No, he would not have been. He killed himself three weeks after the Kelly murder at Chiswick (and was a gentleman who lived at Blackheath).
The McKenzie and Coles' murders of 1889 and 1891, respectively, proved that Jack was very much alive, and that is how police acted.
One of the biggest fallacies of many secondary sources is that Druitt's suicide is conveniently timed because Kelly is the final victim. Kelly was not considered the final victim at the time. A few years later, however, she was retrospectively made the final victim by a singly police chief to make the timing of Druitt's death fit a new, much truncated timeline.
The McKenzie and Coles' murders of 1889 and 1891, respectively, proved that Jack was very much alive, and that is how police acted.
One of the biggest fallacies of many secondary sources is that Druitt's suicide is conveniently timed because Kelly is the final victim. Kelly was not considered the final victim at the time. A few years later, however, she was retrospectively made the final victim by a singly police chief to make the timing of Druitt's death fit a new, much truncated timeline.
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