Very good points there, Sally.
And my grateful thanks to Garry, first for steering the thread back on track, but more crucially for identifying the most chief militating factor against the wrong-night hypothesis.
Hi Lechmere,
Do you have any evidence that the police investigating the Whitechapel murders were in the habit on paying witnesses just for announcing themselves as such, in spite of the fact that their content was for the most part impossible to verify? I would be astonished if this turned out to be the case. Hutchinson would have been obliged to accompany the police round the district if it was requested of him, or else they were in a position to accuse him, with considerable justification, of wasting police time. The account you’re referring to which involved a policeman stopping a man emerging from an alley appeared in an article written several years after the murders and posthumously attributed to Sgt. Stephen White. It is almost certainly fictional.
I’d argue the reverse. Serial killers inserting themselves into investigations is a phenomenon that at least has some historical precedent, whereas I’ve yet to find a single example of someone falsely assuming the identity of someone seen by a witness, whilst still claiming to be a witness themselves.
He probably did notice Sarah Lewis, but may well have reasoned at the time that she was unlikely to have referred to the loiterer specifically or even provide any evidence at all. Besides, if Hutchinson was responsible for the murder, we have no idea how mentally or emotionally “committed” he would have been to the task ahead at the time of the sighting. I contend that he only came forward in response to this particular sighting because it was the first one since the newly adopted policy of suppressing witness descriptions; a ploy introduced at the Eddowes inquest. If Lawende’s description did not reflect its full extent, the same could well be true of Lewis’, for all Hutchinson knew. The Lawende sighting took place in the City, further away, and Lawende himself lived in relatively far-flung Dalston, unlike Lewis, whose sighting was made a few hundred yards away from the Victoria Home.
My suspicion, however, is that a sense of bravado and the opportunity to keep appraised of police progress played just as much of a role as Lewis did.
We don’t know whether or not the ripper claimed any more victims after Kelly, but we know that serial killers are capable of stopping without any major exerting influence. Having said that, experts well-versed in criminology, such as John Douglas, have claimed that: “Generally, crimes such as these cease because the perpetrator has come close to being identified, has been interviewed by the police, or has been arrested for some other offense."
I strongly disagree, and it’s not a case of “adding” him as a suspect either. More books have been written naming Hutchinson as the most likely candidate than any other suspect, and that was true even before I became interested in the subject.
All the best,
Ben
And my grateful thanks to Garry, first for steering the thread back on track, but more crucially for identifying the most chief militating factor against the wrong-night hypothesis.
Hi Lechmere,
Do you have any evidence that the police investigating the Whitechapel murders were in the habit on paying witnesses just for announcing themselves as such, in spite of the fact that their content was for the most part impossible to verify? I would be astonished if this turned out to be the case. Hutchinson would have been obliged to accompany the police round the district if it was requested of him, or else they were in a position to accuse him, with considerable justification, of wasting police time. The account you’re referring to which involved a policeman stopping a man emerging from an alley appeared in an article written several years after the murders and posthumously attributed to Sgt. Stephen White. It is almost certainly fictional.
“but again that provides a trigger for him as a fraudulent witness on the make just as much (more as it is a more commonplace act) as a serial killer inserting himself in the investigation.”
He probably did notice Sarah Lewis, but may well have reasoned at the time that she was unlikely to have referred to the loiterer specifically or even provide any evidence at all. Besides, if Hutchinson was responsible for the murder, we have no idea how mentally or emotionally “committed” he would have been to the task ahead at the time of the sighting. I contend that he only came forward in response to this particular sighting because it was the first one since the newly adopted policy of suppressing witness descriptions; a ploy introduced at the Eddowes inquest. If Lawende’s description did not reflect its full extent, the same could well be true of Lewis’, for all Hutchinson knew. The Lawende sighting took place in the City, further away, and Lawende himself lived in relatively far-flung Dalston, unlike Lewis, whose sighting was made a few hundred yards away from the Victoria Home.
My suspicion, however, is that a sense of bravado and the opportunity to keep appraised of police progress played just as much of a role as Lewis did.
We don’t know whether or not the ripper claimed any more victims after Kelly, but we know that serial killers are capable of stopping without any major exerting influence. Having said that, experts well-versed in criminology, such as John Douglas, have claimed that: “Generally, crimes such as these cease because the perpetrator has come close to being identified, has been interviewed by the police, or has been arrested for some other offense."
“but this is just adding another suspect who hasn’t got much going for him.”
All the best,
Ben
Comment