Hi Jon,
I’m afraid that’s just arrogant nonsense. But even if your comments were sincerely meant (which they aren’t), as opposed to being yet another unsubtle extension of your crusade to ensure that the ripper is a well-dressed medical man with a Gladstone bag (which it is), why would you “repeat” them? In the hope, perhaps, that I won’t do what I’ve always done when you resort to repetition, and respond with counter-repetition of my own? How do you envisage your strategy of repetition and attrition working out for you in the long run, incidentally? I’d be fascinated to know.
So where’s the evidence that Joseph Lawende was grilled as a suspect and thereafter exonerated as one? Where’s the evidence that Schwartz was viewed in that light? And what of Packer and Violenia? Where is the evidence that they were ever interrogated as suspects, once their accounts were adjudged to be bogus? You won’t find any for the simple reason that eyewitnesses were not considered “automatic suspects”, just as they aren’t today. It’s perfectly simple – if you have the slightest smidgeon of evidence to suggest that the police considered Hutchinson a potential Jack the Ripper, provide it, or at the very least explain why Abberline failed to make any reference to these suspicions in his internal police report.
The only suspicions Abberline were likely to have had regarding Hutchinson were that he may have been another fake "witness" seeking money or publicity, and the police had encountered more than their fair share of those during the course of the ripper investigation. Might Hutchinson have been considered a “person of interest” in that sense? Yes, certainly, but you can dispense with the idea that the police of 1888 ever considered the possibility of a voluntary witness being the real Jack the Ripper.
Your mind must be disturbingly easy to “boggle”.
I’d hazard a guess that you were completely unfamiliar with the concept until you decided to fixate about all things Hutchinson, and don’t forget there are plenty of ill-informed people, even today, who can’t quite get their heads around the concept of serial killers injecting themselves into their own police investigations. Take your lazy, unthinking hypocrisy for instance: first you claim that everyone, including yourself, is well acquainted with the concept of killers posing and witnesses, but then you insist that real offenders would not “walk into a police station bold as brass with some ****-and-bull story, that is the stuff of fiction.” Do try to think your arguments through more carefully – why would the 1888 police jump to the conclusion that Hutchinson might have been a serial killer posing as a witness when you insist that such behaviour is the “stuff of fiction”?
Nowadays, of course, the ghoulish hobbyist need only venture into the true crime section at Wasterstone’s for ready examples of this behavioural trait (and in doing so appreciate that it is based on documented fact, not the “stuff of fiction”), but for a nascent Victorian police force investigating a brand new phenomenon, i.e. serial murder, the idea of the most wanted man in all history wandering into the police station requesting an interview with a detective must have seemed a very remote prospect indeed.
I have no idea, and happily, that’s your problem – not mine.
I suggest that since serial murder was an unknown quantity for the Victorian police, they were very unlikely to have anticipated a strategy of subterfuge that even modern investigators find taxing to take on board. Expert criminologist and investigator John Douglas observed that a number of offenders were likely to have slipped the net this way because their pursuers did not know what to look for. Do you have any examples of serial killers pretending to be witnesses that predated 1888?
No, he didn’t.
He lied about doing so, according to the police. He claimed to have been in Hanbury Street in the small hours of the morning when the Chapman murder was supposed to have been committed, just as Hutchinson claimed to have been in Dorset Street in the small hours of the morning when the Kelly murder was supposed to have been committed. In neither case was the claim ultimately accepted as accurate or truthful, and in neither case was the bogus witness ever treated as a suspect. Or do you have evidence – actual evidence, as opposed to two-fold speculation – to suggest otherwise? You are demonstrably clueless on the subject of Violenia, by the way, and it’s more than a little painful to see you suggest that Violenia was a genuine witness who had seen “another couple”. In actual fact, he identified the man as Pizer, and claimed he threatened to kill his female companion by sticking his “knife in her”.
Silly you, yes, but more for misinterpreting what I'd hoped was a simple observation regarding these two discredited witnesses.
“I repeat that state of affairs because that is simply the way it is.”
“In any murder enquiry, in the absence of any other direct witness, the two people who garner the immediate attention of police are, first the 'companion/lover/spouse', and second, any person who claims to have been with the victim around the approximate time of the death.”
“All these circumstances are cause for Abberline to have suspicions, not solely as the killer, but the possibility cannot be excluded.”
“That is a mind-boggling statement to make.
You seem to be saying that, no-one has ever suspected that a killer could come forward posing as a witness to deceive the investigators?”
You seem to be saying that, no-one has ever suspected that a killer could come forward posing as a witness to deceive the investigators?”
I’d hazard a guess that you were completely unfamiliar with the concept until you decided to fixate about all things Hutchinson, and don’t forget there are plenty of ill-informed people, even today, who can’t quite get their heads around the concept of serial killers injecting themselves into their own police investigations. Take your lazy, unthinking hypocrisy for instance: first you claim that everyone, including yourself, is well acquainted with the concept of killers posing and witnesses, but then you insist that real offenders would not “walk into a police station bold as brass with some ****-and-bull story, that is the stuff of fiction.” Do try to think your arguments through more carefully – why would the 1888 police jump to the conclusion that Hutchinson might have been a serial killer posing as a witness when you insist that such behaviour is the “stuff of fiction”?
Nowadays, of course, the ghoulish hobbyist need only venture into the true crime section at Wasterstone’s for ready examples of this behavioural trait (and in doing so appreciate that it is based on documented fact, not the “stuff of fiction”), but for a nascent Victorian police force investigating a brand new phenomenon, i.e. serial murder, the idea of the most wanted man in all history wandering into the police station requesting an interview with a detective must have seemed a very remote prospect indeed.
“Precisely when did it first dawn on human imagination that a killer might pose as a witness to avoid detection?”
I suggest that since serial murder was an unknown quantity for the Victorian police, they were very unlikely to have anticipated a strategy of subterfuge that even modern investigators find taxing to take on board. Expert criminologist and investigator John Douglas observed that a number of offenders were likely to have slipped the net this way because their pursuers did not know what to look for. Do you have any examples of serial killers pretending to be witnesses that predated 1888?
“Violenia heard a man & woman quarreling as they walked along Hanbury St.”
He lied about doing so, according to the police. He claimed to have been in Hanbury Street in the small hours of the morning when the Chapman murder was supposed to have been committed, just as Hutchinson claimed to have been in Dorset Street in the small hours of the morning when the Kelly murder was supposed to have been committed. In neither case was the claim ultimately accepted as accurate or truthful, and in neither case was the bogus witness ever treated as a suspect. Or do you have evidence – actual evidence, as opposed to two-fold speculation – to suggest otherwise? You are demonstrably clueless on the subject of Violenia, by the way, and it’s more than a little painful to see you suggest that Violenia was a genuine witness who had seen “another couple”. In actual fact, he identified the man as Pizer, and claimed he threatened to kill his female companion by sticking his “knife in her”.
Oh right, silly me. Both witnesses obviously tried to discredit their own stories......never thought of that!
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