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  • Stewart P Evans
    replied
    Modern 'Ripperology'

    Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
    ...
    Ripperology has also seen many more researchers who are equally as qualified and as knowledgable as you and others activeley participate in trying to solve the mystery. By trying to prove or disprove facts which you and the other old guard have sought to rely on all these years
    ...
    I am sure that the field of modern 'Ripperology' is awash with 'researchers who are equally (if not more) qualified' to 'actively participate in trying to solve the mystery.' And they are equipped with better tools as witness digital searching on the Internet.

    As I never tire of pointing out, the mystery never will be solved, that much should be obvious to anyone with a modicum of intelligence. What we shall, probably, continue to solve are the minor mysteries that beset the case at the same time increasing our knowledge of the characters involved and the conditions of the day. Surely a fact cannot be disproved, a fact is a fact, isn't it? I think what you are trying to say is that certain assumptions of fact or interpretations of fact are there to be disproved. That can only be a good thing to anyone with an honest interest.

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  • Chris
    replied
    Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
    As far as The SB quest was concerned, the end result was not what was expected, However all was not in vain because we got the names of new suspects from the registers. Names which no one seems to want to mention,despite being all being on a par with other suspect names also from police records. You have the "Machangten three" I have the "Forgotten four"
    What rubbish.

    Last year I spent a considerable amount of time researching William Magrath, with much assistance from Debra Arif and others (of course, that name came from Lindsay Clutterbuck's thesis):


    As I recall, your only contribution was the usual sniping and personal abuse.

    With regard to the others, I believe you claimed that you'd identified them all but that you weren't going to disclose the information. But maybe that was supposed to be a joke?

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  • Stewart P Evans
    replied
    Trevinator

    Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
    ...
    Isnt it the case that you and others who to be fair do have expert knowledge of much surrounding the mystery and have led the cause from the 1960`s and are highly respected,all of you all have been sitting at the top of the ripperology tree since then, suddenly find that in the ensuing years there have been major advances in the world of technology with the internet opening up many more
    research options than there were in the 1960`s.
    ...
    Trevinator, although your post is directed to Paul, I assume, with the reference to the 1960s, that you are including me as having been 'sitting at the top of the Ripperology tree' since then Although maybe not. But I shall address some of your points anyway.

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  • Chris
    replied
    Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
    For your information I have further contacted Mr. McLaren to which he has failed to respond. I also know of one other researcher who has also made a written request but has not yet received a reply.
    It seems that in repeatedly saying that the owner of the document wished it to be made public, you've only been telling us half the story.

    It's a great pity that the atmosphere has been poisoned to such an extent that the text hasn't been published here, as Keith Skinner and the owner originally wished. But at least it is going to be published.

    Now, you've implied often enough that the owner's wishes should be respected. I think that's a very good idea. Certainly nothing is going to discourage others from cooperating with researchers, than people like Christopher McLaren and Nevill Swanson being dragged into public arguments of this kind.

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  • Trevor Marriott
    replied
    Originally posted by PaulB View Post
    Trevor, allow your imagination to run riot for a moment. Let's suppose that there isn't a cartel and that nobody is interested in keeping things secret, but that people don't like the way you operate and were seriously upset by your public insinuation that Keith was a thief, and that consequently they don't want to help you at all. And let us also allow our imaginations to soar and suppose that these people think you are just after getting publicity for yourself as the fearless champion of Ripperology, beating down the doors of the Special Branch to make the ledgers public and twisting the arm of your imagined Mafia-like cartel to release other papers. Let's suppose that you really have p....d people off so badly that that is what has happened.

    In many ways it is a hypothesis that makes far more sense than there being a group of researchers not making information available. I mean, Chris has made tons of information available here, he made all those photographs of Swanson available here, and he began to make Jim Swanson's correspondence with the News of the World available here, until you popped up to insinuate that the material was emerging because you had shaken the tree.
    Now I am a fearless champion now thank you for the compliment.

    Now unless I have missed it I havent seen any correspondence between Swanson and the News of The World which contained the actual name Kosminski

    Isnt it the case that you and others who to be fair do have expert knowledge of much surrounding the mystery and have led the cause from the 1960`s and are highly respected,all of you all have been sitting at the top of the ripperology tree since then, suddenly find that in the ensuing years there have been major advances in the world of technology with the internet opening up many more
    research options than there were in the 1960`s.

    Ripperology has also seen many more researchers who are equally as qualified and as knowledgable as you and others activeley participate in trying to solve the mystery. By trying to prove or disprove facts which you and the other old guard have sought to rely on all these years

    As a result the theories and writings of you and those other early researchers are now being serioulsy questioned and the fact is you dont like it and cant handle it. As a result you duck and dive when questions are put to you about major issues which impinge of your views. You continuosly answer a question with a question thus avoiding the original question.

    In addittion Martin Fido another one of the old guard as knowledgeable as he is has beenleft floudering in the water with Kosminski and Cohen.

    Its now Autumn when the leaves fall from the trees. What will we be left with a handful of Ripperologists clinging onfor dear life at the top for fear of falling and damaging their egos.

    Ripperology is now an even playing field you have to accept that everyone elses views and theories are just as worthy of consideration as yours and the rest of you cartel members and followers.

    You say about me banging on The Special Branch door well someone had to do it didnt they.Crimes are not solved sitting behind a desk. And there is still new material out there but to find it you have to get off your backside and do the leg work.

    As far as The SB quest was concerned, the end result was not what was expected, However all was not in vain because we got the names of new suspects from the registers. Names which no one seems to want to mention,despite being all being on a par with other suspect names also from police records. You have the "Machangten three" I have the "Forgotten four"

    In the course of gathering evidence for the tribunal other new evidence from official files was uncovered which in my opinion now eliminates many of the suspects.

    At this time I do not propose to disclose that. However It will be made public in due course unlike others I am happy to share with the community the results of new research.

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  • Stewart P Evans
    replied
    All I know

    Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post
    ...
    Anderson in 1895 said the case might be solved, and in 1898 Macnaghten -- via a proxy -- agreed but claimed than an alternate (and unknown) Ripper suspect was better then the Polish Jew.
    One interpretation of these sources is that of rivalry.
    'Anderson in 1895 said the case might be solved.' Really, just where did he say that?

    All I know is that in 1895 Griffiths (using the pseudonym 'Alfred Aylmer') wrote that Anderson had 'a perfectly plausible theory that Jack the Ripper was a homicidal maniac, temporarily at large, whose hideous career was cut short by committal to an asylum.'

    You write, 'And in 1898 Macnaghten -- via a proxy [Griffiths again] -- agreed but claimed that an alternate (and unknown) Ripper suspect was better than the Polish Jew.'

    All I know is that in 1898 Mysteries of Police and Crime by Major Arthur Griffiths, London, Cassell and Company Limited, was published in two volumes and included, on pages 28-29 in the introduction, a reference to "Jack the Ripper" with information quite obviously drawn from Macnaghten's notes.

    In this account the reference to Druitt (unnamed) runs (inter alia), 'The third person was of the same type, but the suspicion in his case was stronger, and there was every reason to believe that his own friends entertained grave doubts about him. He also was a doctor in the prime of life...' etc.

    The three cases are presented as 'suspicions' only and it was all qualified by the statement that 'It is at least a strong presumption that "Jack the Ripper" died or was put under restraint after the Miller's Court affair, which ended this series of crimes.'

    There should be little doubt that there was 'rivalry' between Anderson and Macnaghten, as we may also deduct that there was no love lost between them. I have detailed this elsewhere. But I think that the fact that the two men, patently, did not agree on the probable identity of the murderer merely highlights the fact that the police did not 'know' who he was and did not have a worthwhile clue as to his identity.
    Last edited by Stewart P Evans; 09-30-2011, 10:47 AM.

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  • Stewart P Evans
    replied
    Flippant

    Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post
    ...
    Mac briefed the very same author, Major Griffiths, who back in 1895 claimed that Anderson had said that there was a good locked-up lunatic suspect.
    This was the same author who in 1896 claimed that there was a theory at the Yard that the murderer was some kind of 'Jakyll and Hyde' but there was not a shred of proof for it.
    And not two years later the Major disseminated to the public the scoop that there was a specific and promising doctor suspect with a dual personality who, exactly like Stevenson's fictional protagonist/antagonist is middle-aged and has pals, but no family, and who takes his own life as the net closed.
    ...
    Ooh how I hate the flippant references to Macnaghten as 'Mac', very unprofessional. I suppose you think it is rather clever to do that.

    Yes, Anderson was touting a 'homicidal maniac...committed to an asylum' theory in 1895, that shouldn't be a surprise, it was the main police suspect idea in Macnaghten's memo of the preceding year. What you fail to appreciate is how cavalier these popular crime writers could be with their material. And how often they published conflicting material. A sort of 'journalistic license' I suppose. They often gave the public what they thought the public wanted.

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  • Stewart P Evans
    replied
    Pre-formed ideas...

    Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post
    ...
    As Simon very astutely astutely pointed out, Macnaghten began briefing an alternate version to Griffiths in 1898. He could do this so blithely -- and quite falsely call it a 'Home Office Report' -- because it was an unknown document without any status, and thus he was not breaching any official or bureaucratic confidences and/or procedures. At last not technically.
    ...
    Personally I think that you and Simon have your own pre-formed ideas and agendas.

    However can you say that 'Macnaghten began briefing an alternate version to Griffiths in 1898'? You cannot possibly know that. You cannot assume that the differences were deliberate rather than sloppiness, mistakes taken from the draft version (which we know Macnaghten retained) or merely cavalier writing. At the dizzy heights these 'gentlemen' senior police officers operated they tended to do what they pleased. No one was likely to challenge them, or be informed enough to challenge them.

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  • Stewart P Evans
    replied
    Okay...

    Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post
    No, I don't think anybody saw the offical version of the Macnaghten Report.
    ...
    Okay, let's get this right.

    In February 1894 a series of newspaper reports appear in the Sun newspaper in which it is alleged that an inmate of Broadmoor asylum is one and the same as 'Jack the Ripper'. The series culminated, on February 19, 1894, with a talk with the radical MP Henry Labouchere and the reporter suggested the Sun had made the case for a public investigation and asked if Labouchere agreed. Labouchere replied, "Yes; if I were Mr Asquith I should select a clever officer to look into the matter. He would do so carefully, for I suppose that the reward still remains..."

    We do not know, but can only suppose, that Commissioner Bradford would be very aware of this and want to know what was going on, who Cutbush was, and could he really have been the murderer. And, lo and behold, on 23 February 1894 (immediately after this article) Macnaghten pens, on official notepaper, the facts concerning the Sun article, Cutbush, the Whitechapel murders, and the police suspects, such as they were.

    As an internal memo providing information there would be no case file with regard to it, there would be no specific action required, thus no minuting required, and no official date stamping as it was internal, between the Chief Constable's office and the Commissioner's office, and not received from an outside source or agency (which would need stamping).

    And what happened to this memo? Well, specifically we don't know (how could we?) but we do know that it remained within the confines of the offices of the Metropolitan Police hierarchy and was eventually archived in file series MEPO 3/141, the same series in which the missing suspects file had been lodged. However, this is a different series of files to that in which the files on the actual murders were lodged which was series MEPO 3/140. So, from the day it was written, 23 February 1894, (as far as we can tell) until the whole series of files were moved to the Public Record Office, the memo stayed at the Yard.

    Now you are saying that Macnaghten wrote this seven-page document (for his own amusement?) and no one else saw it. Sorry, I don't trade in wild assumptions or fairy tales.
    Last edited by Stewart P Evans; 09-30-2011, 10:06 AM.

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  • Jonathan H
    replied
    No, I don't think anybody saw the offical version of the Macnaghten Report.

    As Simon very astutely astutely pointed out, Macnaghten began briefing an alternate version to Griffiths in 1898. He could do this so blithely -- and quite falsely call it a 'Home Office Report' -- because it was an unknown document without any status, and thus he was not breaching any official or bureaucratic confidences and/or procedures. At last not technically.


    Mac briefed the very same author, Major Griffiths, who back in 1895 claimed that Anderson had said that there was a good locked-up lunatic suspect.

    This was the same author who in 1896 claimed that there was a theory at the Yard that the murderer was some kind of 'Jakyll and Hyde' but there was not a shred of proof for it.

    And not two years later the Major disseminated to the public the scoop that there was a specific and promising doctor suspect with a dual personality who, exactly like Stevenson's fictional protagonist/antagonist is middle-aged and has pals, but no family, and who takes his own life as the net closed.

    Anderson in 1895 said the case might be solved, and in 1898 Macnaghten -- via a proxy -- agreed but claimed than an alternate (and unknown) Ripper suspect was better then the Polish Jew.

    One interpretation of these sources is that of rivalry.

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  • PaulB
    replied
    Originally posted by Stewart P Evans View Post
    Good morning Paul...
    Good morning, Stewart :-)

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  • PaulB
    replied
    Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
    For your information I have further contacted Mr. McLaren to which he has failed to respond. I also know of one other researcher who has also made a written request but has not yet received a reply.

    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.
    Trevor, allow your imagination to run riot for a moment. Let's suppose that there isn't a cartel and that nobody is interested in keeping things secret, but that people don't like the way you operate and were seriously upset by your public insinuation that Keith was a thief, and that consequently they don't want to help you at all. And let us also allow our imaginations to soar and suppose that these people think you are just after getting publicity for yourself as the fearless champion of Ripperology, beating down the doors of the Special Branch to make the ledgers public and twisting the arm of your imagined Mafia-like cartel to release other papers. Let's suppose that you really have p....d people off so badly that that is what has happened.

    In many ways it is a hypothesis that makes far more sense than there being a group of researchers not making information available. I mean, Chris has made tons of information available here, he made all those photographs of Swanson available here, and he began to make Jim Swanson's correspondence with the News of the World available here, until you popped up to insinuate that the material was emerging because you had shaken the tree.

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  • Stewart P Evans
    replied
    Telling you something

    Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
    For your information I have further contacted Mr. McLaren to which he has failed to respond. I also know of one other researcher who has also made a written request but has not yet received a reply.
    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.
    A failure to reply might be telling you something.

    Again, there is no cartel and there are no 'certain things' that someone doesn't want made public about this (at least to my knowledge there aren't) and I really cannot understand the fuss.

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  • PaulB
    replied
    Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View Post
    Yes 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.
    It's the reason, Trevor, not an excuse, although it is understandable that you want to represent it as one.

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  • Stewart P Evans
    replied
    Good Morning...

    Good morning Paul...

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