Yet the historical EVIDENCE - written by two separate senior police officials involved throughout the case - exists and is explicit.
A reputable historian CANNOT simply ignore such evidence, nor is it correct to "rationalise" it out of the reckoning.
The writers were both in possession of more evidence than is now available and may have been involved with the event they recorded.
Thus, while it may be technically correct to state "that an identification has never been proven to have taken place" such a statement would be misleading in the extreme.
We may not be able to reconcile all the details of the identification, and errors may exist in the record, but that is often the case with historical research. It does not give us latitude to ignore of dismiss the event. We have to assume that some such event took place (unless someone can prove that Anderson and Abberline lied or falsified the record).
I am not aware of anyone who claims, without some caveat, that Kosminski is the killer. He is, however, clearly a contemporary suspect - named as such by Sawnson and also listed by Macnaghten.
Those who wish to expunge the identification from the record or to ignore Kosminski (whomever he may have been) are in my view being simplistic and do a disservice to this subject. If we do not employ the established historical method than we are indeed no more than participants in "Playschool".
I think this site, those of us who seek to take the subject seriously and the reputable authors who use such methods without exception in their books (I am thinking in particular here of Messrs Evans, Rumbelow, Fido and Begg) deserve such an approach in discussion.
Phil
A reputable historian CANNOT simply ignore such evidence, nor is it correct to "rationalise" it out of the reckoning.
The writers were both in possession of more evidence than is now available and may have been involved with the event they recorded.
Thus, while it may be technically correct to state "that an identification has never been proven to have taken place" such a statement would be misleading in the extreme.
We may not be able to reconcile all the details of the identification, and errors may exist in the record, but that is often the case with historical research. It does not give us latitude to ignore of dismiss the event. We have to assume that some such event took place (unless someone can prove that Anderson and Abberline lied or falsified the record).
I am not aware of anyone who claims, without some caveat, that Kosminski is the killer. He is, however, clearly a contemporary suspect - named as such by Sawnson and also listed by Macnaghten.
Those who wish to expunge the identification from the record or to ignore Kosminski (whomever he may have been) are in my view being simplistic and do a disservice to this subject. If we do not employ the established historical method than we are indeed no more than participants in "Playschool".
I think this site, those of us who seek to take the subject seriously and the reputable authors who use such methods without exception in their books (I am thinking in particular here of Messrs Evans, Rumbelow, Fido and Begg) deserve such an approach in discussion.
Phil
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