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Your not going to ''Get back into it'' Herlock because then youd have to address some of the points ive made in my last post, which you just casually brushed aside . The fact [ and its blatantly obvious] remains Herlock ,you have a disliking of anything i happen to have an opinion on, especially where Druitt is concerned .
You didn’t make any points in your last post Fishy and the post before that you only posted the scores that you would have awarded to the three suspects names. Every other poster who has suggested amendments to the list has given their reasoning behind those suggestions but not you. You simply posted the scores with no explanation.
Like i said, ive done more than enough research using on the evidence from multiple sources pertaining to the likes of Druitt , Sickert and Gull. [as well as other suspects] Now based on the scoring system you yourself provided and invited others to comment on, i gave my honest opinion . This only bothers you because its Fishy1118 and not someone else. !
Firstly, you said that Druitt was one of the three worst suspects, only then when I pressed you on this point, you added something about ‘regularly discussed on here.’ Your original point was very clearly intended to put Druitt below all other suspects which, no matter our opinions, cannot be considered valid because it would place him lower than the ‘silly’ suspects.
Secondly Fishy, I don’t base my opinion on the poster who gives it. Over the last few years I’ve lost count of the amount of times when a thread entirely unconnected to Druitt has been in progress and of all of the suspects you’ve managed to bring Druitt into it. No one else does this. If Steve Blomer was posting about the GSG you don’t see me jumping in and adding ‘and poor suspects like Kosminski (not that I think that he’s a poor suspect of course) Or if John Wheat is posting on a thread about Berner Street that I say ‘that’s about as likely as Bury being the ripper,’ but this is what keeps occurring from you where Druitt is concerned. Forget all of the other suspects because you keep homing in on Druitt for some reason (and I can only guess that reason). I wouldn’t mind but I’ve never once in my entire life said that he was the ripper. Why don’t you just finally let it go Fishy. If you want to discuss Druitt there are enough threads or you could even start your own.
I know it ,you know it , and im reasonably sure others do to .
The half a dozen that have contacted me say otherwise.
As for '' Winding you Up ' I hardly need do such a thing, as you seem to do a pretty good job of that all by yourself whenever the topic is Druitt related .
I don’t get wound up over Druitt because he’s not particularly important to me. I do find it irritating when others get so irate when any mention of his name occurs. Very few suspects cause such heightened feeling for some inexplicable reason. All sense of balance flies out of the window. I can only think that, in your case, it’s because of some issue that you have with me.
I tend to think that your irritation is due to the fact that the Stephen Knight theory has been thoroughly discredited and that you are a little annoyed? embarrassed? to be the only person still flying the flag and you can’t fail to realise the position that it puts you in when evaluating suspects. Perhaps you should approach the subject of suspects less like a football team that requires your support?
Funny how you elevated Druitt ''Location'' to a '2' only for that which can be argued ''Well he could been there'' so thats all that matters . Well then so could have Sickert or Gull for that matter .
Totally wrong Fishy. I don’t alter the points at random. The list is totally unbiased as I’ve proven by listening to every point made and by making changes where appropriate. I’ll explain (which I would have done anyway if you had simply asked) When I began this I was determined that no one should feel that I was being biased for or against any suspect. I was particularly wary considering my own interest in Druitt. So I wanted to be as strict as possible with him to the extent that if a particular point was debatable i would err against awarding the point. The day before the Nichols murder Druitt was down south playing cricket and a few thought it unlikely that he would have travelled back so I deducted a point for that. But then, on rethinking, I saw that I was being too harsh. The scoring system wasn’t meant to conclude that a mere one off, easily achievable train journey should cost a point so I reinstated it. It’s barely made any difference though and the purpose of my list wasn’t to form a league table of likely suspects it was merely to see how individual suspects stacked up against a tick box list of regularly discussed attributes.
I’m not going to get back into this Fishy. If you want me to spend the time looking back at how many times you’ve taken the opportunity without prompting to leap in with a Druitt-related dig I can do it. You focus on Druitt for one reason only because you have the misguided opinion that I somehow promote Druitt as a suspect and so by digging at him you feel that you have a ‘safe’ way of indirectly having a dig at me. I know it, you know it, everyone that can read knows it. I’ve lost count of the times I’ve been contacted privately telling me to ignore you because you’re simply trying to ‘wind me up.’ I’ve explained my position on Druitt two or three hundred times but obviously it makes no difference.
Ive just looked at Druitt again. I was too harsh on him. So I’ve amended it to the score that I was originally going to give him.
Kelly > 2 - 2 - 4 - 2 - 2 - 1 - 0 = 13
Bury > 2 - 2 - 4 - 0 - 2 - 1 - 0 = 11
Cutbush > 2 - 2 - 3 - 2 - 0 - 1 - 0 = 10
Hyams > 2 - 2 - 3 - 2 - 0 - 0 - 0 = 9
Kosminski 2 - 2 - 1 - 2 - 1 - 0 - 0 = 8
Grainger > 2 - 1 - 3 - 0 - 1 - 1 - 0 = 8
Chapman > 2 - 2 - 1 - 0 - 1 - 0 - 1 = 7
Tumblety > 1 - 1 - 0 - 0 - 2 - 2 - 1 = 7
Thompson > 2 - 2 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 1 - 1 = 6
Barnado > 2 - 2 - 0 - 1 - 0 - 1 - 0 = 6
Cohen > 2 - 2 - 1 - 1 - 0 - 0 - 0 = 6
Levy > 2 - 2 - 0 - 1 - 0 - 0 - 1 = 6
Druitt > 2 - 2 - 0 -1 - 1 - 0 = 6
Barnett > 2 - 2 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 1 - 0 = 5
Stephen > 2 - 1 - 0 - 2 - 0 - 0 - 0 = 5
Stephenson > 2 - 1 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 1 = 4
Bachert > 2 - 2 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 = 4
Cross > 2 - 2 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 = 4
Hardiman > 2 - 2 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 = 4
Hutchinson > 2 - 2 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 = 4
Mann > 2 - 2 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 = 4
Gull > 1 - 1 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 1 = 3
Maybrick > 2 - 1 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 = 3
Sickert > 2 - 1 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 = 3
If it could be shown that it was reasonably possible that they were in England…
Deeming 2 - 1 - 4 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 = 7
Feigenbaum 2 - 1 - 4 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 = 7
Your not going to ''Get back into it'' Herlock because then youd have to address some of the points ive made in my last post, which you just casually brushed aside . The fact [ and its blatantly obvious] remains Herlock ,you have a disliking of anything i happen to have an opinion on, especially where Druitt is concerned .
Like i said, ive done more than enough research using on the evidence from multiple sources pertaining to the likes of Druitt , Sickert and Gull. [as well as other suspects] Now based on the scoring system you yourself provided and invited others to comment on, i gave my honest opinion . This only bothers you because its Fishy1118 and not someone else. !
I know it ,you know it , and im reasonably sure others do to .
As for '' Winding you Up ' I hardly need do such a thing, as you seem to do a pretty good job of that all by yourself whenever the topic is Druitt related .
Funny how you elevated Druitt ''Location'' to a '2' only for that which can be argued ''Well he could been there'' so thats all that matters . Well then so could have Sickert or Gull for that matter .
You're welcome Herlock. BTW, when I made that post, I didn't notice that George had just posted about Deeming, so if I said anything that was redundant after George's post, that's why.
Using this method of awarding points for mental illness, I would still give David Cohen a 2 for mental illness. Here are 2 links mentioning his violence:
I think it is at least reasonably possible that Deeming was in England at the time, and the only question is whether it is merely reasonably possible, or that it's more like a strong likelihood. In the rest of this post, I'm quoting Paul Begg from page 91 of Ripperologist 142:
The entry for Frederick Bailey Deeming in the current Jack the Ripper A to Z is depressingly short and dismissive, possibly because Martin Fido thought Deeming was in jail when the Ripper crimes were committed and Keith Skinner thought he was in South Africa. Begg was probably staring blankly into space, dribbling slightly, and entertaining no opinion about anything at all. Other writers such as Melvin Harris, Colin Wilson, Robin Odell, Donald Rumbelow and Stewart Evans also accepted that Deeming was abroad or in prison at the time.
But he wasn’t.
In 2011 there was a pretty dire Discovery Channel documentary, Jack the Ripper: The Australian Suspect, in which a trenchcoat-wearing former Scotland Yard detective named Robin Napper showed that Deeming was in Britain at the time of the Ripper murders. You may recall that this was the documentary that featured the famous Eddowes shawl being tested for DNA and showed that the DNA retrieved from the gummed back of the stamp on the Openshaw letter belonged to a woman. Somehow this swirling documentary concluded that Deeming ticked all the boxes to be Jack the Ripper and that all Napper needed was the DNA of Deeming’s murdered wife to clinch and close the case, which was a stretch even by the standards of TV documentary makers.
Anyway, the point is that the author this book, Roger Millington, had already discovered that Deeming was in England when the Ripper murders were committed, but it was in 2011 that he learned he had prostate cancer. He died in 2013 and the finished manuscript of this book was found among his papers.
I didn’t come to this book with any great enthusiasm, but it is an excellent and very readable account of the life of Frederick Bailey Deeming, who killed his wife and his four children at Rainhill, Liverpool, and his second wife, Emily Mather, at Windsor, Melbourne, Australia, and otherwise lived the life as a conman and fraudster. According to Millington, it was a detective named Brant who expressed his belief that Deeming was responsible for a triple murder in Johannesburg in September 1888 and thus scotched the idea that Deeming was Jack the Ripper. But the triple murder was committed in February 1888, so Deeming could have been in England to commit the two Ripper murders he confessed to.
According to Millington, Deeming was in Plymouth in early September 1888 and left there on 27 September 1888. He was using the name Lawson. The Double Event was two days later.
You are probably already aware of the dressmaker's identification of Deeming's trial photo as a man with whom she had spent some time on the night of the double event, and who talked excitedly about it the next day. Easy to write off as attention seeking, but she didn't name him as Deeming, but as Mr Lawson, a frequently used known alias of Deeming. How many other persons of interest can be identified as having been in Whitechapel on the night of a murder? Curious that Deeming's last impersonation in Australia was as Baron Swanson?
The other find is the transcript of a court case from 1892 where Deeming stated that he had contracted syphilis from a prostitute who had made a useless man of him for two years, it was right to kill such, he would have killed her, and intended to kill her, and he would not have thought it murder as she deserved it.
The other discovery came from the Crime Museum at Scotland Yard, where Deeming's death mask was on display as the face of Jack the Ripper.
Perhaps Deeming needs a boost in categories 2, 4, 5 and 6?
The other thing I noticed is that your list doesn't include G Wentworth Bell Smith.
I’ll certainly have another look at Deeming later today. The fairly recent book on him is another that I have on my ‘to read again’ list (which I never seem to get to) I’m grateful that you mentioned GWBS but annoyed with myself for missing him in the Morley book. An error compounded by the fact that during my earlier ‘ripper years’ I felt him a good suspect. He’s also been mentioned recently by someone on here but I’m unsure who. All look at his entry when I give Deeming another look.
I wasn’t going by ‘certified insane’, I was using a vague ‘mental health’ issues angle and dividing them between violent and non-violent. So for Druitt it was his suicide with note thinking that he might end up like his mother, who was in an asylum. Stephen should have been a 1 as you rightly pointed out so I’ve changed it.
It’s interesting that you should mention James Kelly in another post Robert. I’ve been intending for about 3 years to re-read Tully’s book but I haven’t got there yet. I only read it once, when it first came out. I was looking through my stuff a few months ago and came across John Morrison’s pamphlet Jimmy Kelly’s Year of the Ripper Murders.
Hi Herlock,
Using this method of awarding points for mental illness, I would still give David Cohen a 2 for mental illness. Here are 2 links mentioning his violence:
I think it is at least reasonably possible that Deeming was in England at the time, and the only question is whether it is merely reasonably possible, or that it's more like a strong likelihood. In the rest of this post, I'm quoting Paul Begg from page 91 of Ripperologist 142:
The entry for Frederick Bailey Deeming in the current Jack the Ripper A to Z is depressingly short and dismissive, possibly because Martin Fido thought Deeming was in jail when the Ripper crimes were committed and Keith Skinner thought he was in South Africa. Begg was probably staring blankly into space, dribbling slightly, and entertaining no opinion about anything at all. Other writers such as Melvin Harris, Colin Wilson, Robin Odell, Donald Rumbelow and Stewart Evans also accepted that Deeming was abroad or in prison at the time.
But he wasn’t.
In 2011 there was a pretty dire Discovery Channel documentary, Jack the Ripper: The Australian Suspect, in which a trenchcoat-wearing former Scotland Yard detective named Robin Napper showed that Deeming was in Britain at the time of the Ripper murders. You may recall that this was the documentary that featured the famous Eddowes shawl being tested for DNA and showed that the DNA retrieved from the gummed back of the stamp on the Openshaw letter belonged to a woman. Somehow this swirling documentary concluded that Deeming ticked all the boxes to be Jack the Ripper and that all Napper needed was the DNA of Deeming’s murdered wife to clinch and close the case, which was a stretch even by the standards of TV documentary makers.
Anyway, the point is that the author this book, Roger Millington, had already discovered that Deeming was in England when the Ripper murders were committed, but it was in 2011 that he learned he had prostate cancer. He died in 2013 and the finished manuscript of this book was found among his papers.
I didn’t come to this book with any great enthusiasm, but it is an excellent and very readable account of the life of Frederick Bailey Deeming, who killed his wife and his four children at Rainhill, Liverpool, and his second wife, Emily Mather, at Windsor, Melbourne, Australia, and otherwise lived the life as a conman and fraudster. According to Millington, it was a detective named Brant who expressed his belief that Deeming was responsible for a triple murder in Johannesburg in September 1888 and thus scotched the idea that Deeming was Jack the Ripper. But the triple murder was committed in February 1888, so Deeming could have been in England to commit the two Ripper murders he confessed to.
According to Millington, Deeming was in Plymouth in early September 1888 and left there on 27 September 1888. He was using the name Lawson. The Double Event was two days later.
You are probably already aware of the dressmaker's identification of Deeming's trial photo as a man with whom she had spent some time on the night of the double event, and who talked excitedly about it the next day. Easy to write off as attention seeking, but she didn't name him as Deeming, but as Mr Lawson, a frequently used known alias of Deeming. How many other persons of interest can be identified as having been in Whitechapel on the night of a murder? Curious that Deeming's last impersonation in Australia was as Baron Swanson?
The other find is the transcript of a court case from 1892 where Deeming stated that he had contracted syphilis from a prostitute who had made a useless man of him for two years, it was right to kill such, he would have killed her, and intended to kill her, and he would not have thought it murder as she deserved it.
The other discovery came from the Crime Museum at Scotland Yard, where Deeming's death mask was on display as the face of Jack the Ripper.
Perhaps Deeming needs a boost in categories 2, 4, 5 and 6?
The other thing I noticed is that your list doesn't include G Wentworth Bell Smith.
Im thinking that I should award him a point for medical knowledge though. He never qualified as a Doctor but he registered as a medical student at the London Hospital in 1967 so it looks like he would have had at least some training and surely anatomy would have been an early part of any training? Morley says that it was said that he took a keen interest in anatomy (again with no source though)
Im thinking that I should award him a point for medical knowledge though. He never qualified as a Doctor but he registered as a medical student at the London Hospital in 1967 so it looks like he would have had at least some training and surely anatomy would have been an early part of any training? Morley says that it was said that he took a keen interest in anatomy (again with no source though)
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