Here's a link to an interesting article published in the Evening Post (Wellington, New Zealand) on 10 July 1905:
It describes a recent visit to the Middlesex Street area by "Mr. T. E. Donne, Superintendent of the New Zealand Government Tourist Department, and Mr. P. A. Vaile, of Auckland, accompanied by Inspector Macmillan and Detective-Sergeant Ferrier, of Scotland Yard".
One of the visitors recounts what they were told about Jack the Ripper:
""We were taken all over the 'country' of 'Jack the Ripper,'" added Mr. Vaile. "The police knew who was the criminal; our friends from Scotland Yard told us that he died while under surveillance and the murders ceased. It was, according to them, a medical man's assistant, who was a little 'unsettled' mentally.""
This sounds like a version of the Druitt story, current at relatively junior levels in Scotland Yard, including the claim that the suspect was under surveillance at the time of his death.
It describes a recent visit to the Middlesex Street area by "Mr. T. E. Donne, Superintendent of the New Zealand Government Tourist Department, and Mr. P. A. Vaile, of Auckland, accompanied by Inspector Macmillan and Detective-Sergeant Ferrier, of Scotland Yard".
One of the visitors recounts what they were told about Jack the Ripper:
""We were taken all over the 'country' of 'Jack the Ripper,'" added Mr. Vaile. "The police knew who was the criminal; our friends from Scotland Yard told us that he died while under surveillance and the murders ceased. It was, according to them, a medical man's assistant, who was a little 'unsettled' mentally.""
This sounds like a version of the Druitt story, current at relatively junior levels in Scotland Yard, including the claim that the suspect was under surveillance at the time of his death.
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