Originally posted by Trevor Marriott
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What makes Druitt a viable suspect?
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Originally posted by harry View PostShow me the evidence that proves Druitt killed anyone,and i'll shake everyones hand Herlock. If no evidence exists, that is enough in itself to accept innocense.the situation doesn't require proof.It is also the case for suspect status.If no evidence or proof exists,one cannot be considered suspect.That is the case with Druitt,and even MM himself can be quoted as writing there was no proof against anyone..What more do posters want? If no one understands, why are there replies to our posts?,and it's an insult to the many viewers who do not post,to insinuate, without cause,their inability to understand.
Druitt's family had suspicions.Fine.I have suspicions.Neither their suspicions or mine carry weight.Theirs apparently went uninvestigated.Me, i'm too lazy to research,so in each case there is no right to consider guilt,and no right to class anyone a suspect,and I don't.
If no evidence exists, that is enough in itself to accept innocense.
. I do not accept that Trevor or myself write in a style or jargon that is not easily understood.
Druitt's family had suspicions.Fine.I have suspicions.Neither their suspicions or mine carry weight.Theirs apparently went uninvestigated.Me, i'm too lazy to research,so in each case there is no right to consider guilt,and no right to class anyone a suspect,and I don't.
Do we have any evidence that Sir Melville would have lied about something this important? The notion is ludicrous.
Were the Druitt family likely to have made up a story about one of their own being the loathed Jack The Ripper? This is also ludicrous.
On an issue this important was Sir M likely to have just casually accepted some vague story casually passed on to him with nothing to back it up and then without a moments thought put that information into the MM to be passed on to his superiors? This beggars belief.
Is it likely that the Druitt family would have suspected/accused Monty of these horrible crimes on flimsy evidence? Of course not.
Therefore it’s entirely reasonable to suggest that Sir Melville actually received very good evidence that Druitt was guilty? Yes it is.
We can’t claim to be fair if we just dismiss this out of hand because it’s inconvenient.Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by harry View PostOne mistake,is that he(MM) didn't have to wait untill the 23rd February,1994,to make the comparison.I doubt we would be discussing Druitt if it hadn't been for the Sun articles,If the information on Druitt was so compelling that he was elevated to suspect,the least I would expect would be a file on him alone.The police could have done that.Should have if he Druitt,w as suspect.
My only reservation about whether the police had a file on Druitt was that in my view IF they were on to him before he died I'm sure there would have been a Scotland Yard detective at his inquest. And, if there had been one present the press coverage of this suicide would have been national news.
That said, the possibility the police began looking for him, and various files created (unknown man in Berner St., unknown man in Mitre Square, unknown man in Dorset St.?) before or after he had died, is still not ruled out. They just lacked a name.Regards, Jon S.
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We are talking about a high profile series of murders, which the police were under pressure to solve, any information confidential or not would have been investigated and acted upon, and any information obtained by those in high places would have found its way down to the likes of Abberline and Reid to investigate. Again you seem to be speculating that there was such information, but if there was you dont seem to realize how it would have been dealt with.Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
He is stating in an official document that Ostrog and Kosminski were looked upon as suspects, and he is endorsing that suspicion in the original memo.. He then later exonerates them in the AV. Reading between the lines he must have later realized that the information either he had been given, or he found for himself, which he penned in the first Memo was wrong. He then rectified that in the AV, hence the term beating a hasty retreat from what he has wrongly stated in the original.
What is the point in correcting errors if you do nothing with the correction but stick it in a drawer at home?
The A.V. would be at home if it was his first draft, which apparently it was.
The only reason parts of his memoir reflect details in the A.V. is for the same reason. In 1914 he had no access to his 1894 report, only the A.V. which he kept at home.Last edited by Wickerman; 05-19-2019, 01:19 PM.Regards, Jon S.
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My final say on this thread, and on this topic is that i reiterate that the MM is unsafe and unreliable. I have wasted hours of my life which I will never get back on trying to explain simple logic to those who dont seem to understand the concept of simple logic.
Logic, reason and unbiased debate are completely foreign concepts to you. I’ll leave you to go a chat on the thriving Feigenbaum thread.Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Reading between the lines he must have later.....Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View PostTherefore it’s entirely reasonable to suggest that Sir Melville actually received very good evidence that Druitt was guilty? Yes it is.
If we argue that Mac kept the very good evidence to himself as I have argued before would this not be a serious dereliction of duty from a man who was a Chief Constable?
Regards Darryl
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Originally posted by Darryl Kenyon View Post
I cannot agree with this. I am not saying Mac is an ardent liar, but if there was very good evidence linking Druitt to the crimes would Anderson have openly blamed a Polish Jew in his Autobiography, and his people from shielding him, knowing the criticism he would come under? When he could have easily said that we had a strong suspect who committed suicide not long after the last murder.
If a suspect moves into an area, and murders begin, when he moves out of the area, the murders stop. And, while he lived there he could never satisfactorily account for his whereabouts on the nights in question. And, he was often over heard to voice a intense hatred of that of that kind of woman (the victims). This is all circumstantial, but taken together could be said to be strong evidence in favor of guilt. These detail would make someone a valid suspect, yet no proof exists. And, in this case the suspect was dead by his own hand (presumably).
Mac. might be convinced by what he knows, yet Anderson was not. Is that so unusual?
If you recall medical opinion on the mutilations had already been expressed by Dr Phillips, by Dr Gordon Brown & by Dr's Duke, Blackwell, Llewellyn, etc. yet Anderson chose not to accept professional opinion, and to send in Dr Bond.
So why should we be surprised if Anderson now disagreed with Macnaghten?
Regards, Jon S.
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Originally posted by Darryl Kenyon View Post
I cannot agree with this. I am not saying Mac is an ardent liar, but if there was very good evidence linking Druitt to the crimes would Anderson have openly blamed a Polish Jew in his Autobiography, and his people from shielding him, knowing the criticism he would come under? When he could have easily said that we had a strong suspect who committed suicide not long after the last murder. And would Swanson in private annotations basically say that if the ID had been successful the suspect would have been hung?
If we argue that Mac kept the very good evidence to himself as I have argued before would this not be a serious dereliction of duty from a man who was a Chief Constable?
Regards Darryl
Macnaghten lied.
He just believed some baseless fantasy.
The Druitt family made something up about Monty.
Druitt did something (or things) that we’re innocent but looked so suspicious that his family suspected him.
None of these alternative explanations are massively believable imo.
Therefore its plausible that he genuinely received information that appeared to point to Druitt’s guilt and that, for good measure, he also had good reason to believe that Druitt’s own family believed this.
Apologies for the repetition but, why select Druitt? Why not just any incarcerated lunatic or criminal that died after Kelly. No one would have batted an eyelid. But no, he goes for an upper class Barrister/Schoolteacher. Why?Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
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