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What makes Druitt a viable suspect?

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  • Simon,

    Why would the family be at a loss what to do with their suspicions? How could they have possibly learned if they were right or wrong? Ask Macnaghten? Hello, did you suspect MJD was the Ripper? I very much doubt it..

    Perhaps they hoped that someone like Majendie might have been able to deal with the situation in some way whilst avoiding a scandal?

    Why can't you bring yourself to believe that Macnaghten simply looked back through the records, found a person who conveniently died at about the right time, wrote a memorandum he thought nobody would ever read, purposely got the facts wrong so nobody could positively attribute guilt to an innocent person, leaked his bogus information to a well-respected author [Griffiths] before writing yet another version of his memorandum which his daughter partly typed-up for reasons yet unknown?
    For one thing he could certainly have gone back through the records and found someone that fit his criteria but would have been a more likely candidate than an innocuous Barrister/Schoolteacher from a respectable upper class family. Why pick someone who, if someone did look into him, might easily have had a cast iron alibi? Why pick someone related by marriage to one of his best friends? Why not just leave it at Kosminski and Ostrog? It doesn’t add up for me.



    Regards

    Sir Herlock Sholmes.

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

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post

      Hi Simon
      nice post but wait for Paul beg to ask where is your evidence

      www.trevormarriott.co.uk
      Why would I ask Simon that, Trevor? Simon doesn't have any evidence. It's just supposition, and only one of several possible ways in which the family might have inadvertantly revealed their anxieties. Any chance of you actually answering my questions?

      Comment


      • Originally posted by Simon Wood View Post
        Hi Herlock,

        Why would the family be at a loss what to do with their suspicions? How could they have possibly learned if they were right or wrong? Ask Macnaghten? Hello, did you suspect MJD was the Ripper? I very much doubt it.

        Why can't you bring yourself to believe that Macnaghten simply looked back through the records, found a person who conveniently died at about the right time, wrote a memorandum he thought nobody would ever read, purposely got the facts wrong so nobody could positively attribute guilt to an innocent person, leaked his bogus information to a well-respected author [Griffiths] before writing yet another version of his memorandum which his daughter partly typed-up for reasons yet unknown?

        Regards,

        Simon
        Hi Simon.

        There's a saying that goes something like, "the cure is worse than the disease".
        That is a terrible plot Simon.
        Regards, Jon S.

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
          Simon,




          Perhaps they hoped that someone like Majendie might have been able to deal with the situation in some way whilst avoiding a scandal?



          For one thing he could certainly have gone back through the records and found someone that fit his criteria but would have been a more likely candidate than an innocuous Barrister/Schoolteacher from a respectable upper class family. Why pick someone who, if someone did look into him, might easily have had a cast iron alibi? Why pick someone related by marriage to one of his best friends? Why not just leave it at Kosminski and Ostrog? It doesn’t add up for me.


          exactly herlock.
          lets face it-he probably wrote the memo expecting a response from superiors after the cutbush article, and honestly just wrote down his thoughts on the matter. He includes one suspect that was apparently known to police-koz, and a couple more, including druitt which he heard more than likely about from a friend/acquaintance (private info). And the more he thought about it, and maybe including some other evidence , he simply thought he was the best suspect for the ripper. Druitt was already dead and the ripper murders were over-so what else could he do anyway?

          I guess the question I would have is-did he think the C5 ended with Kelly (and not include McKenzie) because his favored suspect was already dead or did he already have the C5 only in his mind as ripper victims and that bolstered his idea that Druitt was the ripper?

          Comment


          • Hi Paul,

            I seem to have touched a nerve.

            I merely listed a perfectly reasonable series of events for Macnaghten.

            You ask for evidence of what I believe.

            Where's the evidence for what you believe?

            BTW Have you yet made the move?

            Regards,

            Simon
            Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

            Comment


            • Hi Jon,

              It's a much better plot than any of yours.

              Regards,

              Simon
              Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

              Comment


              • Hi Herlock,

                Reputations are fragile things, so why are you inventing all these infernally complex maybe/perhaps/possibly family scenarios to avoid a scandal which they would never have allowed to happen in the first place.

                Regards,

                Simon
                Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Simon Wood View Post
                  Hi Herlock,

                  Reputations are fragile things, so why are you inventing all these infernally complex maybe/perhaps/possibly family scenarios to avoid a scandal which they would never have allowed to happen in the first place.

                  Regards,

                  Simon
                  Hi Simon

                  How could they have not allowed a scandal to occur? What control could they have exerted over Monty if he was guilty?
                  Regards

                  Sir Herlock Sholmes.

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

                  Comment


                  • Hi Herlock,

                    Buttoned their lips.

                    If Macnaghten didn't find out about MJD until some years after he became a police officer, how did the family first come to believe/suspect he was the Whitechapel murderer?

                    Regards,

                    Simon
                    Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

                    Comment


                    • Hi Simon,

                      We have no way of knowing how or when the family came to suspect Monty. It didn’t have to be at the time of the murders. For me the question is still - why did Macnaghten pick Druitt? He wasn’t compelled to. He would have had easier less problematical alternatives.
                      Regards

                      Sir Herlock Sholmes.

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

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by Simon Wood View Post
                        Hi Jon,

                        It's a much better plot than any of yours.

                        Regards,

                        Simon
                        Lol!

                        I don't recall spelling out any plots, but never mind tou·ché
                        Regards, Jon S.

                        Comment


                        • No one has claimed the family didn't have suspicions.What I say is that it is the only indication that anyone had suspicions about Druitt.As we do not know what was the nature of those suspicions,how can we evaluate those suspicions?Does the unknown equate to reasonable cause to suspect?

                          Comment


                          • We've only got Macnaghten's word for it that there were any family suspicions.
                            Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

                            Comment


                            • Exactly Simon,that is the first consideration,and that too is open to suspicion.Some will suspect one way,others another.

                              Comment


                              • Hi Herlock,

                                Why did Macnaghten pick Druitt?

                                Because there was nothing problematical about him. He was dead. He obligingly committed suicide at approximately the right time, although not "in bloodstained clothes" . . . "on the night of his last murder" [Farquharson, 1892], nor "at the time of the Miller's Court murder [MM, 1894]." And he was not "a man who at one time was engaged in rescue work among the depraved women of the East End . . ." [North Country Vicar, 1899].

                                Macnaghten picked Druitt. Anderson picked the Polish Jew. Two out of three from the memorandum, both police officers ignoring Ostrog who, in October 1894, received £10 compensation from the police for proving that he was in a French jail at the time of the Whitechapel murders.

                                It isn't rocket science.

                                Macnaghten is not to be trusted.

                                Regards,

                                Simon
                                Never believe anything until it has been officially denied.

                                Comment

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