You're still missing the crucial point regarding the Hutchinson-Violenia comparison. Whether it was true or not, Violenia claimed to have been near a crime scene at a time relevant to the time of death. The police dismissed him as a false witness but did not consider him a suspect. Since the exact same details were true of Hutchinson, it logically follows that he never became a suspect either. The precedent for the treatment of false witness had been established way in advance of Violenia coming forward, and Hutchinson was almost certainly dismissed as a publicity/money-seeker, without the possibility of his culpability in the crimes ever being considered.
I can't believe that anyone can be of this opinion.
You seem to have some inexplicable trouble distinguishing between suspicion and resolved suspicion. The latter is an elusive commodity even in modern serial killer investigations, but for some reason you believe that the 1888 police had some trusty barometer for determining the guilt or innocence of anyone they suspected. This is many, many long sea miles away from reality, I can assure you. The police would have been utterly deluged with suggested suspects who all needed to be investigated as far their limited resources would allow. There would have been hundreds of suspects whose innocence was never confirmed, and the only reason the Macnaghten three were mentioned were because they were among the few that were considered any good.
Unfortunately, the perceived legitimacy of certain suspects very clearly boiled down to the personal views of some of the senior officials concerned. It is clear, for example, that certain out-dated views as to why a series of brutal murders might end influenced some people's views as to which suspects merited attention, and local gentile men with no recorded history of mental illness or criminal behaviour were seldom considered.
If Hutchinson was ever considered a suspect, which is unlikely, the chances of him being mentioned as such in later memoirs were clearly very slim.
All the best,
Ben
It is not obviously wrong that there were no other unexonerated suspects– show me how it is wrong.
You seem to have some inexplicable trouble distinguishing between suspicion and resolved suspicion. The latter is an elusive commodity even in modern serial killer investigations, but for some reason you believe that the 1888 police had some trusty barometer for determining the guilt or innocence of anyone they suspected. This is many, many long sea miles away from reality, I can assure you. The police would have been utterly deluged with suggested suspects who all needed to be investigated as far their limited resources would allow. There would have been hundreds of suspects whose innocence was never confirmed, and the only reason the Macnaghten three were mentioned were because they were among the few that were considered any good.
Unfortunately, the perceived legitimacy of certain suspects very clearly boiled down to the personal views of some of the senior officials concerned. It is clear, for example, that certain out-dated views as to why a series of brutal murders might end influenced some people's views as to which suspects merited attention, and local gentile men with no recorded history of mental illness or criminal behaviour were seldom considered.
If Hutchinson was ever considered a suspect, which is unlikely, the chances of him being mentioned as such in later memoirs were clearly very slim.
All the best,
Ben
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