None of the suspect names (Ostrog, Druitt or Kosminski) was made public. When I first started to read about the Ripper case with any seriousness, the "game" (of Ripperology) was to try to identify who might have been under suspicion and named on the file.
Clearly Kosminski was not so secret that he could not even be named on an official file, open to any authorised officer - MM did it!
Interestingly, Anderson never named his suspect, but the information he gave narrowed it down quite a bit. Swanson named Kosminski, but in a private place unlikely to be seen in his lifetime by anyone unknown to him and without his permission.
As ALL the suspect files appear no longer to exist in the archive, one must assume that all were treated similarly (destroyed) or prove the most attractive to pilferers. They (or some of them) may still exist in private hands.
I too am interested in the reading of the marginalia which makes them a RECORD of a conversation about which DSS may have had no prior knowledge. But we cannot prove that, and DSS's views and opinions remain unknown. there are equally valid readings which would have DSS setting out his own knowledge alongside a colleagues. There is nothing I have yet seen that allows us to make a choice, but the latter is probably the safer reading in the absence of other evidence and for internal reasons relating to the marginalia.
It is also possible given the phrasing and absence of a forename, that Kosminski was code of some sort for another polish Jew. But no likely candidate has appeared apart from Kaminski and Cohen identified years ago by Martin Fido. they did not find much support.
So where does that leave us?
There is to my mind the possibility of a past and present "cover-up" but it would relate to fenian involvement. I make that statement based on the police attitude to release of the SB registers and to possible angles in regard to Eddowes and MJK. (There is, in my view, a slight possibility that Cutbush was the sensitivity.) Thus MM's three suspects would be a diversion, put on the file to distract attention. That would explain why there is nothing to link any of the three with the case directly and the errors included.
But that would not explain Anderson and DSS's focus on someone called Kosminski - one of the three.
So I conclude that the simplest solution (reverting to Occam's razor) is that the police simply did not know who the killer was, and had differing views. They had no evidence against any of the men. That is why the name was sensitive but not secret.
I am not satisfied by that reasoning, but it is the best I can do for the moment. and it is my working hypothesis. I do not believe in sustained conspiracies or cover-ups (having been a civil servant for 40 years). I also cannot explain why the names Ostrog or Druitt were ever linked with Kosminski (except as stated above) though we do know how MM may have heard of MJD.
Happy to discuss further,
Phil H
Phil H
Clearly Kosminski was not so secret that he could not even be named on an official file, open to any authorised officer - MM did it!
Interestingly, Anderson never named his suspect, but the information he gave narrowed it down quite a bit. Swanson named Kosminski, but in a private place unlikely to be seen in his lifetime by anyone unknown to him and without his permission.
As ALL the suspect files appear no longer to exist in the archive, one must assume that all were treated similarly (destroyed) or prove the most attractive to pilferers. They (or some of them) may still exist in private hands.
I too am interested in the reading of the marginalia which makes them a RECORD of a conversation about which DSS may have had no prior knowledge. But we cannot prove that, and DSS's views and opinions remain unknown. there are equally valid readings which would have DSS setting out his own knowledge alongside a colleagues. There is nothing I have yet seen that allows us to make a choice, but the latter is probably the safer reading in the absence of other evidence and for internal reasons relating to the marginalia.
It is also possible given the phrasing and absence of a forename, that Kosminski was code of some sort for another polish Jew. But no likely candidate has appeared apart from Kaminski and Cohen identified years ago by Martin Fido. they did not find much support.
So where does that leave us?
There is to my mind the possibility of a past and present "cover-up" but it would relate to fenian involvement. I make that statement based on the police attitude to release of the SB registers and to possible angles in regard to Eddowes and MJK. (There is, in my view, a slight possibility that Cutbush was the sensitivity.) Thus MM's three suspects would be a diversion, put on the file to distract attention. That would explain why there is nothing to link any of the three with the case directly and the errors included.
But that would not explain Anderson and DSS's focus on someone called Kosminski - one of the three.
So I conclude that the simplest solution (reverting to Occam's razor) is that the police simply did not know who the killer was, and had differing views. They had no evidence against any of the men. That is why the name was sensitive but not secret.
I am not satisfied by that reasoning, but it is the best I can do for the moment. and it is my working hypothesis. I do not believe in sustained conspiracies or cover-ups (having been a civil servant for 40 years). I also cannot explain why the names Ostrog or Druitt were ever linked with Kosminski (except as stated above) though we do know how MM may have heard of MJD.
Happy to discuss further,
Phil H
Phil H
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