To Wickerman
You touch on what for me is one of the pieces of compelling, albeit soft evidence for Druitt's guilt.
That Montie was a dead ringer for Lawende's 'Jack the Sailor', at least generically: lithe, medium height, about 30, and fair-moustached; a Gentile-featured, youngish man seen by a Jew -- at least according to Druitt's high school pictures.
Since Druitt was an athlete it is reasonable to assume that he remained slim and trim. And Lawende was, at least according to the way police used him, the very best Ripper witness.
To Versa
I think that both Anderson and Macnaghten both believed that they knew the identity of the Ripper. Since they preferred different suspects they both cannot be right, and might both be wrong.
But Macnaghten, as a primary source, goes against the expected bias of class and race by choosing somebody from his own class and race. It is quite extraordinary that he did that, an aspect mostly missed here.
You touch on what for me is one of the pieces of compelling, albeit soft evidence for Druitt's guilt.
That Montie was a dead ringer for Lawende's 'Jack the Sailor', at least generically: lithe, medium height, about 30, and fair-moustached; a Gentile-featured, youngish man seen by a Jew -- at least according to Druitt's high school pictures.
Since Druitt was an athlete it is reasonable to assume that he remained slim and trim. And Lawende was, at least according to the way police used him, the very best Ripper witness.
To Versa
I think that both Anderson and Macnaghten both believed that they knew the identity of the Ripper. Since they preferred different suspects they both cannot be right, and might both be wrong.
But Macnaghten, as a primary source, goes against the expected bias of class and race by choosing somebody from his own class and race. It is quite extraordinary that he did that, an aspect mostly missed here.

. Still, if we believe that a small group of top ranking officers believed that they had a solution or solutions (Kosminski or Druitt), but that this hadn't percolated down to the lower ranks, then there was always a slim chance of an "innocent" man being charged with the crimes. Therefore one might have expected these officers to a least leave a proper record of what they knew, e.g. a sealed envelope to be opened in the event that someone was charged with the crimes after the top ranking officers had died. They don't seem to have done this, which is odd, because they wouldn't have wanted a miscarriage of justice (as it would appear to them, they being in possession of the solution).
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