I wanted to move my views and possibilities on Swanson and what he wrote in his private notes to a new thread. So here goes.
The most contentious issue is the Seaside home ID. I personally do not believe the ID took place in Brighton but it is a possibility. Brighton at the time had a large Jewish population and if Lawende was the witness, not forgetting he was a commercial traveler, he could have been stuck in Brighton and the police may have had to have moved quickly IE They could only hold Kosminski for, say 48 hrs without anymore evidence forthcoming.
For what it is worth I think consideration should be made that Seaside home should have read Seaman's home . I note that there was a Sailors home in Well st [now Ensign St], and the nearby Destitute Sailors' Asylum which was on the next street , Dock St. Both close to Lemen street police station and Tenter st which , I believe was Lawende's address in 1891, plus only a few minutes from Greenfield street where possibly Kosminski resided in 1891. Which is when I suspect the ID took place
Bearing in mind that Lawende [ if Lawende was the witness ], said that the man he sighted had the appearance of a sailor. What better place to put a mentally unstable suspect who may have been a sailor in front of a witness than an asylum for sailors. Now I believe not everybody or indeed probably most people who resided there suffered from mental illness but it still gives the ID an air of credibility to it if there ever was a court case. In fact Lawende could have been confronted with a few seamen, one at a time but it was Kosminski he recognised. .
Although I have no proof of this and just a few suggestions it is tempting. A suspect who had the appearance of a sailor but wasn't, yet picked out by a witness at a Sailors home after perhaps looking at a few other seamen beforehand. Even if Lawende says he wasn't positive and reminded the Police that he only had a cursory glance at the murderer it might have hardened the thoughts of Anderson and maybe Swanson that Kosminski was their man. Particularly after he said Sadler wasn't the man not long after, even though he could be seen as a reasonable suspect. He could even have been used at the Sadler ID to test his veracity. Pick out Sadler as well and the case against Kosminski gets watered down, but he didn't.
One of the more controversial aspects regarding the marginalia is Swansons statement that "And after this identification which suspect knew, no other murder of this kind took place in London". Not forgetting Swanson wrote this around twenty years after the events he is describing, twice Peter Sutcliffe went eleven months between murders. Suppose he was put on an ID after a gap of ten months just before one of the eleven month gap murders. Would one of the heads of the ripper task force in remenisces twenty years later have said the murders stopped because of good old fashioned police work which led to him being put on an ID parade [ regardless of the gap ] ?
I think it is a possibility and I suspect Swanson wanted the police to take credit for the cessation of the murders even if the ID was two years later.
Regarding the ID Swanson writes that Kosminski knew he was identified and Anderson says the witness identified the suspect the instant he was confronted with him.
A possible explanation.
Witness " Yes that's him " or taps him on the shoulder
Kosminski throws expletives towards witness in Yiddish
Witness then knows he is a fellow Jew. That's not to say that's why I believe the witness backed down, I personally believe he thought twice about it .
"Am I 100% convinced after all this time ?"
For instance . But certain members of the police force [ rightly or wrongly ] may have thought/ or was reported differently.
In relation to Kosminski being returned to his brother in laws house,
A suspect cannot be held on to forever. If they haven't the evidence to charge said suspect, and my belief is without a positive ID which would be sworn to in court the police didn't have enough evidence to charge Kosminski, they have to let him go. And if they cannot hold on to him the very least the police do [ then and now ] is put the suspect under surveillance . As the police seemed to have done with Kosminski [ City CID ].
There hasn't been enough evidence [ thus far ] , to charge Bruckner [ the prime suspect ] with the abduction and probable murder of Madeline Mcann. If he wasn't in prison would they have have been able to hold him all this time, since he became a suspect without charging him ? I doubt it. But keeping some kind of surveillance on him though until they manage [ if they ever did ] to gather more evidence is a fair assumption. I imagine something similar happened with Kosminski, so his family thought it advisable/or agreed to place him in a workhouse where [ I believe ], a certificate for admission to an asylum could be obtained.
Pertaining to the surveillance, I wonder if the City police not seeming to be able to stop Kosminski entering the workhouse and then the asylum , where it would be very unlikely he would ever be charged , even if new evidence were found, brought some form of conflict between Anderson and Henry Smith. Which mighty have carried on down the years and what they wrote ?
Anderson may have wanted to try every trick in the book [ such as the French police possess ] to stop Kosminski getting away, where Smith may have thought the evidence just wasn't there. So the City CID didn't stop him/or couldn't from entering the workhouse.
Again I have no proof of this , just a suggestion.
Much has been made regarding Kosminski being sent to the workhouse with his hands tied behind his back , according to Swanson . But if we look at Hyam Hyams something similar happened. In December 88 he was taken to the Whitechapel workhouse infirmary suffering delusions. Released in January 89 He was readmitted in April 89 then sent to Colney Hatch under restraint only to be released in August 89.
We simply do not know why Kosminski had his hands tied behind his back , perhaps he was threatening his sister again with a knife ?
Swanson believing Kosminski died in the asylum is a problem. I have ruminated on the idea that it was the City police's jurisdiction to keep tabs on him since they were the ones watching Kosminski at his brother in laws house. Maybe Jacob Cohen [ who I think lived in City territory ] was some form of go between .
Tracks might have been lost on Kosminski when he transferred to Leavesden in 1894. What is known is that Swanson believed him dead in 1895. In the Colney hatch register it says Date of discharge removal or death 19/04/94.
Could Swanson have thought it was death ?
For what it is worth I am not a fan of Anderson. He comes across as being pompous, overbearing and always right in his general comments.
But the fact is if you believe the Marginalia to be genuine it must be what Swanson thought, or remembered.
That does not mean he was right of course. History has taught us that the prime suspect isn't always the killer and of course other police officers disagreed on his conclusions.
But He did have access to all the documents and was central to the investigation.
My personal belief is that Kosminski was a suspect and that over time Swanson's and as a knock on, so to speak, Anderson's [ when possibly discussing the case together ] suspicions hardened [ when no other man became a prime suspect,or charged so to speak ] to the fact they had their man all along.
Just a few thoughts and suggestions
Regards Darryl
The most contentious issue is the Seaside home ID. I personally do not believe the ID took place in Brighton but it is a possibility. Brighton at the time had a large Jewish population and if Lawende was the witness, not forgetting he was a commercial traveler, he could have been stuck in Brighton and the police may have had to have moved quickly IE They could only hold Kosminski for, say 48 hrs without anymore evidence forthcoming.
For what it is worth I think consideration should be made that Seaside home should have read Seaman's home . I note that there was a Sailors home in Well st [now Ensign St], and the nearby Destitute Sailors' Asylum which was on the next street , Dock St. Both close to Lemen street police station and Tenter st which , I believe was Lawende's address in 1891, plus only a few minutes from Greenfield street where possibly Kosminski resided in 1891. Which is when I suspect the ID took place
Bearing in mind that Lawende [ if Lawende was the witness ], said that the man he sighted had the appearance of a sailor. What better place to put a mentally unstable suspect who may have been a sailor in front of a witness than an asylum for sailors. Now I believe not everybody or indeed probably most people who resided there suffered from mental illness but it still gives the ID an air of credibility to it if there ever was a court case. In fact Lawende could have been confronted with a few seamen, one at a time but it was Kosminski he recognised. .
Although I have no proof of this and just a few suggestions it is tempting. A suspect who had the appearance of a sailor but wasn't, yet picked out by a witness at a Sailors home after perhaps looking at a few other seamen beforehand. Even if Lawende says he wasn't positive and reminded the Police that he only had a cursory glance at the murderer it might have hardened the thoughts of Anderson and maybe Swanson that Kosminski was their man. Particularly after he said Sadler wasn't the man not long after, even though he could be seen as a reasonable suspect. He could even have been used at the Sadler ID to test his veracity. Pick out Sadler as well and the case against Kosminski gets watered down, but he didn't.
One of the more controversial aspects regarding the marginalia is Swansons statement that "And after this identification which suspect knew, no other murder of this kind took place in London". Not forgetting Swanson wrote this around twenty years after the events he is describing, twice Peter Sutcliffe went eleven months between murders. Suppose he was put on an ID after a gap of ten months just before one of the eleven month gap murders. Would one of the heads of the ripper task force in remenisces twenty years later have said the murders stopped because of good old fashioned police work which led to him being put on an ID parade [ regardless of the gap ] ?
I think it is a possibility and I suspect Swanson wanted the police to take credit for the cessation of the murders even if the ID was two years later.
Regarding the ID Swanson writes that Kosminski knew he was identified and Anderson says the witness identified the suspect the instant he was confronted with him.
A possible explanation.
Witness " Yes that's him " or taps him on the shoulder
Kosminski throws expletives towards witness in Yiddish
Witness then knows he is a fellow Jew. That's not to say that's why I believe the witness backed down, I personally believe he thought twice about it .
"Am I 100% convinced after all this time ?"
For instance . But certain members of the police force [ rightly or wrongly ] may have thought/ or was reported differently.
In relation to Kosminski being returned to his brother in laws house,
A suspect cannot be held on to forever. If they haven't the evidence to charge said suspect, and my belief is without a positive ID which would be sworn to in court the police didn't have enough evidence to charge Kosminski, they have to let him go. And if they cannot hold on to him the very least the police do [ then and now ] is put the suspect under surveillance . As the police seemed to have done with Kosminski [ City CID ].
There hasn't been enough evidence [ thus far ] , to charge Bruckner [ the prime suspect ] with the abduction and probable murder of Madeline Mcann. If he wasn't in prison would they have have been able to hold him all this time, since he became a suspect without charging him ? I doubt it. But keeping some kind of surveillance on him though until they manage [ if they ever did ] to gather more evidence is a fair assumption. I imagine something similar happened with Kosminski, so his family thought it advisable/or agreed to place him in a workhouse where [ I believe ], a certificate for admission to an asylum could be obtained.
Pertaining to the surveillance, I wonder if the City police not seeming to be able to stop Kosminski entering the workhouse and then the asylum , where it would be very unlikely he would ever be charged , even if new evidence were found, brought some form of conflict between Anderson and Henry Smith. Which mighty have carried on down the years and what they wrote ?
Anderson may have wanted to try every trick in the book [ such as the French police possess ] to stop Kosminski getting away, where Smith may have thought the evidence just wasn't there. So the City CID didn't stop him/or couldn't from entering the workhouse.
Again I have no proof of this , just a suggestion.
Much has been made regarding Kosminski being sent to the workhouse with his hands tied behind his back , according to Swanson . But if we look at Hyam Hyams something similar happened. In December 88 he was taken to the Whitechapel workhouse infirmary suffering delusions. Released in January 89 He was readmitted in April 89 then sent to Colney Hatch under restraint only to be released in August 89.
We simply do not know why Kosminski had his hands tied behind his back , perhaps he was threatening his sister again with a knife ?
Swanson believing Kosminski died in the asylum is a problem. I have ruminated on the idea that it was the City police's jurisdiction to keep tabs on him since they were the ones watching Kosminski at his brother in laws house. Maybe Jacob Cohen [ who I think lived in City territory ] was some form of go between .
Tracks might have been lost on Kosminski when he transferred to Leavesden in 1894. What is known is that Swanson believed him dead in 1895. In the Colney hatch register it says Date of discharge removal or death 19/04/94.
Could Swanson have thought it was death ?
For what it is worth I am not a fan of Anderson. He comes across as being pompous, overbearing and always right in his general comments.
But the fact is if you believe the Marginalia to be genuine it must be what Swanson thought, or remembered.
That does not mean he was right of course. History has taught us that the prime suspect isn't always the killer and of course other police officers disagreed on his conclusions.
But He did have access to all the documents and was central to the investigation.
My personal belief is that Kosminski was a suspect and that over time Swanson's and as a knock on, so to speak, Anderson's [ when possibly discussing the case together ] suspicions hardened [ when no other man became a prime suspect,or charged so to speak ] to the fact they had their man all along.
Just a few thoughts and suggestions
Regards Darryl
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