Hi John,
A lot of things that never actually happened were reported in the papers, so it's possible this may have been claimed somewhere. However the only envelope mentioned in police records at any crime scene was at the Chapman murder, and it had not been used to wipe off a knife.
There were false reports that a message from the killer was found at the Chapman murder either on the wall or on an envelope. There was writing on the envelope that was there, but it was only a fragment of the address that had been written on it, not a message. But it wouldn't take much for story to get garbled in the retelling and turn into claims of a message from the killer, which seems to be how this whole confusion came about.
There were other false reports of messages at crime scenes (some reports claimed a message was found at the Kelly murder, for example) as well as copycat chalk messages written around the East End as a result of these inaccurate news reports of the Chapman murder. It could be argued either that the whole reason for the Goulston Street Graffito in the first place was that the killer had heard rumors of the messages and decided to make one for real, marking it with the piece of apron to prove it was from him. Of course it could also be argued that the graffito had nothing to do with the apron piece and the police only thought that the two were connected because of the already well publicized idea that the killer would write messages.
For more details, see this article.
Originally posted by Johnr
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Originally posted by Johnr
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There were other false reports of messages at crime scenes (some reports claimed a message was found at the Kelly murder, for example) as well as copycat chalk messages written around the East End as a result of these inaccurate news reports of the Chapman murder. It could be argued either that the whole reason for the Goulston Street Graffito in the first place was that the killer had heard rumors of the messages and decided to make one for real, marking it with the piece of apron to prove it was from him. Of course it could also be argued that the graffito had nothing to do with the apron piece and the police only thought that the two were connected because of the already well publicized idea that the killer would write messages.
For more details, see this article.
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