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What SHOULD the police have done?

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  • #16
    i truely believe they did as much as they possibly could.They flooded the streets with officers,worked long hours etc.
    The talk of a 'large' reward,anyone think this would have helped?My views are the use of a reward could have just given police more headaches, chasing up false information from people hoping for financial reward.

    Dixon9
    still learning

    Comment


    • #17
      Hi,
      Setting a trap for the killer, might have worked, I have mighty suspicions, that they may have used that ploy with Eddowes, with or without her knowledge, it seems a mighty coincedence that a woman arrested at 8pm, in a drunken stumour, should have been released from police custody some thirty minutes before meeting the infamous Ripper.
      Did they set the whole thing up?
      Could it be that Eddowes did have grave suspicions about a certain man, did she venture into a Aldgate pub on the afternoon of the 29th, where she knew he was a regular, and came on to him, knowing she was being shadowed by officers/officer, and play acted her drunkeness, venturing outside knowing she was going to be arrested, and taken to the cells.
      Was it possible that the police informed intresting onlookers that 'we will let her sober up, and release her at 1am, before dragging her off to Bishopsgate nick, leaving her possible killer a avenue to explore.
      I am obviously dismissing Stride as a victim by suggesting this.
      The reason I offer this as a scenerio, is the route Eddowes took on leaving the cells being the opposite one would expect, also one could speculate that she was followed by a plain clothes officer upon leaving [ Bleinkensops man] and this policeman lost her, who by then had been joined by her killer.
      It is even possible that a number of officers had been placed in position, at routes Eddowes was going to use, so that someone was always close by.
      The police went very tight lipped with the press , after the discovery of the body, was that because they failed to do their duty proberly.?
      And the city CD that was said to have had a good look at the suspect, was he the officer that may have followed Eddowes and a man.
      If this scenerio is any where near right, naturally the man seen with Eddowes would have been Identified, but as he was not caught in the act, nothing could be proven, mayby that was why there was a lull in October, because he was being closely watched.
      One could even suggest that no more Ripper murders occured, and the kelly murder was infact a domestic, like originally believed, and was copied as a Ripper crime.
      All good B movie stuff, but it does fit a lot of points.
      Regards Richard.

      Comment


      • #18
        Originally posted by Phil Carter View Post
        Hello Neil,

        1888 reality.

        best wishes

        Phil
        Then they did all they could at the time.

        Monty


        PS re door to door. No door to door no Lewande.
        Monty

        https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...t/evilgrin.gif

        Author of Capturing Jack the Ripper.

        http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1445621622

        Comment


        • #19
          Originally posted by richardnunweek View Post
          Setting a trap for the killer, might have worked
          From the Evening News, 2nd Feb 1949:

          A London girl Amelia Lewis volunteered to act as a decoy for Jack the Ripper and was used as such. She is still alive and will be 82 in March - Mrs A. Brown of Adys Rd, Peckham.

          Comment


          • #20
            Hi All,

            What should the police have done?

            That all depends on what you think certain elements of the police were actually doing.

            You don't need to be a criminal mastermind to pull off the mystery of the century - you just need to be in tight control of the ongoing investigation.

            Regards,

            Simon
            Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

            Comment


            • #21
              Watch Out!

              Originally posted by Simon Wood View Post
              Hi All,
              What should the police have done?
              That all depends on what you think certain elements of the police were actually doing.
              You don't need to be a criminal mastermind to pull off the mystery of the century - you just need to be in tight control of the ongoing investigation.
              Regards,
              Simon
              Watch out - there's a conspiracy about!
              SPE

              Treat me gently I'm a newbie.

              Comment


              • #22
                Hunter wrote:
                If the Whitechapel murders had continued for some length of time I believe that Jack would have been aprehended.

                I positively agree.
                What the police could have done better with the ressources available to them at the time?
                1) Interview the witnesses more thoroughly.
                2) Arrange intensified patrolling in a more professional fashion than the WVC.
                (Notice I'm not saying anything about the bloodhounds!)
                Best regards,
                Maria

                Comment


                • #23
                  Originally posted by Simon Wood View Post
                  You don't need to be a criminal mastermind to pull off the mystery of the century - you just need to be in tight control of the ongoing investigation.
                  There have been other series of murders that have gone unsolved and the police were in tight control over the investigation. In the Zodiac murder case, the police gave misleading information to the press. Should they be implicated as well?... or could it be that they were simply trying to catch the killer by any means possible?

                  And you're correct; you don't have to be a criminal mastermind to pull off the mystery of the century; you just have to be a difficult perpetrator to pursue due to the nature of the crimes themselves and just fortunately as a result, got away with it.

                  Maybe that's too simple and not fantastic enough.
                  Best Wishes,
                  Hunter
                  ____________________________________________

                  When evidence is not to be had, theories abound. Even the most plausible of them do not carry conviction- London Times Nov. 10.1888

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Originally posted by mariab View Post
                    Hunter wrote:
                    If the Whitechapel murders had continued for some length of time I believe that Jack would have been aprehended.

                    I positively agree.
                    What the police could have done better with the ressources available to them at the time?
                    1) Interview the witnesses more thoroughly.
                    2) Arrange intensified patrolling in a more professional fashion than the WVC.
                    (Notice I'm not saying anything about the bloodhounds!)
                    1) Why are you so sure they didnt?
                    2) Meaning?


                    Steady on Hunter, dont let realism cloud your judgement.

                    Monty
                    Monty

                    https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...t/evilgrin.gif

                    Author of Capturing Jack the Ripper.

                    http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/1445621622

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Originally Posted by mariab
                      What the police could have done better with the ressources available to them at the time?
                      1) Interview the witnesses more thoroughly.

                      Monty wrote:
                      1) Why are you so sure they didnt?

                      Why they didn't? Are you serious? Look how Abberline interviewed Barnett or Hutchinson, or how Schwartz and Lawende were interviewed! 60% of the details were left out. They spent just 5 hours with Barnett. Did they really check his alibi for the entire night? And how about Joseph Fleming, did they look up for him at all?
                      Originally Posted by mariab
                      2) Arrange intensified patrolling in a more professional fashion than the WVC.

                      Monty wrote:
                      2) Meaning?

                      For the WVC at least the "silent boots" was a great idea, but they clearly didn't manage to do "comprehensive" patrolling, plus, there are suspicions by certain Ripperologists (I won't mention names, to protect the guilty) about Joseph Aarons allegedly having been involved in the Lusk letter deed, plus, don't make me mention the names Le Grand and Batchelor, about whom at this point noone wishes to hear anymore.
                      Please notice that I'm NOT claiming that I personally suspect Joseph Aarons. I'm just saying that it would be of benefit if his earlier activities before the WVC were researched.

                      Monty wrote:
                      Steady on Hunter, dont let realism cloud your judgement.

                      I LOVE this!
                      Last edited by mariab; 10-12-2010, 04:36 AM.
                      Best regards,
                      Maria

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        By the by, let me state that I agree with everything Supe and Hunter wrote in their posts – apart from the fingerprinting. It would have been marvellous if the Victorian police had realized the usefulness of such a tool, but the time was not yet ripe for this (despite people having written letters to propose fingerprinting in the Whitechapel investigation).
                        Best regards,
                        Maria

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          NickB wrote:
                          From the Evening News, 2nd Feb 1949:
                          A London girl Amelia Lewis volunteered to act as a decoy for Jack the Ripper and was used as such. She is still alive and will be 82 in March - Mrs A. Brown of Adys Rd, Peckham.

                          Is this a reliable account? From 1949, it might very well not be reliable at all.
                          Best regards,
                          Maria

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            At this late date and with nearly all but some of the major divisional and Home Office reports missing, we don't know many of the more intricate details of the police investigation. Notebooks kept by constables, sergeants and divisional inspectors have, for the most part, not survived the passage of time.

                            We do know a little about what was standard procedure, which in domestic cases had proven quite effective in the past. In every case of the Whitechapel murders, friends, relatives, aquaintances and people in the vicinity of the crime were interrogated and checked out. Swanson's and Abberline's surviving reports verify this. In domestics there were usually witnesses or at least people who heard the perpetrator make threats or even boast of his crime to somebody. The suspect was even known to confess under interrogation.

                            Of course, they were dealing with a different situation here, but despite this, it is to their credit that they did not falter in, at least, checking and eliminating what had previously been their best candidates. Placing Barnett under the proverbial 'hotlight' for 5 hours, even after 5 other murders of a similar character, in the same area, had taken place, exibits a good mark of professionalism to me.

                            With these most unique crimes, they were treading new ground. They made adjustments in many areas as the series progressed - even to watching certain individuals - but we must remember that the canonicals plus Tabram took place in only three months; and then it appeared to end as suddenly as it began; with the Mackenzie and Coles murders occuring over a much wider timespan.

                            This type of culprit - a 'murderer of strangers', as Sugden chose to call it - is difficult to apprehend even now. Their best chance is for the killer to make a slip over time; to leave a tangible clue. This one, either by accident or design... didn't. They were left with suspects based on theories of certain behaviour and/or suspicions by relatives or aquaintances. Even their attempts at ID lineups appear to have fallen flat.

                            With our ability of hindsight and 122 years of other case studies it is easy to second guess. In 1888, they didn't have that luxury or knowledge.
                            Last edited by Hunter; 10-12-2010, 05:13 AM.
                            Best Wishes,
                            Hunter
                            ____________________________________________

                            When evidence is not to be had, theories abound. Even the most plausible of them do not carry conviction- London Times Nov. 10.1888

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Hello Hunter (I hope you're fine, by the way),
                              I agree with everything you say except for Barnett, whom they definitely let go too easily. 5 hours of questioning is a joke, especially since there are many inconsistencies between what he claimed at different times and what Mary Kelly's girlfriends claimed. And it's not clear at all if they checked his alibi for the entire night. Plus, did they seek to talk to Joseph Fleming, to corroborate what Barnett was claiming?
                              Also, though it's a fact that notebooks kept by constables, sergeants, and divisional inspectors have not survived the passage of time, and with these important sources missing we are unable to reconstruct many of the more intricate details of the police investigation, still, we can clearly see that Abberline's questioning of the witnesses is everything but satisfactory. He doesn't go through things linearly/systematically, and he leaves very important details completely out. (This is most visible in the questioning of Barnett and Hutchinson.)
                              I completely agree with you that the Ripper was possibly more lucky than exceedingly skilled in aprehending. (Especially if we assume that BS was the Ripper, which I know that the majority of Ripperologists don't. I'm sitting on the fence on this.) Exactly as you said, the best chance to catch such a killer is time. And the Ripper murders occurred in too short a time frame.
                              Best regards,
                              Maria

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                I think clearly the Police made mistakes. I think every Police department makes mistakes. Given the technology of the time, they did everything they could. But they didn't have an eye for the future, and that is a problem. For the past several decades, police have had a "collect everything" ethic. Whether or not its useful now, sample it because it might be useful later. Cold cases often get solved this way. Items preserved from rapes and murders were available for DNA testing when the technology evolved. Had the police recognized the acceleration of technology in the age which they lived, and the probability that they might not catch him, they could have taken steps that would allow them to catch him withing the next ten years. If they had this attitude of preserving everything just in case, they would have taken pictures of the crime scenes. They would have gotten a photographic record of the injuries, the autopsies, and detailed sketches of the mutilations. They would have preserved clothing and possessions. Fingerprint analysis leaped ahead a great deal in the 10 years after the killings. So did the training of dogs. If it had occurred to them that someone who was not at the scenes, was not involved in the case, and was not known to them at the time might solve the case, we would have more now.
                                The early bird might get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

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