As we know, a major point that all theories must take into account is the fact that police officials expressed conflicting opinions as to the ripper identity or profile.
This has been much discussed.
Equally interesting, and possibly the cause (or the consequence ?) of this, is the fact that these bigwigs held different opinions as well regarding the witnesses.
Abberline (1903) : seems to think only Mrs Long has seen the ripper
Macnaghten (1894) : "no one ever saw the Whitechapel murderer"
Reid (1901) : "no one has ever seen the man except his victims"
Griffiths : only a "police constable in Mitre Court"
Anderson (1910): only one person "had ever had a good view of the murderer"
Three quick remarks, among many :
1: Lawende, generally considered the best witness, can only be referred to by Anderson.
2: Hutchinson and Cox are completely forgotten
3: no reference either to any of the various witnesses of the Stride case
4: no one saw the ripper according to Macnaghten and Reid, which is quite surprising.
This has been much discussed.
Equally interesting, and possibly the cause (or the consequence ?) of this, is the fact that these bigwigs held different opinions as well regarding the witnesses.
Abberline (1903) : seems to think only Mrs Long has seen the ripper
Macnaghten (1894) : "no one ever saw the Whitechapel murderer"
Reid (1901) : "no one has ever seen the man except his victims"
Griffiths : only a "police constable in Mitre Court"
Anderson (1910): only one person "had ever had a good view of the murderer"
Three quick remarks, among many :
1: Lawende, generally considered the best witness, can only be referred to by Anderson.
2: Hutchinson and Cox are completely forgotten
3: no reference either to any of the various witnesses of the Stride case
4: no one saw the ripper according to Macnaghten and Reid, which is quite surprising.
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