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  • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

    Perhaps you could try and prove that MacNaghten’s evidence was no good? And when I say prove PI, I do mean prove. I don’t mean just a re-stating of your opinion of the likelihood of….

    He never cited any incriminating evidence.

    Comment


    • Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post



      In # 84, you did not write anything about Druitt being deemed guilty.

      You wrote that he could be found guilty.
      Yes, that's right, ....are you asking how someone could be deemed to be guilty without a trial?
      Finding compelling evidence in his room is one way.
      Just suppose the missing organs were found in a drawer in his room, it's not the kind of circumstance that he can justify away as 'not my fault'.


      He wrote of his fear that he would 'be like mother'.

      That is obviously a reference to her mental state and reflects a fear of going mad...
      Which is precisely what everyone thought, and yet her symptoms were consistent with depression. Not something to justify taking your own life, especially a young man of his age, unless he had being showing signs of depression, which we wouldn't know about.
      It is very possible the comment for him to not "be like mother" referred to the fact she was locked up.

      Hypothetically, if the family did suspect he might be the killer, and as his elder brother William was head of the house, it means his brother knew about the suspicion.
      Duty required that if any junior family member learns of suspicion they must report it to William as head of the house.
      So, was it William who approached Macnaghten?
      And, lets not forget, William was the one who produced that suicide note.
      Did William even write the note?

      It's all speculation, but not unreasonable speculation.

      Regards, Jon S.

      Comment


      • Sorry, Jon, but even without the benefit of having seen Mrs Druitt's medical notes, I would imagine that she was suffering from something more serious than depression.

        Moreover, if Druitt thought that her condition merited being mentioned in his suicide note, then that too suggests that he thought she was suffering from something more substantial than depression.

        And since she had never committed murder, or been charged with having committed murder, if Druitt was referring to murder in his suicide note, then why would he have mentioned his mother?

        At the time of his suicide, his mother had been in an asylum for three or four months.

        Why would he have been thinking about her spending the rest of her life in confinement?

        I do not agree that speculation that his relatives suspected him of having committed the Whitechapel murders is reasonable.

        If they were in touch with him during the period in which the murders were committed, then they knew about his holiday in Dorset.

        Why, then, would they have suspected him?

        Comment


        • Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post


          He never cited any incriminating evidence.
          But he clearly felt that it was incriminating. We can’t assume that it didn’t exist. It certainly might have been the case that Druitt wasn’t actually guilty though. What we do have though is Farquharson telling people, 5 years before the Memorandum, that the ripper was the son of a surgeon that committed suicide. Yes, he said that the killer committed suicide on the night of the last murder, but the main point is that no other son of a surgeon committed suicide just after the Kelly murder. Farquaharsen was from the same area as the Druitt’s. Others favoured Druitt too. Where they all liars or where they all gullible or did they know something that we don’t?

          Another point to make is that Bond believed that Alice Mackenzie was a ripper victim although Phillips disagreed. Munro, who was a friend of MacNaghten’s, also thought Mackenzie was a ripper victim. Why then would Macnaghten have picked at random someone that was dead when Mackenzie was killed when many believed her to have been a victim? It makes no sense. The fact that Macnaghten strongly believed that the murders ended with Kelly, and took the time to stress the fact, points to the fact that he felt that he had very good reason for believing Druitt to have been guilty.
          Regards

          Sir Herlock Sholmes.

          “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

          Comment


          • Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post
            .

            If they were in touch with him during the period in which the murders were committed, then they knew about his holiday in Dorset.

            Why, then, would they have suspected him?
            Perhaps because they also knew that trains existed PI?
            Regards

            Sir Herlock Sholmes.

            “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

            Comment


            • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

              But he clearly felt that it was incriminating.


              So incriminating as to render him 'more likely than Cutbush' to have committed the murders?



              Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

              We can’t assume that it didn’t exist.

              Where is the evidence that it did exist?



              Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

              What we do have though is Farquharson telling people, 5 years before the Memorandum, that the ripper was the son of a surgeon that committed suicide. Yes, he said that the killer committed suicide on the night of the last murder, but the main point is that no other son of a surgeon committed suicide just after the Kelly murder. Farquaharsen was from the same area as the Druitt’s. Others favoured Druitt too. Where they all liars or where they all gullible or did they know something that we don’t?

              What is easier than to accuse a dead person of being a murderer?

              Farquharson had to pay £5000 in libel damages two years later.

              What makes you think he knew anything?



              Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

              The fact that Macnaghten strongly believed that the murders ended with Kelly, and took the time to stress the fact, points to the fact that he felt that he had very good reason for believing Druitt to have been guilty.

              If you really believe that, then please explain why he took the time to give details of three so-called suspects,

              any one of whom would have been more likely than Cutbush to have committed this series of murders?

              Comment


              • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

                Perhaps because they also knew that trains existed PI?

                Would you suspect someone of having committed murder because of the existence of trains?

                Comment


                • Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post


                  So incriminating as to render him 'more likely than Cutbush' to have committed the murders?






                  Where is the evidence that it did exist?






                  What is easier than to accuse a dead person of being a murderer?

                  Farquharson had to pay £5000 in libel damages two years later.

                  What makes you think he knew anything?






                  If you really believe that, then please explain why he took the time to give details of three so-called suspects,

                  any one of whom would have been more likely than Cutbush to have committed this series of murders?
                  No, I’m not going to explain the obvious PI because I’ve been here before on Druitt and I’m tired of hearing the same old stuff. We’re going around in circles and I think that if we had a photograph of Druitt leaving Millers Court carrying a knife dripping with blood you’d invent some way of dismissing him. I don’t care if you think Druitt a poor suspect because he’s one of the very few worthwhile one’s that we have. Macnaghten named him. That’s enough. Not to make him the killer but enough to make him a person of far more interest than 99+% of all other suspects. That we don’t know what his information was is frustrating and disappointing but it is what it is. To suggest that he simply made it up is not worthy of consideration. Why people have to resort to this kind of stuff is beyond me.

                  Macnaghten had evidence that he thought pointed to Druitt.
                  For years we looked for some connection between Druitt and Macnaghten and we now have it.
                  Druitt has no alibi for any of the murders.
                  He was fit and healthy and the right age.
                  He had easy access to any anatomical knowledge the killer might have had.
                  His suicide gives a reason for the termination of the murders (if Kelly was the last of course) His suicide also points to a decline.
                  He was mentioned as the ripper in all but name 5 years before the memorandum (by Farquharson.)
                  We have the North Country Vicar story.
                  We have the English patient story.
                  We have a potential link to the Cavendish letter.
                  In 1908 Frank Richardson writes a story where the ripper is Dr. Bluitt who drowns himself in the Thames.
                  He wasn’t simply favoured by Macnaghten, others did too.

                  None of the above proves that Druitt was guilty. I’ve never made that claim but it utterly baffles me how anyone genuinely interested in the case doesn’t find Druitt the most intriguing of suspects.

                  Im not bothered whether you like it or not PI but Druitt, Kosminski and Bury are the three best suspects that we have by a country mile. It’s not even close. I’d prefer not to continue with this PI because I’ve had years of this kind of approach and it gets us nowhere. If Druitt doesn’t interest you, no problem, move on to another topic but I’m not going to keep trying to counter what appears to be some kind of holy mission to eliminate Druitt. Let’s leave it.
                  Regards

                  Sir Herlock Sholmes.

                  “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post


                    Would you suspect someone of having committed murder because of the existence of trains?
                    No but I’d accept the possibility that they can be used to move a person from one location to another in fairly quick time.

                    Further reason to end the discussion because all Druitt discussion ends like this. When someone won’t accept that a person can move around.
                    Regards

                    Sir Herlock Sholmes.

                    “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

                      Macnaghten had evidence that he thought pointed to Druitt.

                      That is an assumption.

                      You cannot know that to be true.



                      Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

                      He had easy access to any anatomical knowledge the killer might have had.

                      There is no evidence that he had any relevant anatomical knowledge nor experience of applying it.



                      Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

                      His suicide gives a reason for the termination of the murders (if Kelly was the last of course) His suicide also points to a decline.

                      There is evidence that he suffered a mental breakdown three weeks after Kelly's murder, that it was triggered by his dismissal from his teaching post, and that the breakdown caused him to decide to commit suicide.

                      That is evidence that his suicide was not connected with any murder, but with something else entirely.

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post
                        Sorry, Jon, but even without the benefit of having seen Mrs Druitt's medical notes, I would imagine that she was suffering from something more serious than depression.
                        I understand, it's not unusual for those who object to think they know better than her doctor.
                        We have seen her medical condition written somewhere, she also had paranoid delusions.

                        Moreover, if Druitt thought that her condition merited being mentioned in his suicide note, then that too suggests that he thought she was suffering from something more substantial than depression.
                        You've convinced yourself of that possibility, but as the note no longer exists we can only rely on the coroner's summary after reading the note. And to me it is completely ambiguous.

                        And since she had never committed murder, or been charged with having committed murder, if Druitt was referring to murder in his suicide note, then why would he have mentioned his mother?
                        Because she was locked up, as he could be if his fears were realized.

                        At the time of his suicide, his mother had been in an asylum for three or four months.
                        Six months, but who's quibbling.

                        Why would he have been thinking about her spending the rest of her life in confinement?
                        Incurable, perhaps?
                        She did die just over a year later.

                        I do not agree that speculation that his relatives suspected him of having committed the Whitechapel murders is reasonable.

                        If they were in touch with him during the period in which the murders were committed, then they knew about his holiday in Dorset.

                        Why, then, would they have suspected him?
                        Researchers have been trying to use his cricket schedule to rule him out, all attempts have failed.
                        Why bring it up anymore?

                        Suicide did run in the family, but oddly only on the female side, as far as I know.
                        Regards, Jon S.

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post

                          Sorry, Jon, but even without the benefit of having seen Mrs Druitt's medical notes, I would imagine that she was suffering from something more serious than depression.



                          Originally posted by Wickerman View Post

                          I understand, it's not unusual for those who object to think they know better than her doctor.
                          We have seen her medical condition written somewhere, she also had paranoid delusions.


                          You have just proved my point: paranoid delusions are obviously something more serious than depression.

                          And it is quite obvious that it is not a case of my making myself out to know better than her doctor.

                          It is rather a case of Druitt fearing that he was going mad, as I suggested in an earlier post.

                          You have written repeatedly that he must have feared that he would be locked up.

                          What he actually wrote was that he was afraid he would be like mother, not that he would be locked up.

                          Comment


                          • Macnaghten had evidence that he thought pointed to Druitt.

                            That is an assumption.

                            You cannot know that to be true.


                            It appears that we are caught up in semantics. Rather than get into an argument as to what constitutes "evidence" why not say that Macnaghten had some basis for making the statements that he did. Now that tells us nothing as to its reliability or whether it was factual only that he had some reason be it good or bad. Otherwise, we would have to conclude that he was lying or simply enjoyed making things up.

                            c.d.

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post


                              Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

                              Macnaghten had evidence that he thought pointed to Druitt.


                              That is an assumption.

                              You cannot know that to be true.



                              I believe that Macnaghten felt that he had sufficient reasons for naming Druitt. I can show my reasons, and how I came to them, for arriving at this opinion….but I have no way of proving it.

                              You believe that Macnaghten named Druitt for no other reason than his suicide and you can give your reasons for this opinion……but you have no way of proving it.

                              That is where we stand on this point and in the absence of any new evidence I’d suggest that our positions won’t change. Therefore nothing can be gained (for either of us or anyone else) in us going back and forth over the same point.


                              ……….


                              Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

                              He had easy access to any anatomical knowledge the killer might have had.


                              There is no evidence that he had any relevant anatomical knowledge nor experience of applying it.


                              And as you should have been able to deduce from the section of my post that you are responding to, that’s not at all what I was saying. I’m not even suggesting any level of knowledge from the killer. The only reason that I made that very minor point is self evident. Perhaps a better way of putting it is that if we discuss suspects with no known medical/anatomical knowledge Druitt would have had better opportunity than most to have gained such knowledge due to his father being a surgeon. I’m talking about a possibility and nothing more. Does this minor point really require disputing PI?

                              ……….


                              Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

                              His suicide gives a reason for the termination of the murders (if Kelly was the last of course) His suicide also points to a decline.


                              There is evidence that he suffered a mental breakdown three weeks after Kelly's murder, that it was triggered by his dismissal from his teaching post, and that the breakdown caused him to decide to commit suicide.

                              That is evidence that his suicide was not connected with any murder, but with something else entirely.



                              Of course it isn’t evidence PI. It’s speculation on your part. None of us know when Druitt started to have problems or when his problems might have become visible to others. We don’t even know why he was dismissed from the school. What if he’d sexually assaulted a female member of staff, what if he’d had an explosion of temper and struck a pupil, what if he’d been absent once too often, what if it had been discovered that he’d been visiting prostitutes, what if they had found evidence that he was the ripper, what if he’d turned to drink, what if he’d stolen some money, what if he’d exposed himself to a pupil. What if….

                              I’m no expert in mental health issues but I wonder how prevalent it is for someone to have a setback in life, have a decline in mental health and then commit suicide all within the space of three weeks? Druitt could have been having issues for months for all that we know. As we know today, people often manage to keep mental health issues from others until they gradually get worse. To claim that there is ‘evidence that his suicide must have been connected to something else just doesn’t hold water PI.



                              .
                              We really are getting nowhere PI. You won’t even concede the mildest and most obvious points.
                              Regards

                              Sir Herlock Sholmes.

                              “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by c.d. View Post
                                Macnaghten had evidence that he thought pointed to Druitt.

                                That is an assumption.

                                You cannot know that to be true.


                                It appears that we are caught up in semantics. Rather than get into an argument as to what constitutes "evidence" why not say that Macnaghten had some basis for making the statements that he did. Now that tells us nothing as to its reliability or whether it was factual only that he had some reason be it good or bad. Otherwise, we would have to conclude that he was lying or simply enjoyed making things up.

                                c.d.
                                That sums it up c.d.
                                Regards

                                Sir Herlock Sholmes.

                                “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

                                Comment

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