Because no such elaboration is needed, and obscures what is a straight-through line between the primary sources of 1889, 1891 and 1914.
Macnaghten refers to the family believing in Montague's guilt because he was, definitely, 'sexually insane': eg. he obtained sexual fulfillment from violence.
In 2008, the politician of the 'West of England' MP story was indentified as Tory MP, Henry Farquharson, a near-neighbour of the original Druitt homestead (Vicar Charles Druitt, Montie's cousin, was still in the region). The Druitts were also Tories. The M.P. was a mmeber of the Olb Boy Network -- in tbis case the Etonian wing -- like Melville Macnaghten.
Identifying the MP proved that a likely bridge could now be found between Mac's report(s) of 1894 and the 1889 reports of Druitt's inexplicable suicide.
This shattered an earlier theory that Mac perhaps had mixed up Druitt with other suspects, as he seemed to know so little about him that was accurate.
That Druitt being a Ripper susoect, at all, begins with Macnaghten in the extant record.
In fact, belief -- rightly or wrongly -- in Montie's culpability emerged, as Macnaghten had written for file, among his family as the 1891 source arguably establishes. Mac had confirmed this, albeit more obliquely, in his memoirs too.
The notion that the police knew at the time of Druitt's death that he was the Ripper and that Kelly was the final victim, is a lie that Mac foisted on the public via Griffiths and Sims. The real investigation included 'Ripper' murders after Kelly (Coles was originally the final victim).
In his own memoirs Macnaghten admitted that it was not until 'some years after' (the MP story is from early 1891) that the likely real fiend, long dead, came to 'police' attention, though all other surviving sources strongly suggest that this was known only to Mac at Scotland Yard.
Macnaghten refers to the family believing in Montague's guilt because he was, definitely, 'sexually insane': eg. he obtained sexual fulfillment from violence.
In 2008, the politician of the 'West of England' MP story was indentified as Tory MP, Henry Farquharson, a near-neighbour of the original Druitt homestead (Vicar Charles Druitt, Montie's cousin, was still in the region). The Druitts were also Tories. The M.P. was a mmeber of the Olb Boy Network -- in tbis case the Etonian wing -- like Melville Macnaghten.
Identifying the MP proved that a likely bridge could now be found between Mac's report(s) of 1894 and the 1889 reports of Druitt's inexplicable suicide.
This shattered an earlier theory that Mac perhaps had mixed up Druitt with other suspects, as he seemed to know so little about him that was accurate.
That Druitt being a Ripper susoect, at all, begins with Macnaghten in the extant record.
In fact, belief -- rightly or wrongly -- in Montie's culpability emerged, as Macnaghten had written for file, among his family as the 1891 source arguably establishes. Mac had confirmed this, albeit more obliquely, in his memoirs too.
The notion that the police knew at the time of Druitt's death that he was the Ripper and that Kelly was the final victim, is a lie that Mac foisted on the public via Griffiths and Sims. The real investigation included 'Ripper' murders after Kelly (Coles was originally the final victim).
In his own memoirs Macnaghten admitted that it was not until 'some years after' (the MP story is from early 1891) that the likely real fiend, long dead, came to 'police' attention, though all other surviving sources strongly suggest that this was known only to Mac at Scotland Yard.
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