Originally posted by TomTomKent
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Three things in life that don't stay hidden for to long ones the sun ones the moon and the other is the truth
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Originally posted by pinkmoon View PostHi tomtom,I think the conclusion from this must be that there wasn't any real evidence against Druitt or kosminski <SNIP>.
We have evidence indicating there was possibly a witness identification of a suspect as well as the evidence that placed the suspect under investigation, but we can not conclude a lack of evidence.
If we do not have information to hand it is far wiser to state we have no grounds to reach a conclusion than to simply conclude the data would be a negative result. At best we can state that none of the available theories overcome a null.There Will Be Trouble! http://www.amazon.co.uk/A-Little-Tro...s=T.+E.+Hodden
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Originally posted by pinkmoon View PostHi tomtom,I think the conclusion from this must be that there wasn't any real evidence against Druitt or kosminski I think Druitt is the most tantalising because of this "private information" and also the story of the killer drowning himself in the Thames appeared a few weeks after the Kelly murder.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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Originally posted by TomTomKent View Post
But if we take your above measure into account, we can flip the coin over. Why did Anderson describe a Jewish suspect that Swanson called Kosminski, if Druitt was such a good subject?
No surviving paperwork indicates the police collectively held one single opinion towards any suspect.
And, even though Swanson named Kosminski, his careful choice of words can easily indicate that he was not offering his own opinion, but merely clarifying Anderson's opinion.
Swanson never voiced an opinion on the identity of the murderer.Regards, Jon S.
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But we also have to seriously consider these suspects as the police clearly knew more than we do 125 years later. We can't just cast them aside.G U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostThe police opinions (Anderson, Macnaghten, Littlechild, Abberline, etc.), are all private opinions, not official police opinion.
No surviving paperwork indicates the police collectively held one single opinion towards any suspect.
And, even though Swanson named Kosminski, his careful choice of words can easily indicate that he was not offering his own opinion, but merely clarifying Anderson's opinion.
Swanson never voiced an opinion on the identity of the murderer.There Will Be Trouble! http://www.amazon.co.uk/A-Little-Tro...s=T.+E.+Hodden
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Originally posted by GUT View PostBut we also have to seriously consider these suspects as the police clearly knew more than we do 125 years later. We can't just cast them aside.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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G'Day Tom
I would need some serious convincing before I could accept that there is a person alive today, 125 years after the event and given all the material no longer in existence, that knows more than any senior officer alive at the time of the crime.G U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
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Arguably not.
That Swanson was likely to have said this to a reporter of the 'Pall Mall Gazatte' is strengthened by what he wrote to himself in 1910, or thereabouts, in a copy of his beloved ex-chief's memoirs.
He names the likely Ripper, "Kosminski", and also that he died "shortly aferwards" (eg. shortly after being incarcerated in a mental institution).
In 1895, for the first time in the extant record, Dr. Anderson began to speak (in his case to Major Griffiths under his alias Alfred Aylmer) of a major suspect who was safely caged after being on the prowl for the weeks of the murders (the police chief does not say the man was deceased, but his son in his later biog. of his parents decribes the Polish suspect as being incarcerated and then dying.)
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The PMG is not a primary source, it is a second-hand opinion, therefore hearsay.
The PMG article raises the question of who informed the PMG reporter of Swanson's opinion, and was it true?
In 1895 Swanson was still Chief Inspector with no cause to talk to the press about an unsolved series of murders.
The article should be viewed with suspicion.Regards, Jon S.
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