To Lynn
That's exactly what Scotland Yard did do. They did take credit for solving the mystery, and long before the retirement of its top cops.
Anderson did this to Griffiths in 1895.
Macnaghten, anonymously, to Griffiths in 1898, and then to Sims from 1899 to 1917.
In his own words under his own name in 1913, as he retried, and in 1914 from retirement.
As an aside: Anderson believed that his Ripper was deceased and that he was believed by his own people to be the fiend, and so did Mac--but only the latter's actually was dead and actually had a family who believed in his culpability (according to the meager extant record).
That's exactly what Scotland Yard did do. They did take credit for solving the mystery, and long before the retirement of its top cops.
Anderson did this to Griffiths in 1895.
Macnaghten, anonymously, to Griffiths in 1898, and then to Sims from 1899 to 1917.
In his own words under his own name in 1913, as he retried, and in 1914 from retirement.
As an aside: Anderson believed that his Ripper was deceased and that he was believed by his own people to be the fiend, and so did Mac--but only the latter's actually was dead and actually had a family who believed in his culpability (according to the meager extant record).
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