The police had no idea pre 1895 who the perpetrator was. Herewith statements made by various, each in their own timeline.
1. On October 23rd 1888
Dr. Robert Anderson, Ass. Comm, Met Police said (HO144/221/A49301C, f.117)
2. In August 1889, printed in the Pall Mall Gazette, 4th November 1889
Dr Anderson admits to " our failure to find Jack the Ripper as they call him" in an interview with American Journalist R.Harding Davis.
3. In June 1892, in Cassell's Saturday Journal, 1892
Dr. Anderson
4. On 1st September 1908, speaking retrospectively, Daily Chronicle
Dr Anderson said
referring to the destruction of clues (Clay Pipe, Writing on wall)
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5. On 28th may 1892, Cassell's Saturday journal
Chief Inspector Frederick George Abberline said
6. On 24th March 1903, Pall Mall Gazette
Abberline, then retired and living in Bournemouth, said
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7. 3rd February 1893, Eastern Post and Daily Chronicle
Superintendent Thomas Arnold said
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8. In November 1890, in The North American Review,
Commissioner James Monro said
and in Cassell's that same year he stated that the police had nothing positive in the way of clues about the identity of the Ripper.
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In 1891, after the murder of Francis Coles on 13th February that year, the police believed that they had found the Ripper.. Sadler. However, he was found not to be Coles' killer, and he faded into obscurity. The ripper still had not been found.
In 1895, the police, including Swanson, believed that Grainger (Grant) was the Ripper. Nothing was found to connect him with being Jack the Ripper either. But this shows that they were still trying to find Jack the Ripper.
In 1894, Chief Constable Melville Macnaghten wrote his now famous "memoranda" in which he first says
He then goes on to list 3 most likely suspects, Druitt, Kosminski and Ostrog.
But here Sir MM is writing of the suspicion in 1888. As has been clearly seen above, the Commissioner, the Assistant Commissioner, one Chief Inspector (Abberline), and one Superintendant had ALL said that nobody knew who the culprit was. This shows very clearly that Sir MM cannot have been writing from any basis of known fact.
It is confirmed a year later by Chief Inspector Swanson, who was chasing Grainger as the Ripper.
It therefore is quite simple.
No person known to have died (Cohen, Druitt et al) can have been the Ripper.
No person known to have been followed by any policeman, for ex. Sagar, Cox, (re Kosminsky, Cohen, Levy et al) could have been the Ripper.
No person known to have been locked up or incarcerated before 1895 could have been the Ripper either (Kosminsky, Le Grande et al)
Unless every single comment made by all the above men is a lie, (Anderson, Abberline, Swanson, Monro, Arnold) no person was known to have committed the Whitechapel Crimes by 1895.
That means that anything written before that date, pinning the tail on the donkey as it were, must be false. Sir MM must have known, by referring back to 1888 in his memoranda of 1894, that his writings were not true.
It also means that if Swanson was still chasing Jack the Ripper in 1891 (Coles-Sadler) and 1895 (Graham-Grainger).. then HE didn't believe that Kosminsky was the Ripper either at that time. That causes doubt as to why the same man would change his view completely in a copy of Anderson's memoirs from 1910, that Kosminsky WAS Jack the Ripper.
We can go around in circles over this. But the sheer fact is that by dint of actual dated comment, no person pre-1895 was thought to be Jack the Ripper.
If the Commissioner (Monro) didn't know in 1890, then it is obvious to see that none of his fellow officers under him knew either. The Assistant Commissioner(Anderson) to at least 1892 stated he didn't know.
Cheif Inspector Swanson (who reported directly to Anderson) still didn't know in 1895 because he tried to link Grainger as JTR, and Sir MM was Anderson's second-in-command, in 1894 didn't know either. Chief Inspector Abberline didn't know, as they were "swamped in theories" by 1892, and add to that Edmund Reid stated that nobody had a clue as to whom the killer was, and even the Inspector of Prisons, Arthur Griffiths said
in Windsor Magazine under the pen-name of Alfred Aylmer..
(of Anderson), talking of undiscovered crimes in 1895, that
Exit stage left any suspect..Kosminsky, Le Grande, Ostrog, Druitt, Cohen, Levy, you name him... all cannot have been Jack the Ripper, because the police themselves from the very top on down, all said that nobody was identified and the crimes were unsolved.
It comes from the collective horse's mouth.
I invite you all to discuss the above amongst yourselves at will, ladies and gentlemen.
kindly
Phil
Ref:
Howard Brown and his website jtrforums,
The Complete JTR A-Z (Messrs Begg, Fido and Skinner),
Scotland Yard Investigates (Evans and Rumbelow),
The Man who hunted JTR, Edmund Reid-Victorian Detective (Connell and Evans)
My sincere thanks to all of the above.
1. On October 23rd 1888
Dr. Robert Anderson, Ass. Comm, Met Police said (HO144/221/A49301C, f.117)
..but that five successive murders should have been committed, without our having the slightest clue of any kind is extraordinary, if not unique, in the annals of crime.
Dr Anderson admits to " our failure to find Jack the Ripper as they call him" in an interview with American Journalist R.Harding Davis.
3. In June 1892, in Cassell's Saturday Journal, 1892
Dr. Anderson
..The mention of this appalling sequence of still undiscovered crimes...
Dr Anderson said
I told Sir William Harcourt that I could not accept the responsibility for the non-detection of the author of the Ripper crimes..
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5. On 28th may 1892, Cassell's Saturday journal
Chief Inspector Frederick George Abberline said
Theories! we were lost almost in theories; there were so many of them
6. On 24th March 1903, Pall Mall Gazette
Abberline, then retired and living in Bournemouth, said
We have never believed all those stories about Jack the Ripper being dead, or that he was a lunatic, or anything of that kind.
7. 3rd February 1893, Eastern Post and Daily Chronicle
Superintendent Thomas Arnold said
We had some of the finest men from all parts of London, but all their efforts were useless
8. In November 1890, in The North American Review,
Commissioner James Monro said
Excluding the unique series of outrages in Whitechapel, - at the non-discovery of the perpetrators of which none grieved more than the Metropolitan Police, - I cannot call to mind half a dozen really serious cases of murder which, within the last five or six years, have remained undetected; and the number of such offences committed is really small.
.................................................. ...................
In 1891, after the murder of Francis Coles on 13th February that year, the police believed that they had found the Ripper.. Sadler. However, he was found not to be Coles' killer, and he faded into obscurity. The ripper still had not been found.
In 1895, the police, including Swanson, believed that Grainger (Grant) was the Ripper. Nothing was found to connect him with being Jack the Ripper either. But this shows that they were still trying to find Jack the Ripper.
In 1894, Chief Constable Melville Macnaghten wrote his now famous "memoranda" in which he first says
No one ever saw the Whitechapel murderer, many homocidal maniacs were suspected, but no shadow of proof could be thrown on any one.
But here Sir MM is writing of the suspicion in 1888. As has been clearly seen above, the Commissioner, the Assistant Commissioner, one Chief Inspector (Abberline), and one Superintendant had ALL said that nobody knew who the culprit was. This shows very clearly that Sir MM cannot have been writing from any basis of known fact.
It is confirmed a year later by Chief Inspector Swanson, who was chasing Grainger as the Ripper.
It therefore is quite simple.
No person known to have died (Cohen, Druitt et al) can have been the Ripper.
No person known to have been followed by any policeman, for ex. Sagar, Cox, (re Kosminsky, Cohen, Levy et al) could have been the Ripper.
No person known to have been locked up or incarcerated before 1895 could have been the Ripper either (Kosminsky, Le Grande et al)
Unless every single comment made by all the above men is a lie, (Anderson, Abberline, Swanson, Monro, Arnold) no person was known to have committed the Whitechapel Crimes by 1895.
That means that anything written before that date, pinning the tail on the donkey as it were, must be false. Sir MM must have known, by referring back to 1888 in his memoranda of 1894, that his writings were not true.
It also means that if Swanson was still chasing Jack the Ripper in 1891 (Coles-Sadler) and 1895 (Graham-Grainger).. then HE didn't believe that Kosminsky was the Ripper either at that time. That causes doubt as to why the same man would change his view completely in a copy of Anderson's memoirs from 1910, that Kosminsky WAS Jack the Ripper.
We can go around in circles over this. But the sheer fact is that by dint of actual dated comment, no person pre-1895 was thought to be Jack the Ripper.
If the Commissioner (Monro) didn't know in 1890, then it is obvious to see that none of his fellow officers under him knew either. The Assistant Commissioner(Anderson) to at least 1892 stated he didn't know.
Cheif Inspector Swanson (who reported directly to Anderson) still didn't know in 1895 because he tried to link Grainger as JTR, and Sir MM was Anderson's second-in-command, in 1894 didn't know either. Chief Inspector Abberline didn't know, as they were "swamped in theories" by 1892, and add to that Edmund Reid stated that nobody had a clue as to whom the killer was, and even the Inspector of Prisons, Arthur Griffiths said
in Windsor Magazine under the pen-name of Alfred Aylmer..
(of Anderson), talking of undiscovered crimes in 1895, that
Much dissatisfaction was vented upon Mr Anderson at the utterly abortive efforts to discover the perpetrator of the Whitechapel murders.
It comes from the collective horse's mouth.
I invite you all to discuss the above amongst yourselves at will, ladies and gentlemen.
kindly
Phil
Ref:
Howard Brown and his website jtrforums,
The Complete JTR A-Z (Messrs Begg, Fido and Skinner),
Scotland Yard Investigates (Evans and Rumbelow),
The Man who hunted JTR, Edmund Reid-Victorian Detective (Connell and Evans)
My sincere thanks to all of the above.
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