Monty:
So are you saying then that you believe that Macnaghten never actually believed in the suspect candidacy of any of those 3 men? He just pulled names from a hat for the sake of saying that it could have been anyone other than Cutbush? Well, duh, Sir Melville, it could have been any one of hundreds of thousands of people.....the problem is that regardless of his own beliefs, and regardless of his own status within the police force in 1888, or lack thereof, he made the choice to name 3 people who, by the time the memorandum was written several years later, were not in a position to be able to defend themselves or to be capable of clearing their name.
I've said this before, why not Tumblety, or Klosowski? Genuine suspects who were known to the police officials and both of whom were still alive and free when the memorandum was written? That's just to name two examples. He could easily have chosen to go down that path but whether for the sake of cowardice or the sake of simplicity, he took the path of naming those 3 men.
And it's largely down to him that two of them are even regarded as likely suspects in 2012. So if the basis on which they were suspected in the first place is false, or misleading (which in Macnaghten's case it definitely is), then why are they even still on the suspect radar in 2012? Especially poor Monty Druitt, it irks me to no end that anyone would still consider him a viable suspect.
So regardless of how you look at it and regardless of Macnaghten's motives, what he did was ultimately reckless and damaging, and that's why I rate him as the worst of the police officials - with apologies to Jonathan Hainsworth.
Cheers,
Adam.
So are you saying then that you believe that Macnaghten never actually believed in the suspect candidacy of any of those 3 men? He just pulled names from a hat for the sake of saying that it could have been anyone other than Cutbush? Well, duh, Sir Melville, it could have been any one of hundreds of thousands of people.....the problem is that regardless of his own beliefs, and regardless of his own status within the police force in 1888, or lack thereof, he made the choice to name 3 people who, by the time the memorandum was written several years later, were not in a position to be able to defend themselves or to be capable of clearing their name.
I've said this before, why not Tumblety, or Klosowski? Genuine suspects who were known to the police officials and both of whom were still alive and free when the memorandum was written? That's just to name two examples. He could easily have chosen to go down that path but whether for the sake of cowardice or the sake of simplicity, he took the path of naming those 3 men.
And it's largely down to him that two of them are even regarded as likely suspects in 2012. So if the basis on which they were suspected in the first place is false, or misleading (which in Macnaghten's case it definitely is), then why are they even still on the suspect radar in 2012? Especially poor Monty Druitt, it irks me to no end that anyone would still consider him a viable suspect.
So regardless of how you look at it and regardless of Macnaghten's motives, what he did was ultimately reckless and damaging, and that's why I rate him as the worst of the police officials - with apologies to Jonathan Hainsworth.
Cheers,
Adam.
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