One fact goes well beyond any petty differences in opinions, and it is that the statements in print made by these men that are being discussed do not constitute any single logical train of thought or premise when looked at as "Departmental Positions".
Clearly, the Memorandum offers us three suspects that have nothing as a common factor in their lives and without any shred of connective evidence linking them to ANY crimes beyond theft. A socially acceptable and adept comfortably wealthy Barrister who commits suicide due to a depressed state after losing his job, and fears his maternal gene carries the same insanity inherent in the source....a compulsive thief who we now know was imprisoned during the Ripper crimes, and a dirt poor Polish Jew who was overtly and obviously mentally challenged.
What evidence can be seriously considered in any one of those men....that one's family suggested to someone in Macnaghtens camp they thought their barrister relative was perhaps the Ripper....is it that Anderson believed the killer to be a local Polish Jew who was insane.....because Ostrog wasnt checking in regularly with the local police means he was out killing in the East End?
Please.
What we have with all these opinions is a very clear picture of how little they did know about the Whitechapel murderer let alone Jack the Ripper, who killed at the same time,....and the grounds for suspicion that the disparate and contradictory public pronouncements were intentional "mis" or "dis" information.
Best regards all
Clearly, the Memorandum offers us three suspects that have nothing as a common factor in their lives and without any shred of connective evidence linking them to ANY crimes beyond theft. A socially acceptable and adept comfortably wealthy Barrister who commits suicide due to a depressed state after losing his job, and fears his maternal gene carries the same insanity inherent in the source....a compulsive thief who we now know was imprisoned during the Ripper crimes, and a dirt poor Polish Jew who was overtly and obviously mentally challenged.
What evidence can be seriously considered in any one of those men....that one's family suggested to someone in Macnaghtens camp they thought their barrister relative was perhaps the Ripper....is it that Anderson believed the killer to be a local Polish Jew who was insane.....because Ostrog wasnt checking in regularly with the local police means he was out killing in the East End?
Please.
What we have with all these opinions is a very clear picture of how little they did know about the Whitechapel murderer let alone Jack the Ripper, who killed at the same time,....and the grounds for suspicion that the disparate and contradictory public pronouncements were intentional "mis" or "dis" information.
Best regards all
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