What a surprise -- you already knew the answer to your own question.
It's a shame you know so little about historical methodology.
You approach this subject as if you are Jack Webb on 'Dragnet', which is hopelessly off-track.
The belief in Druitt's culpability does not begin with Macnaghten's 'twitterings' but with the Ripper's people in Dorset, n the West of England' MP story of 1891.
And Mac's 1914 memoirs are not 'error-ridden', though that concept is claimed by Macnaghten himself in his preface -- where championship cricket, Jack the Ripper, and alleged inaccuracies are suggestively juxtaposed.
Can't you see you are being taken for a ride?
I guess not, as the implications are just too horrendous to contemplate.
Nevertheless, you should read Mac's Chapter IV some time as they match what others said of this police sleuth at the time: hands-on, discreet and affable to a fault.
I take it you screwed up about the dates involving Sims and Abberline too, and that is why you do not address my question?
Pity.
It's a shame you know so little about historical methodology.
You approach this subject as if you are Jack Webb on 'Dragnet', which is hopelessly off-track.
The belief in Druitt's culpability does not begin with Macnaghten's 'twitterings' but with the Ripper's people in Dorset, n the West of England' MP story of 1891.
And Mac's 1914 memoirs are not 'error-ridden', though that concept is claimed by Macnaghten himself in his preface -- where championship cricket, Jack the Ripper, and alleged inaccuracies are suggestively juxtaposed.
Can't you see you are being taken for a ride?
I guess not, as the implications are just too horrendous to contemplate.
Nevertheless, you should read Mac's Chapter IV some time as they match what others said of this police sleuth at the time: hands-on, discreet and affable to a fault.
I take it you screwed up about the dates involving Sims and Abberline too, and that is why you do not address my question?
Pity.
Comment