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  • Originally posted by Lewis C View Post

    Swanson said that after the ID, "no other murder of this kind took place in London". It's unclear which murders would qualify as being "of this kind", but even if we include the Coles murder, that was in 1891.

    Kosminski had an alibi for the Coles murder!

    That has not, however, prevented Scott Nelson from suggesting that there were two Kosminskis - Aaron and an accomplice - which leaves open the possibility that a Kosminski committed the Coles murder.

    Anderson and Macnaghten both considered the murder of Kelly to be the last in the series.

    There is no reason to suppose that Swanson held a different view.

    Swanson must therefore have meant that the alleged identification took place no later than early 1889, and since he has Kosminski's incarceration taking place after a very short time, he has Kosminski being removed to an asylum around March 1889, the very same time that Macnaghten gave in his memoranda - nearly two years earlier than in reality.

    If Macnaghten knew of Kosminski's incarceration and that he still was incarcerated in an asylum in 1894, then he must have known when it happened.

    Swanson evidently never checked whether the date was correct.
    Last edited by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1; 10-11-2023, 07:43 PM.

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    • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post

      Yes George.
      Thanks Jon. I said the same thing on another thread and Steve commented that he'd never seen that idea expressed before and couldn't believe that anyone would think it. Nice to know I'm not entirely on my own, on this opinion at least.

      Cheers, George
      The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or the one.

      ​Disagreeing doesn't have to be disagreeable - Jeff Hamm

      Comment


      • Originally posted by GBinOz View Post

        Thanks Jon. I said the same thing on another thread and Steve commented that he'd never seen that idea expressed before and couldn't believe that anyone would think it. Nice to know I'm not entirely on my own, on this opinion at least.

        Cheers, George
        I have to say that I can’t see why it’s such an unlikely suggestion either George.
        Regards

        Sir Herlock Sholmes.

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

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Lewis C View Post

          Thank you Wickerman and PI for your responses. I had a thought though: If the ID took place no earlier than 1896, it seems odd that Swanson said that after the ID, "no other murder of this kind took place in London".[ It's unclear which murders would qualify as being "of this kind", but even if we include the Coles murder, that was in 1891. The murders would have already stopped long before the ID.
          The ID had to take place in or after 1890, the year the Seaside Home opened, but you are asking about a comment made by Swanson in or after 1918.
          Even the best of people make mistakes, memory is not the most reliable source, you can inadvertently telescope events together that in reality happened years apart, and vice versa. I would say if it is not an exaggeration by Swanson, he could have been repeating something he heard Anderson say.

          Certainly, Swanson should have had firsthand knowledge of something as important as an ID of a Ripper suspect if he was still in the same position Warren put him in. I don't know if he was, much of the investigation relaxed the year after the Kelly murder, so methods may have changed.

          I think the main problem with answering your question is, we like to think Swanson had to be involved. If he wasn't, was he on vacation, was he off sick?
          If he was not directly involved, I mean not present for the ID, then there is your answer.
          I know that is not the answer you are looking for, but we might be making too many assumptions in expecting Swanson to be directly involved in the ID.
          Regards, Jon S.

          Comment


          • Originally posted by GBinOz View Post

            Thanks Jon. I said the same thing on another thread and Steve commented that he'd never seen that idea expressed before and couldn't believe that anyone would think it. Nice to know I'm not entirely on my own, on this opinion at least.

            Cheers, George
            It's not a new suggestion, way back in the archives you should find myself & Chris George both agreeing that the Marginalia does not suggest Swanson was claiming that Kozminski was also his suspect.
            Regards, Jon S.

            Comment


            • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post

              It's not a new suggestion, way back in the archives you should find myself & Chris George both agreeing that the Marginalia does not suggest Swanson was claiming that Kozminski was also his suspect.
              Indeed, 'those were the days.' This is an old battle with some familiar combatants.

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              • Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post

                Indeed, 'those were the days.' This is an old battle with some familiar combatants.

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                How can Swanson have believed in 1895 that Kosminski, aged 29, was dead when he had read the year before that he was still alive?

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                • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
                  I know that is not the answer you are looking for, but we might be making too many assumptions in expecting Swanson to be directly involved in the ID.
                  Yes, I agree that it is best not to assume that, especially since there are other indications that point toward the ID being earlier than 1896.

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post

                    I have to say that I can’t see why it’s such an unlikely suggestion either George.
                    Thank you Herlock. I appreciate your expressing your opinion.

                    Cheers, George
                    The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few, or the one.

                    ​Disagreeing doesn't have to be disagreeable - Jeff Hamm

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post
                      How can Swanson have believed in 1895 that Kosminski, aged 29, was dead when he had read the year before that he was still alive?
                      Careful. That's not actually in evidence. Let's proceed with caution.

                      1. First off, we don't know that Swanson read Macnaghten's 'Confidential' 1894 memo. He could have done, but there is no direct evidence for it.

                      2. More importantly, Macnaghten doesn't say that 'Kosminski' is still alive. He states in the rough draft that he thinks Kosminski is still confined, but in the final draft that comment has been removed, and, in fact, Macnaghten refers to Kosminski in the past tense (though it is fair to note that he also refers to Ostrog in the past tense):

                      "Kosminski, a Polish Jew, & resident in Whitechapel. This man became insane owing to many years indulgence in solitary vices. He had a great hatred of women, specifically of the prostitute class, & had strong homicidal tendencies; he was removed to a lunatic asylum around March 1889. There were many strong 'circs' connected with this man which made him a strong "suspect."

                      That the line removed from the Aberconway version is the very part about Macnaghten thinking that Kosminski was still in the asylum undercuts your argument. Macnaghten seems to have changed his mind--or someone changed it for him.

                      3. There seems to be a growing sense in some circles that a mistake has been made and that 'Kosminski' is not Aaron Kosminski. I personally find this difficult to accept, but others do not. It's quite a complex series of arguments and can't be reduced to a simple sound bite.

                      Finally, and--this is highly relevant to this conversation--I'm not really insisting that Swanson WAS referring to a dead Polish Jewish suspect in the 1895 Pall Mall Gazette article. I did make this suggestion back in 2003, but theoretically, he could have been referring to someone else--Druitt for instance--and his thoughts changed over the years. I have speculated this myself on a number of occasions, just as Chris George and Jon and George from Oz and others have. People's reasoning isn't static, so we can't confidently assume that Swanson's was, either. So, your own thoughts on the matter are worthy of consideration.

                      In the final analysis, we only have access to a journalist paraphrasing Swanson in 1895. As I wrote clear back in 2003, it's not 'much to go on.' It still isn't.

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post

                        Careful. That's not actually in evidence. Let's proceed with caution.

                        1. First off, we don't know that Swanson read Macnaghten's 'Confidential' 1894 memo. He could have done, but there is no direct evidence for it.

                        Finally, and--this is highly relevant to this conversation--I'm not really insisting that Swanson WAS referring to a dead Polish Jewish suspect in the 1895 Pall Mall Gazette article. I did make this suggestion back in 2003, but theoretically, he could have been referring to someone else--Druitt for instance--and his thoughts changed over the years.


                        I take your points, Roger.

                        It is true that I cannot prove that Swanson read Macnaghten's first draft of his memorandum by the time that he was reported in 1895 to believe that the murderer was dead.

                        Would you not agree with me, however, that it is quite a coincidence that Swanson was reported in 1895 to believe that the murderer was a certain dead person and that only the year before, Macnaghten had recorded that the suspect he was especially interested in had died soon after the last murder in the series?

                        Is it really believable that these two men were coincidentally expressing their views that the murderer was a certain dead person, that the press knew not only of Swanson's opinion but of the strong opinion at Scotland Yard that the murderer was dead, and yet that the two men were unaware of each other's opinion?

                        Although mention of Kosminski's still being alive was not made in the final version of the memorandum, the fact is that having mentioned that he was still alive, Macnaghten wrote nothing about his being dead.

                        In the circumstances, if Swanson had had any doubts, he could hardly have failed to check for himself, in which case he would have realised that Kosminski was alive.


                        Last edited by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1; 10-12-2023, 06:39 PM.

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                        • Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1 View Post


                          Kosminski had an alibi for the Coles murder!

                          That has not, however, prevented Scott Nelson from suggesting that there were two Kosminskis - Aaron and an accomplice - which leaves open the possibility that a Kosminski committed the Coles murder.

                          Anderson and Macnaghten both considered the murder of Kelly to be the last in the series.
                          Kelly was the last in the series, Kosminski had no known accomplice.

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                          • Swanson: The Life and Times of a Victorian Detective by Adam Wood.

                            Essential reading for participants in this discussion (less Druitt).

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by Scott Nelson View Post

                              Kelly was the last in the series, Kosminski had no known accomplice.


                              The actual "Kosminski" police suspect, when he was caught, may have implicated Aaron, a relative already incarcerated as a lunatic, as an accomplice to the murders.

                              An Alternate Kosminski Suspect and Police Witness: Some Perspectives and Points to Ponder

                              Scott Nelson​





                              Or, just maybe, Aaron Kosminski was an accomplice of another family member. Maybe the arrest of Aaron provided information which led the police to the real suspect?

                              Coles, Kosminski and Levy – was there a Victim/Suspect/Witness connection?

                              Scott Nelson​

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                              • Valid speculation. Nothing definitive.

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