Rubyretro;152418]I certainly agree that it's worth considering whether Hutch had a benign motive for dressing up his description of A Man or not. It's just that I see the
very strong Jewish angle to his description -because I think that he stressed the point almost too much (adding that detail in about Petticoat Lane). It COULD be 'innocent' in that the public and Police were biased towards a Jewish culprit for JtR, granted.[/QUOTE]Still, if you then look at the larger picture of the murder sites at Berner street and Mitre square and the apron piece in the building in Goulston Street, then
Hutch's description doesn't seem so innocent. That's not even taking into account Buck's Row and Hanbury street, and the anti-jewish fever suceeding
those events( We're going back to abby's original Post now).
Then if you look at the sites of the murders in relation to where Hutch lived,
modern 'profiles' of serial killers, and witnesses -he fits the bill.
Of course that could still all be innocent coincidences -which abound and confuse this case; Maybe the murderer was a complete unkown afterall. But how to explain why the murders suddenly stopped ?
As soon as you think that Hutch was the murderer then there is a logical explanation as to why the murders stopped (detailed earlier on in the Thread).
When you start thinking that Hutch may have been JtR, and then looking at his placing himself at the last murder site, in the right time frame, and Mrs Lewis's Statement appearing to corroborate it...it adds up.
I admit that it might be false deduction (2 +2 =5), but none of the other candidates such as Druitt or Tumblety or Chapman add up in this way for Me.
It just brings me back to Hutch or 'unknown'.
These were my first thoughts on reading the facts on Casebook, before I even knew that Garry, Bob, Ben etc existed.
I agree wholeheartedly with Joel Hall that it is great fun debating with people who disagree with your arguments, since it will either harden them or force you to reconsider them; I've had to change my mind or drop (for the moment !) alot of details -but no one has (yet !) convinced me of the fallacy of the basic premise.
(I can see that someone who had a book to defend might find it very important not to be proved wrong -but I don't actually care).
very strong Jewish angle to his description -because I think that he stressed the point almost too much (adding that detail in about Petticoat Lane). It COULD be 'innocent' in that the public and Police were biased towards a Jewish culprit for JtR, granted.[/QUOTE]Still, if you then look at the larger picture of the murder sites at Berner street and Mitre square and the apron piece in the building in Goulston Street, then
Hutch's description doesn't seem so innocent. That's not even taking into account Buck's Row and Hanbury street, and the anti-jewish fever suceeding
those events( We're going back to abby's original Post now).
Then if you look at the sites of the murders in relation to where Hutch lived,
modern 'profiles' of serial killers, and witnesses -he fits the bill.
Of course that could still all be innocent coincidences -which abound and confuse this case; Maybe the murderer was a complete unkown afterall. But how to explain why the murders suddenly stopped ?
As soon as you think that Hutch was the murderer then there is a logical explanation as to why the murders stopped (detailed earlier on in the Thread).
When you start thinking that Hutch may have been JtR, and then looking at his placing himself at the last murder site, in the right time frame, and Mrs Lewis's Statement appearing to corroborate it...it adds up.
I admit that it might be false deduction (2 +2 =5), but none of the other candidates such as Druitt or Tumblety or Chapman add up in this way for Me.
It just brings me back to Hutch or 'unknown'.
These were my first thoughts on reading the facts on Casebook, before I even knew that Garry, Bob, Ben etc existed.
I agree wholeheartedly with Joel Hall that it is great fun debating with people who disagree with your arguments, since it will either harden them or force you to reconsider them; I've had to change my mind or drop (for the moment !) alot of details -but no one has (yet !) convinced me of the fallacy of the basic premise.
(I can see that someone who had a book to defend might find it very important not to be proved wrong -but I don't actually care).
Comment