Originally posted by Jonathan H
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Whilst appreciating that Kosminski sits atop the suspects totem pole and occupies the position once held by Druitt, Druitt still occupies second place and snaps at Kosminski's heels. But neither need have been Jack the Ripper and the cynical among us probably feel that neither of them were. What distinguished Kosminski, however, is not so much Macnaghten's reliability as the fact that Anderson apparently gains corroboration of sorts from Swanson, and Anderson is definite whilst Macnaghten is conjectural (although I suspect they were both conjectural). Now, in saying that anyone is at the top of the totem pole, what we mean is in terms of prioritisation of time and resources. Thus a statement of fact (irrespective of it ultimately probably being conjectural) based on presumed evidence and a claimed positive eye-witness identification, tacit probable corroboration from another source, and both sources being senior, informed officers active in the investigation at the time, must inevitably put it ahead of a policeman who was senior and informed, but not active in the investigation, who was openly conjectural, and was basing his conclusion on second-hand information received from an unknown source.
But that doesn't undercut Macnaghten or diminish Druitt. As I repeatedly say, we don't really know the evidence on which either conclusion was based, so we can't assess it. In that respect they are equal suspects, both worthy of investigation. There is no competition. A argument that Druitt was Jack the Ripper does not depend on eradicating Kosminski first. Or vice cersa.
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