One of the main reasons numbers of Ripper researchers have overlooked or totally dismissed Thomas Cutbush as a serious suspect over the years is because of Macnaghten"s comments about Cutbush in his memorandum.It is a strange piece of work ,from the Chief Constable CID ,both in its draft form of the Aberconway report and in its official version of 1894.
Moreover, it has never been clear exactly who it was composed for, though it certainly seems plausible that it was put together as a result of The Sun newspaper"s series of sensational articles of February 1894 in which they virtually named the Ripper as being Thomas Cutbush, and it seems likely that it was prepared for the Home Secretary or another ministerial dignitary to have in case of further questions on the matter arising in the House of Commons.
For a long time,the dismissal of Thomas Cutbush by serious researchers was fairly automatic,and it continued throughout the 1990"s despite the case against Thomas Cutbush being reopened by AP Wolf, in his perceptive and compelling analysis of Cutbush in ,"Jack the Myth", available here on Casebook thanks to AP"s kindness and generosity.
However the recent availability of some of the Broadmoor files on Cutbush has highlighted the danger to women in particular and society in general that Thomas Cutbush had represented .We are now given factual proof that Thomas Cutbush continued to be considered ,long after stabbing women in the streets of Kennington in 1891, to be a violent,unpredictable man.Indeed,it is quite clear from the few files that have been made available, that from the moment he was admitted to Broadmoor in 1891 until his death there in 1903 he presented as a fearsome and dangerous patient, almost certainly suffering from delusions of persecution and likely to have been a paranoid schizophrenic----certainly therefore someone who "could have been" Jack the Ripper.This was after all a man who expressed in violent language a desire to "rip up" his minders and anyone else who crossed his path ,who threw out vicious punches unexpectedly wounding a warder minding his own business and engaged at the time in a conversation with another person .A man whose records in the institution are profoundly different and a complete contrast to, for example, those of Aaron Kosminski about whom we have no record of any violent act apart from him once picking up a chair and using threatening language to one of the staff--and this in an institution for the "milder imbecilic "-not Broadmoor for the criminally insane .
And yet,------- Aaron Kosminski,along with Montague Druitt and Ostrog were named in the memorandum as "more likely than Cutbush" to have been JtR----.Something doesnt make sense here,particularly since the memorandum is full of confusing innaccuracies about the ages occupations and institutionalisations of his various leading suspects.
Moreover, it has never been clear exactly who it was composed for, though it certainly seems plausible that it was put together as a result of The Sun newspaper"s series of sensational articles of February 1894 in which they virtually named the Ripper as being Thomas Cutbush, and it seems likely that it was prepared for the Home Secretary or another ministerial dignitary to have in case of further questions on the matter arising in the House of Commons.
For a long time,the dismissal of Thomas Cutbush by serious researchers was fairly automatic,and it continued throughout the 1990"s despite the case against Thomas Cutbush being reopened by AP Wolf, in his perceptive and compelling analysis of Cutbush in ,"Jack the Myth", available here on Casebook thanks to AP"s kindness and generosity.
However the recent availability of some of the Broadmoor files on Cutbush has highlighted the danger to women in particular and society in general that Thomas Cutbush had represented .We are now given factual proof that Thomas Cutbush continued to be considered ,long after stabbing women in the streets of Kennington in 1891, to be a violent,unpredictable man.Indeed,it is quite clear from the few files that have been made available, that from the moment he was admitted to Broadmoor in 1891 until his death there in 1903 he presented as a fearsome and dangerous patient, almost certainly suffering from delusions of persecution and likely to have been a paranoid schizophrenic----certainly therefore someone who "could have been" Jack the Ripper.This was after all a man who expressed in violent language a desire to "rip up" his minders and anyone else who crossed his path ,who threw out vicious punches unexpectedly wounding a warder minding his own business and engaged at the time in a conversation with another person .A man whose records in the institution are profoundly different and a complete contrast to, for example, those of Aaron Kosminski about whom we have no record of any violent act apart from him once picking up a chair and using threatening language to one of the staff--and this in an institution for the "milder imbecilic "-not Broadmoor for the criminally insane .
And yet,------- Aaron Kosminski,along with Montague Druitt and Ostrog were named in the memorandum as "more likely than Cutbush" to have been JtR----.Something doesnt make sense here,particularly since the memorandum is full of confusing innaccuracies about the ages occupations and institutionalisations of his various leading suspects.
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