To Natalie
Abberline is almost certainly thinking that this 'young medical student [and/or] doctor' is the 3rd missing medical student from 1888.
The figure described by Griffiths and Sims is a middle-aged physician.
The reason the ex-detective knows nothing of the Macnaghten Report, 1894 version, is because he would hardly be saying 'we' if he knew that the Assistant Commissioner had written a Report -- about a Gentile, a Jew and a Slav -- which suggested that these might be significant suspects.
In that Report, Mac writes that the Druitt family 'believed' that he was the fiend. It is not just the timing of his suicide.
Abberline knows nothing of these machinations.
If he knew that about this Report, he could hardly fail to see that Griffiths was quoting from it, or from Macnaghten directly.
He would hardly be dissing the Commissioner's suspect and then talk about saying that he must go see Macnaghten to tell him about Chapman.
The 'Drowned Doctor' is the Commissioner's suspect -- but then who would have known this in 1903?
Similarly, Abberline also does not realize that Anderson is the chief backer of the 'locked-up lunatic' suspect.
It makes perfect sense when you realize that the Mac Memoirs, the Druitt primary sources, and the MP story all dovetail perfectly with Abberline in 1903 -- Druitt was not only not a contemporaneous suspect but knowledge about him was kept close to the CID admin vest.
And why would it not be?
What could the police say? We know who the Ripper is -- now let us trash a man who cannot defend himself, who is a fellow Gentile Gentleman, send his family down the gurgler when nobody can be brought o trial.
Of course, Macnaghten will do exactly that in disguised form starting in 1898, and that is why Abberline thinks that this must be some kind of press invention. That the mighty Sims -- whom he never names -- must be being misled by totally dodgy sources. He is completely and understandably ignorant that the Ur-source is the current Commissioner.
Abberline is almost certainly thinking that this 'young medical student [and/or] doctor' is the 3rd missing medical student from 1888.
The figure described by Griffiths and Sims is a middle-aged physician.
The reason the ex-detective knows nothing of the Macnaghten Report, 1894 version, is because he would hardly be saying 'we' if he knew that the Assistant Commissioner had written a Report -- about a Gentile, a Jew and a Slav -- which suggested that these might be significant suspects.
In that Report, Mac writes that the Druitt family 'believed' that he was the fiend. It is not just the timing of his suicide.
Abberline knows nothing of these machinations.
If he knew that about this Report, he could hardly fail to see that Griffiths was quoting from it, or from Macnaghten directly.
He would hardly be dissing the Commissioner's suspect and then talk about saying that he must go see Macnaghten to tell him about Chapman.
The 'Drowned Doctor' is the Commissioner's suspect -- but then who would have known this in 1903?
Similarly, Abberline also does not realize that Anderson is the chief backer of the 'locked-up lunatic' suspect.
It makes perfect sense when you realize that the Mac Memoirs, the Druitt primary sources, and the MP story all dovetail perfectly with Abberline in 1903 -- Druitt was not only not a contemporaneous suspect but knowledge about him was kept close to the CID admin vest.
And why would it not be?
What could the police say? We know who the Ripper is -- now let us trash a man who cannot defend himself, who is a fellow Gentile Gentleman, send his family down the gurgler when nobody can be brought o trial.
Of course, Macnaghten will do exactly that in disguised form starting in 1898, and that is why Abberline thinks that this must be some kind of press invention. That the mighty Sims -- whom he never names -- must be being misled by totally dodgy sources. He is completely and understandably ignorant that the Ur-source is the current Commissioner.
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