To Mr. Holmes
If you mean a 'credible suspect' from the point of view of evidence which could stand up to either science or in a court of law, then nobody is a credible suspect. There is no such evidence against anybody now, and perhaps not then either -- at least not after Druitt coolly took his own life.
On the other hand, from the point of view of historical methodology [provisional] arguments can be mounted for the probable guilt of certain police suspects because of what those policeman, who were there, claimed about them.
Since those significant police figures mostly chose different suspects, then that leaves two possibilities; they were all wrong, or one was right and the others wrong. A comprehensive theory has to plausibly explain why the other police were mistaken or did not agree.
For example an argument like this:
Sir Robert Anderson, the dedicated, pious and incorruptible head of CID, is likely to be the best source, and his opinion is backed by Donald Swanson, the modest, dependable operational head of the case.
Sure, Sir Melville Macnaghten (who was not there in 1888) did not agree with their choice of 'Kosminski' but he seems to have been misinformed about his own preferred suspect, Druitt, so that makes him, arguably, a less reliable source. Scoffing field detectives such as Abberline and Reid were not privy to the closely held knowledge about the Polish Jew suspect, and so their dismissals of this suspect can in themselves be dismissed.
This nutshell summary above can all be countered (Anderson thought his suspect was deceased whereas Macnaghten knew 'Kosminski' was still alive; Anderson mistakenly thought his suspect was 'safely caged' after 'mere weeks' on the prowl, whereas Macnaghten arguably knew it was a long, long time before he was sectioned) and the veracity of such alternate, competing arguments -- or lack of -- is in the eye of the beholder.
I argue that Montague Druitt is the best Ripper suspect, unlikely as he seems, because claims about his guilt apparently came from his own lips. The family of lawyers and doctors judged him not to be delusional but 'Jack', as posthumously did an MP, the people he told, and Sir Melville, a police chief. They had familial, class, and institutional prejudices-pressures to get the deceased Druitt off the hook, and yet each judged that they could not.
He was 'Jack'.
Could all these different people have been mistaken?
Sure, but that also seems unlikely.
Also, Druitt has nothing to do with 'anatomical knowledge' and Macnaghten made no such claim in his memoirs.
Also, the timing of Druitt's suicide was excruciatingly inconvenient -- eg. embarrassingly it did not fit -- as the murderer probably killed McKenzie (and maybe Mylett and the Pinchin St. Torso?) and, as late as Feb 1891, Frances Coles. The latter was thought by certain police (arguably Swanson) to be the true, final victim of Jack the Ripper.
When Mac found Druitt in 1891 his self-murder was too early. It would mean that poor Mary Kelly, all the way back in Nov 1888, was the final victim of this murderer. As he writes in his memoirs, they had been chasing a phantom (whom he 'laid' to rest).
Some will never absorb the notion, explicit in the primary sources of 1888-1889-1890-1891 (and Mac in 1914), that the timing of Druitt's suicide cemented the canonical victims and not the other way round.
If you mean a 'credible suspect' from the point of view of evidence which could stand up to either science or in a court of law, then nobody is a credible suspect. There is no such evidence against anybody now, and perhaps not then either -- at least not after Druitt coolly took his own life.
On the other hand, from the point of view of historical methodology [provisional] arguments can be mounted for the probable guilt of certain police suspects because of what those policeman, who were there, claimed about them.
Since those significant police figures mostly chose different suspects, then that leaves two possibilities; they were all wrong, or one was right and the others wrong. A comprehensive theory has to plausibly explain why the other police were mistaken or did not agree.
For example an argument like this:
Sir Robert Anderson, the dedicated, pious and incorruptible head of CID, is likely to be the best source, and his opinion is backed by Donald Swanson, the modest, dependable operational head of the case.
Sure, Sir Melville Macnaghten (who was not there in 1888) did not agree with their choice of 'Kosminski' but he seems to have been misinformed about his own preferred suspect, Druitt, so that makes him, arguably, a less reliable source. Scoffing field detectives such as Abberline and Reid were not privy to the closely held knowledge about the Polish Jew suspect, and so their dismissals of this suspect can in themselves be dismissed.
This nutshell summary above can all be countered (Anderson thought his suspect was deceased whereas Macnaghten knew 'Kosminski' was still alive; Anderson mistakenly thought his suspect was 'safely caged' after 'mere weeks' on the prowl, whereas Macnaghten arguably knew it was a long, long time before he was sectioned) and the veracity of such alternate, competing arguments -- or lack of -- is in the eye of the beholder.
I argue that Montague Druitt is the best Ripper suspect, unlikely as he seems, because claims about his guilt apparently came from his own lips. The family of lawyers and doctors judged him not to be delusional but 'Jack', as posthumously did an MP, the people he told, and Sir Melville, a police chief. They had familial, class, and institutional prejudices-pressures to get the deceased Druitt off the hook, and yet each judged that they could not.
He was 'Jack'.
Could all these different people have been mistaken?
Sure, but that also seems unlikely.
Also, Druitt has nothing to do with 'anatomical knowledge' and Macnaghten made no such claim in his memoirs.
Also, the timing of Druitt's suicide was excruciatingly inconvenient -- eg. embarrassingly it did not fit -- as the murderer probably killed McKenzie (and maybe Mylett and the Pinchin St. Torso?) and, as late as Feb 1891, Frances Coles. The latter was thought by certain police (arguably Swanson) to be the true, final victim of Jack the Ripper.
When Mac found Druitt in 1891 his self-murder was too early. It would mean that poor Mary Kelly, all the way back in Nov 1888, was the final victim of this murderer. As he writes in his memoirs, they had been chasing a phantom (whom he 'laid' to rest).
Some will never absorb the notion, explicit in the primary sources of 1888-1889-1890-1891 (and Mac in 1914), that the timing of Druitt's suicide cemented the canonical victims and not the other way round.
Comment