Every time I read someone cite that fact that Abberline thought SK was Jack, I feel the need to point out that he never said this until AFTER SK was charged with the three poisonings. Abberline had no knowledge of SK 15 years back, in Whitechapel.
Am I right in thinking it went like this? .... Abberline is dissatisfied that he never caught JtR. The case remains a puzzle for the rest of his working life and into his retirement.
Then one day he reads in the paper (or attends a trial) of a man who has killed three "wives". Obviously, this is very unusual and so he is very interested to follow the trial. Then he reads/hears (via the witnesses) that this serial killer used to live in the Whitechapel area in 1888.
Abberline has never heard of psychological profiling. Many of the villains he dealt with over the years changed their M.O. So he's not got that to inhibit his jumping to the conclusion that he did. "Oh my goodness, thinks Abberline - in that case, this man must have been Jack the Ripper!"
This is because serial killers are extremely rare. Maybe Abberline is thinking, the chance of there being two in the same area at the same time (obviously one hadn't actually starting killing yet, but had the mindset and personality of a killer) is so remote, that it simply must have been SK.
Thoughts anyone?
Am I right in thinking it went like this? .... Abberline is dissatisfied that he never caught JtR. The case remains a puzzle for the rest of his working life and into his retirement.
Then one day he reads in the paper (or attends a trial) of a man who has killed three "wives". Obviously, this is very unusual and so he is very interested to follow the trial. Then he reads/hears (via the witnesses) that this serial killer used to live in the Whitechapel area in 1888.
Abberline has never heard of psychological profiling. Many of the villains he dealt with over the years changed their M.O. So he's not got that to inhibit his jumping to the conclusion that he did. "Oh my goodness, thinks Abberline - in that case, this man must have been Jack the Ripper!"
This is because serial killers are extremely rare. Maybe Abberline is thinking, the chance of there being two in the same area at the same time (obviously one hadn't actually starting killing yet, but had the mindset and personality of a killer) is so remote, that it simply must have been SK.
Thoughts anyone?
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