To Marlowe
I agree with you, to a large extent.
That Swanson only uses the last name, just like Macnaghten, might be because this suspect begins with the latter and not the former.
Furthermore, that Mac exploited Aaron Kosminski -- a family more commonly known by another name -- who was a poor, mentally ill local, a Polish Jew, who masturbated chronically, who had threatened a relative with a knife, and who was sectioned in early 1891.
Perhaps not wanting to use Pizer, an 1888 debacle, in the suspects' section of his report, Mac refashioned and elevated Aaron, maybe only the most minor of suspects, into 'Kosminski'; with added details that the 'suspect' hated harlots, and had very strong homicidal tendencies. Mac critically backdated his incarceration to March 1889, and in the alternate version of his report which was disseminated to the public, he even had him maybe seen by a beat cop with the fourth victim.
'Kosminski' was thus, arguably, fictitious window-dressing; completely unrecognizable to his family and community, and untraceable by the press and even Anderson if he had tried to get more details from the asylum -- and why would he have risked such exposure?
I base this theory on the way that Macnaghten ruthlessly dropped the Polish Jew suspect altogether from his memoirs, and also in the same tome claimed that there had never been a strong eyewitness to 'Jack' -- let alone a positive witness identification.
I agree with you, to a large extent.
That Swanson only uses the last name, just like Macnaghten, might be because this suspect begins with the latter and not the former.
Furthermore, that Mac exploited Aaron Kosminski -- a family more commonly known by another name -- who was a poor, mentally ill local, a Polish Jew, who masturbated chronically, who had threatened a relative with a knife, and who was sectioned in early 1891.
Perhaps not wanting to use Pizer, an 1888 debacle, in the suspects' section of his report, Mac refashioned and elevated Aaron, maybe only the most minor of suspects, into 'Kosminski'; with added details that the 'suspect' hated harlots, and had very strong homicidal tendencies. Mac critically backdated his incarceration to March 1889, and in the alternate version of his report which was disseminated to the public, he even had him maybe seen by a beat cop with the fourth victim.
'Kosminski' was thus, arguably, fictitious window-dressing; completely unrecognizable to his family and community, and untraceable by the press and even Anderson if he had tried to get more details from the asylum -- and why would he have risked such exposure?
I base this theory on the way that Macnaghten ruthlessly dropped the Polish Jew suspect altogether from his memoirs, and also in the same tome claimed that there had never been a strong eyewitness to 'Jack' -- let alone a positive witness identification.
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