Originally posted by PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR 1
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Not to say those three random names were ever real suspects, the meaning was they are/were as remote a suspect as you could find.
I'm not sure if that works, because aside from Ostrog, the other two had some cause, even if after the fact, and to some extent misguided?, to be regarded as suspects.
So, I don't see how that interpretation works.
Funny thing is, as Druitt was the first real suspect that researchers got their teeth into, I think it would be terrific if he turned out to be the real JtR, and it still is not out of the question. Not one researcher has been able to find something that eliminates him as a potential suspect.
With Kozminski this is also true, but his mental state in 1888, according to existing records, shows a perfectly normal person. It's his illness that is the most qualifying factor, but that condition is only apparent later in life after the murders. And we know he was not Anderson's personal suspect up to Oct. 1888, as he declared in writing there were no suspects. Kozminski was only 23 in 1888, far too young to fit the few good witness descriptions in the case.
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