Yes Darryl, you are mistaken.
You are being misled by Macnaghten; he is fudging because he is under acute pressure. Try and measure all the sources by him, about him and his proxies (J. F. Nesbit; Major Griffiths; George Sims - and rogue source, Frank Richardson). Otherwise none of it makes any sense.
Consider that the memoir chapter of 1914, "Laying the Ghost of ack the Ripper", is Macnaghten's de-facto 3rd version of his report. Except this time he was retired; he did not have to worry about losing his job. He could write more freely - up to a point - because he was clear of Warren, Anderson, the Vicar, the Druitts, even his close friend, Majendie, was long deceased.
Sure enough, Macnaghten finally admits what we can see confirmed by other contemporaneous sources: the 1894 versions of the report both deceitfully give the misleading impression that all there was to know about Druitt was learned by police in 1888. We can see from the way the police behaved this was not true: the autumn of terror is a handy myth created by Mac. He is lying when he claims the police knew Kelly had to be the final victim of this particular maniac.
In his 1914 version the retired, seriously ill chief admitted that the incriminating evidence against Druitt did not arrive until years later, that it was Macnaghten who learned it on a personal and private level from the man's "own people" and, embarrassingly, it meant the police had been fruitlessly chasing a phantom.
You are being misled by Macnaghten; he is fudging because he is under acute pressure. Try and measure all the sources by him, about him and his proxies (J. F. Nesbit; Major Griffiths; George Sims - and rogue source, Frank Richardson). Otherwise none of it makes any sense.
Consider that the memoir chapter of 1914, "Laying the Ghost of ack the Ripper", is Macnaghten's de-facto 3rd version of his report. Except this time he was retired; he did not have to worry about losing his job. He could write more freely - up to a point - because he was clear of Warren, Anderson, the Vicar, the Druitts, even his close friend, Majendie, was long deceased.
Sure enough, Macnaghten finally admits what we can see confirmed by other contemporaneous sources: the 1894 versions of the report both deceitfully give the misleading impression that all there was to know about Druitt was learned by police in 1888. We can see from the way the police behaved this was not true: the autumn of terror is a handy myth created by Mac. He is lying when he claims the police knew Kelly had to be the final victim of this particular maniac.
In his 1914 version the retired, seriously ill chief admitted that the incriminating evidence against Druitt did not arrive until years later, that it was Macnaghten who learned it on a personal and private level from the man's "own people" and, embarrassingly, it meant the police had been fruitlessly chasing a phantom.

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