Originally posted by Ben
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I've presumed no such thing. I've suggested the possibility that the family members who allegedly suspected Druitt may not have been the ones who remembered precisely where Druitt was on a few specific dates in 1888, especially if the suspicions were voiced some years subsequent to that. That's not grasping at straws at all. It's just entertaining the possibility that second-hand hearsay ought not to be taken at face value, especially if it's predicated on the idea that Macnaghten deliberately withheld it from other senior investigators. More likely, he did share it with other investigators, but none of them viewed it as particularly incriminating.
None of that amounts to "grasping at straws".
None of that amounts to "grasping at straws".
Grasping at straws is deciding, for no reason at all, that Druitt's depression must have manifested itself in "flitting to and fro" or being deliberately cagey to his family about his movements. Either that or something akin to "Yes yes, there's no evidence that Druitt was ever in the East End...ah, but if he was the ripper...!"
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