' and the catchphrase (literally) 'Catch me when you can'.
In short, AP's earlier association between the catchphrase and the name Jack could, at least in theory, have inspired any or all of the three missives in question.
Originally posted by CitizenX
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Hmmm. It's always a tricky one, to argue that a writer only mentions something (or someone in this case) to give the content some credibility, if you are then going to claim that it's this very mention that strips it of all credibility and shows it must have been written with hindsight.
If there was one poster up in the Whitechapel Murderer's killing zone before Sept 17th, which included Lusk's name among the 'undersigned', then whoever wrote that letter did just fine, whether they knew this to be the case or took a lucky stab in the dark.
In any case, if the good people at Punch were already thinking, by Sept 22nd, in terms of the Whitechapel Murderer playing a game of Blind Man's Buff with a blindfolded copper, before they knew that joker Jack would soon be asking: 'How can they catch me now', or that in due course the author of From Hell would similarly be teasing Lusk, then the whole concept of 'I'm right under your nose, yet you still can't catch me' was already established and gathering its own momentum in the aftermath of Annie's murder, without any help from the first of the letter writers, and indeed before the public could guess there would be any.
Would the killer not have been as pleased as Punch with such developments, especially if, as Dan Norder argued recently (and as I have long suspected), he appears to have been keeping an eye on his own publicity and gaining inspiration from it?
In case anyone didn't already know, Blind Man's Buff is a game in which one player is blindfolded and has to try and touch the others, who are all hiding in plain sight and trying to avoid being touched, while teasing him to make him change direction.
Love,
Caz
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