'Macnaghten, of course, described Druitt as 'sexually insane' and Ostrog as having been 'detained in a lunatic asylum as a homicidal maniac'. As we are discussing Macnaghten's citing of these other men as 'more likely' suspects than Cutbush then, obviously, whether or not they actually had 'serious mental health issues' is not relevant to the argument'.
I think otherwise, Stewart, for Macnaghten was acutely aware of the mental health issues within the Cutbush family, including that of one of his most senior and most public officers; then obliquely he dances out known criminals who might have been Jack the Ripper, whilst obscuring the criminal activity of the man he is dismissing.
I imagine myself as the most senior police officer involved in the hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper, five years on with still no arrest, and with five memos in my information system telling me that Peter Sutcliffe must be the Yorkshire Ripper, so I sit down and write my own memo, dismissing Sutcliffe as the killer, because I have a tape recorded message telling me that the Yorkshire Ripper is from Newcastle.
The 'lie' doesn't have to belong to the person promoting it, for he was fed with it.
I think otherwise, Stewart, for Macnaghten was acutely aware of the mental health issues within the Cutbush family, including that of one of his most senior and most public officers; then obliquely he dances out known criminals who might have been Jack the Ripper, whilst obscuring the criminal activity of the man he is dismissing.
I imagine myself as the most senior police officer involved in the hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper, five years on with still no arrest, and with five memos in my information system telling me that Peter Sutcliffe must be the Yorkshire Ripper, so I sit down and write my own memo, dismissing Sutcliffe as the killer, because I have a tape recorded message telling me that the Yorkshire Ripper is from Newcastle.
The 'lie' doesn't have to belong to the person promoting it, for he was fed with it.
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