Jon's response (post #43) is so boringly typical of people who don't have the humility to acknowledge that they have just been educated on a subject they are grossly ignorant about. Despite pretty much everyone else having the nous to appreciate that the "criminal mind" has not "evolved" in 125 poxy years, and despite experts in psychology and criminology knowing this full well, Jon sticks his head in the sand and insists he must be right. Because we're all part of this huge conspiracy - Douglas et al included - to make Hutchinson the ripper.
None of that makes the slightest scrap of difference to the basic, fundamental propensity of human beings to come forward and tell lies voluntarily when they think it might advance their cause to do so. The Victorians weren't apes or cavemen, Jon. The human capacity for self-preservation hasn't changed one iota, and nor has the urge to act on it. If anything, modern advances in technology and forensics (and the fact that this trait is well-documented today) ought to act as a deterrent to modern offenders coming forward, and yet we know it doesn't.
Arguments such as these only play into the hands of those devilish "Hutchinsonians". Of course you're not likely to encounter evidence of 19th century killers injecting themselves into their own investigations. For that to happen, the police investigating those cases had to have recognised that one of the seemingly innocent witnesses (or one of the apparently bogus, publicity-seeking ones) was the real killer coming forward under a false guise, and out of self-preservation. But the whole point is that they would not have made this connection because there was no established precedent for such behaviour in an era when policing as an organized body was in its infancy. The reality, therefore, is that many unsolved murders from the 19th century may have been committed by men who came forward as witnesses.
The absence of records from the 19th century is more an indication that the "killer-witnesses" were getting away with it in an unenlightened era, than it is an indication that it didn't happen at all because the "human brain" was less "evolved" back then. If you found me a single instance of a 19th century killer behaving in the way I've described, and were able to demonstrate that Abberline would probably have known about it, I would no longer be justified in arguing that he was oblivious to the very possibility of Hutchinson being the culprit. At the moment, all you're doing is lending support to that argument.
Yes!
Blimey, progress at last.
You are correct. Publicity-seekers have always been a problem for the police. It was well-known behaviour, unlike killers coming forward as witnesses, which according to you was unheard of in the 19th century. Can you now finally, finally, understand that if the police detected problems with Hutchinson's account, they were far more likely to dismiss him as a publicity-seeker (which had "always been a problem for the police") than accuse him of being the real killer? If, not, tough, because that's the corner you've just argued yourself into.
I suggest you read my Casebook Examiner article, in which I expound several cases of serial killers approaching the police under the false guises of witness and informers. I'm not going to reproduce the entire article here at your behest. This thread is supposed to be discussing the contention that Hutchinson read the Times. Toddle off and find a Hutchinson-as-suspect argument if you want to lose another one of those.
The alternative is to argue that the characteristics of the criminal mind, the choices made, the influence of a changing society, the advances of technology, the progressions of forensic sciences, have had no impact whatsoever on the human brain and its decision making process.
The evidence that a 19th century killer had approached the police and posed as a witness to inject himself into the case working along with the police should be easy enough to locate given the extensive records of 19th century criminal cases in England.
The absence of records from the 19th century is more an indication that the "killer-witnesses" were getting away with it in an unenlightened era, than it is an indication that it didn't happen at all because the "human brain" was less "evolved" back then. If you found me a single instance of a 19th century killer behaving in the way I've described, and were able to demonstrate that Abberline would probably have known about it, I would no longer be justified in arguing that he was oblivious to the very possibility of Hutchinson being the culprit. At the moment, all you're doing is lending support to that argument.
The potential for a witness to waste police time has always been problem for the police. Though the tendency in the 19th century was to seek out a reporter. Publicity was their aim, and the press were always an easy target.
Blimey, progress at last.
You are correct. Publicity-seekers have always been a problem for the police. It was well-known behaviour, unlike killers coming forward as witnesses, which according to you was unheard of in the 19th century. Can you now finally, finally, understand that if the police detected problems with Hutchinson's account, they were far more likely to dismiss him as a publicity-seeker (which had "always been a problem for the police") than accuse him of being the real killer? If, not, tough, because that's the corner you've just argued yourself into.
So, if I am being told that Hutchinson conducted himself in the same way as a modern killer is known to have done, then such a claim needs to be supported by sources.
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