Originally posted by Stewart P Evans
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Plausibility of Kosminski
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Last edited by Trevor Marriott; 09-30-2011, 01:22 AM.
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Originally posted by PaulB View PostI think I have answered this. Your general attitude, accusations veiled and otherwise, and innuendo that Keith Skinner stole the material, and the fact that you never approached Keith or any of the A to Z authors to see or otherwise be provided with the Aberconway version, has led the owner to change his mind. As a matter of fact, I believe that the owner of the document was happy for it to be made available on the internet, and asked if it interfered with any plans Keith had for using it. Keith said it didn't and was in the process of seeking permission when you made your filthy innuendo about Keith and that changed the ball game. It will now be published in the next edition of the A to Z.
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To Simon
Your points are very astute, and get right to the heart of the mystery.
Don't be put off. Nobody is laying a glove on you.
It was not a mystery to Macnaghten. The element Mac concealed from Bradford and Asquith, though they never saw the 'Report', was that the fiend was long dead before the poilice had ever heard of him. And, it was all handed to Macnaghten on a plate -- it was not a field investigation.
Macnaghten disseminated the 'Drowned Doctor' to the public, and the Polish Jew and the Russian thief -- both hyped and dismissed -- because he knew they were unregonisaeble to people familiar with the real people who lay behind their fictitious variants.
To Paul
Your point about Macnaghten perhaps not caring what Sims wrote -- hence the sloppily inaccurate details -- does not ring true either of the former's formidable memory, nor of his compassionate need to be careful to shield the Druitt family (eg. 'friends').
The reason I think this is because of Mac's 1914 memoir, where he pointedly withdrew elements of the tale he had related to Sims over the years. Eg. not a contemporaneous suspect the police were abouit to arrest, not an asylum veteran -- and thus perhaps not affluent and unemplyed -- and not a 'Drowned Doctor'.
Arguably, he did care.
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Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View PostYes yes yes is that the best excuse you can come with for all of these shenanegans and the non compliance of a specific request from the current owner which I can tell you was made to the owner after all of this took place.
No doubt if you are right in your claims that the evil (and completely delusory) "cartel" is thwarting Christopher McLaren's wishes, he'll immediately send you a copy so that you can post it here yourself. And what a feather in your cap that will be! What are you waiting for?
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Originally posted by Chris View PostIf you think Paul is lying when he says the owner of the document no longer wants it published on the Internet, why don't you just contact the owner yourself and check?
No doubt if you are right in your claims that the evil (and completely delusory) "cartel" is thwarting Christopher McLaren's wishes, he'll immediately send you a copy so that you can post it here yourself. And what a feather in your cap that will be! What are you waiting for?
It seems like all the outside sources which the cartel seek to rely on to endorse their theories clam up when approached by other researchers. I really have to wonder why the cartel dont want certain things made public.
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I have no business in this thread but I’m throwing caution to the wind. The following point is directed mainly go Garry Wroe who I believe is a professional in this field (Psychology). His opinion (and others) would be most welcome.
Rob House’s book makes a compelling case for the schizophrenic serial killer. He discusses something called co-morbidity (I think) which indicates that a person could be both a psychopath and a schizophrenic.
Psychopathy, on the other hand, is a personality disorder characterized by extreme narcissism and an almost total disregard for and lack of empathy with others. These elements, coupled with ruthlessness, cruelty and an absence of remorse, mean that the psychopath is able to lie without compunction and justify just about any act so long as it succeeds in attaining a desired result.
I’m wondering what you, Garry, and others think of this idea. My personal belief is that Jack (if he existed) was probably a psychopath more in the Ted Bundy, John Wayne Gacy mold but I may be dead wrong.
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It is my view that we can not get any more out of this by looking at it as we have. Kosminski has been discussed heavily for so long now. We all know there is no evidence against the MM3. We can turn it around, upside down.. but that is the bottom line. As Stewart has stated...No evidence.
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It's a perfectly reasonably hypothesis, but, alas, like other hypotheses, lacking the evidence necessary for it to be accepted. Yes, Anderson said "the criminal was a sexual maniac of a virulent type", and "sexual maniac" may mean "insane sexual deviant" as you have said, but Macnaghten thought Jack the Ripper was a sexual maniac too. So can we say the "the investigation was fatally flawed by Anderson’s assumption that the wanted man must have been insane and obviously homicidal". Was that really just Anderson's assumption, or was it what the police in general would have thought?
I tend to exclude Macnaghten from the equation, Paul, because he had no direct involvement in the investigation. Anderson, on the other hand, made statements which clearly imply a collective thinking with regard to the killer’s social status, ethnicity, religion and mental state. For example: ‘And the conclusion we came to was that he and his people were certain low-class Polish Jews …’ Also: ‘And the result proved that our diagnosis was right on every point.’
So either Anderson misrepresented the situation, or two or more senior investigators analysed the crimes and formulated a number of definite conclusions regarding the killer. But frankly, Paul, I’d be astonished if they hadn’t. This was (and is) standard police procedure, and despite some of the criticisms that have been levelled at them, these men were not incompetent. They were simply hunting a quarry who was beyond their collective experience.
Macnaghten said that sexual maniacs could be walking among the general population unnoticed, so they obviously weren't regarded as stereotypical drooling madmen with wild eyes and insane grins. So what precisely would the police have been looking for and would looking for a homicidal madman have necessarily led the police to the wrong suspects?
Macnaghten said a lot of things, Paul, most of which were either conjecture or blatantly untrue. But he did name three men whose details were clearly contained within the case files. And what do we find? Whilst two were incarcerated lunatics, the third was a suicide who was thought to be going mad. The two lunatics, coincidentally, were said to have been misogynists. The suicide was described as having been ‘sexually insane’.
Textual analysis won't change the "psychological perspective", nor is it intended to, it is intended only to hopefully help in establishing whether or not the events described by Anderson (and Swanson) actually happened.
But that is precisely my point, Paul. The best that can be hoped for is that a micro-analysis of Anderson’s written output will result in one of two conclusions. Either Anderson probably told the truth, or Anderson probably lied. In other words, it will provide no definitive answer. Even if Anderson probably told the truth, where does that leave us? It certainly does not confirm that Kosminski was the Whitechapel Murderer. He might have been the victim of misidentification, for example, perhaps even a malicious identification. If nothing else, we know that the identification was crucial in the case against Kosminski. It must have been, otherwise all hopes of a conviction would not have been lost when the witness refused to sign a statement. Thus if the identification was flawed, so was the case against Kosminski.
Again, I applaud you for the work you have done in attempting to resolve the Anderson issue, but at the same time I do feel that it is a lost cause. Rightly or wrongly, Paul, I feel that psychology is key in any evaluation of Kosminski’s suspect status. And on that basis, Kosminski is a nonstarter.Last edited by Garry Wroe; 09-30-2011, 04:50 AM.
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To Garry Wroe
The reason for the stall is the Andrew Spallek's breawkthrough 2008 identification of the 'West of England' MP is not understood and appreicated in some quarters.
It means that Druitt precedes the 'memo' as a Ripper suspect; that he was not cobbled together by Constable Magoo.
It also means that the theory that Mac was not involved directly in the invetigation is wrng. As he admitted in his memoirs and 1913 comments, he investigated Druitt 'some years after'.
If Druitt, amongst police, begins with Macnaghten why not Aaron Kosminski who was sectioned two years after he joined the Met?
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Originally posted by Garry Wroe View PostUnfortunately, Greg, Hollywood has presented a very distorted picture of such conditions, even to the extent that many believe schizophrenia to be a Jekyll and Hyde manifestation.
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When most people think 'schizo serial killer', I would imagine that David Berkowitz comes to mind, though of course there's also many who believe he was faking. Although not a serial killer, Sirhan Sirhan was, I believe, Schizo.
I sure don't pretend to be an expert of this, and certainly wouldn't suggest Garry doesn't know what he's talking about, but I know Rob has made a specialist study of this particular type of killer, though unfortunately a lot of his material along these lines was necessarily edited from his manuscript for publication. I'd like to encourage him to present more of it to us in one of the journals. I don't know why, but I find it fascinating.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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