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If the police arresting Kosminski had heard been told that he had threatened his sister with a knife, that may have been enough for him to take precautions n ot to get harmed himself.
I am not sure if I follow this? Are you saying Kosminski asked to have his hands tied behind his back ?
Regards Darryl
[B]Swanson DID misremember - or was not in the know - about some parts, we know that much.
From the wikipedia entry on Swanson - On 15 September 1888 Commissioner Sir Charles Warren issued a memorandum to Dr. Robert Anderson, Assistant Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police and Chief of the Criminal Investigation Department (CID), placing Swanson in overall charge of the investigation into the murder of Annie Chapman in Hanbury Street, Spitalfields. Swanson was freed from all other duties and given his own office at Scotland Yard from which to co-ordinate inquiries. He was given permission to see "every paper, every document, every report [and] every telegram" concerning the investigation.[4] As subsequent murders were committed in the Whitechapel Murders series Swanson remained ‘in situ’ - gaining a mass of knowledge and information about the killings.
So what parts was he not in the know about Fish?
Regards Darryl
Fish we are going to have to disagree if you thought that Jack was a cool calculating killer, in virtually all his kills [talking C5 and Tabram here], there was enormous risk. Doesn't the FBI report on Jack pin him down as a disorganised personality? You say - who turns into a meek and generally totally harmless schizophrenic. Yet this same schizophrenic attacks women [if the letter is to be believed] , and his sister, he is also put on some form of ID with great difficulty, we don't know what the difficulty is but he could have shown some violent form of resistance? What we do know is - In a very short time the suspect with his hands tied behind his back, he was sent to StepneyWorkhouse and then to Colney Hatch, Swansons words. Doesn't sound very meek and harmless when taken off the streets.
We always seem to have the idea that the police were looking just at people who were wandering the streets aimlessly with a vacant look in their eyes. Yet Pizer was their Num 1 suspect for a while. He wasn't meek and harmless. In fact to me the police looked at all angles, yes including people who had just recently been released from an asylum but people like Jacob Isenschmid had shown violent behaviour. Even today with the advances in treatment for schizophrenic individuals [ none of this available in Victorian London], we still here cases of people being let out back into society deemed cured only for them to attack and kill again, and sometimes very shortly after release.
One last point when Kosminski was taken to the asylum the case notes are from what they have been told, eating out of the gutter etc. I have often wondered if they are wholly truthful. Kosminski's family if they suspected him of being Jack would want him put away for good but possibly not want the shame that he was one of their family and the repercussions that could bring. Maybe they embellished some of the details regarding his mental state.
Regards Darryl
Hi DK
I don't see any dis organized behavior with the ripper. On the contrary, except for maybe the stride attack where I believe he simply lost his temper.
I agree that the letter doesn't really tell us anything new. But isn't this a small point in favour of its authenticity? If you were a forger trying to make a splash, wouldn't you write something more sensational such as, "There's a local man called Kosminski who's well known to be violent, he's been seen with blood all over him after some of the murders and his own family are privately admitting that they think he's Jack the Ripper"?
Saying as much would be too good to be true, and would attract suspicion. Up till now, we have no contemporary (or near-contemporary) evidence that Kosminski was actually violent towards women, but this letter does just enough to provide such evidence, without setting off too many alarm-bells.
Fish, just a couple of points I would like to make - I wasnīt aware that they were right, regarding the FBI profile. But I could say the same about the expert you use to bolster the Cross/Lech theory.
Yes, you could. And?
I know it is a bit of a guessing game but what I can say reading profile and the like from psychologists is some suspect Jack to have been like David Cohen and some which could be similar to Kosminski [the end of his mental rope after Kelly as Douglas says ]. It isn't Kosminski but Cohen seems far removed from an organised cool intelligent killer. I have yet to read a profile [ I am not saying there isn't any out there], that suggests cool organised intelligent apart from the one you say Cross would have acted after Nichols.
Thatīs quite enough. Couple it with the Torso slayings and where the parts went, and you may understand my take on things a little better. The Ripper murders are Torso Murders Light to me.
You know as well as I do that these notes are very uncertain to credibility as well as to identity. And completely harmless people have been transported to prison with shackled hands. - Well you may differ Fish but I believe Swanson wrote these notes to the best of his memory. Of course he could have mis-remembered but you say harmless people taken to prison. He wasn't taken to prison nor was he charged with anything. If he was just a harmless imbecile [not going to prison], why the need to tie his hands behind his back?
Regards Darryl
Swanson DID misremember - or was not in the know - about some parts, we know that much. Once more, the person spoken about here is not conclusiverly ID:d. It is not even proven that what is spoken about really happened. It has just about no evidential value in my book.
If the police arresting Kosminski had heard been told that he had threatened his sister with a knife, that may have been enough for him to take precautions n ot to get harmed himself. There is not a worrd about how the person arrested acted violently, whichever way we read the matter.
And it wasnīt Kosminski, how many times do I have to tell you?
Fish, just a couple of points I would like to make - I wasnīt aware that they were right, regarding the FBI profile. But I could say the same about the expert you use to bolster the Cross/Lech theory.
I know it is a bit of a guessing game but what I can say reading profile and the like from psychologists is some suspect Jack to have been like David Cohen and some which could be similar to Kosminski [the end of his mental rope after Kelly as Douglas says ]. It isn't Kosminski but Cohen seems far removed from an organised cool intelligent killer. I have yet to read a profile [ I am not saying there isn't any out there], that suggests cool organised intelligent apart from the one you say Cross would have acted after Nichols. You know as well as I do that these notes are very uncertain to credibility as well as to identity. And completely harmless people have been transported to prison with shackled hands. - Well you may differ Fish but I believe Swanson wrote these notes to the best of his memory. Of course he could have mis-remembered but you say harmless people taken to prison. He wasn't taken to prison nor was he charged with anything. If he was just a harmless imbecile [not going to prison], why the need to tie his hands behind his back?
Regards Darryl
One thing is for sure: I donīt have to do the Kos research myself, since others are so enthusiastic about him, shawls, letters and all. Thatīs a good thing!
Don't get me started on the so-called DNA on the shawl. I will be boring people endlessly why it cannot conclusively prove Kosminski was the killer.
Fish we are going to have to disagree if you thought that Jack was a cool calculating killer, in virtually all his kills [talking C5 and Tabram here], there was enormous risk.
Yes - and it takes a really cool cgharacter to do it for that precise reason. Psychopaths, unable to panic as they generally are, would fit the bill nicely.
Doesn't the FBI report on Jack pin him down as a disorganised personality?
I wasnīt aware that they were right. Most researchers recognize a bit of both in him, actually. And disorganized killers are generally loud and unruly creatures.
You say - who turns into a meek and generally totally harmless schizophrenic. Yet this same schizophrenic attacks women [if the letter is to be believed] , and his sister, he is also put on some form of ID with great difficulty, we don't know what the difficulty is but he could have shown some violent form of resistance? What we do know is - In a very short time the suspect with his hands tied behind his back, he was sent to StepneyWorkhouse and then to Colney Hatch, Swansons words. Doesn't sound very meek and harmless when taken off the streets.
You know as well as I do that these notes are very uncertain to credibility as well as to identity. And completely harmless people have been transported to prison with shackled hands.
We always seem to have the idea that the police were looking just at people who were wandering the streets aimlessly with a vacant look in their eyes. Yet Pizer was their Num 1 suspect for a while. He wasn't meek and harmless. In fact to me the police looked at all angles, yes including people who had just recently been released from an asylum but people like Jacob Isenschmid had shown violent behaviour. Even today with the advances in treatment for schizophrenic individuals [ none of this available in Victorian London], we still here cases of people being let out back into society deemed cured only for them to attack and kill again, and sometimes very shortly after release.
He does not fit the bill at all, Iīm afraid. Moreover, I am quite convinced that the man who killed Kelly also killed the 1873 Torso victim. And fierce though Kosminski may have been (not), I donīt see him as a candidate for that one, since he was eight years old and not in Britain.
One last point when Kosminski was taken to the asylum the case notes are from what they have been told, eating out of the gutter etc. I have often wondered if they are wholly truthful. Kosminski's family if they suspected him of being Jack would want him put away for good but possibly not want the shame that he was one of their family and the repercussions that could bring. Maybe they embellished some of the details regarding his mental state.
Regards Darryl
One thing is for sure: I donīt have to do the Kos research myself, since others are so enthusiastic about him, shawls, letters and all. Thatīs a good thing!
Personally, I am having trouble with the idea that we should believe in Kosminski on account of how he was a mentally challenged man - but we are not to believe in these mental challenges having played a role when he killed away in the autumn of 1888. At this stage, he would have been able to plan, to kill silently, to leave the victims on the ground as unfinished business while making good his escape - in other words, he would NOT have acted in accordance with the kind of mental shortcomings that were the things that drew attention to him initially, but instead as a cool and calculating man.
Itīs a bit like eating the cake and keeping it at the same time, is it not?
So we are looking at a very stealthy and sharp killer, a fearless and silent assailant, able to do all of these things, who turns into a meek and generally totally harmless schizophrenic only AFTER the killing spree, walking peopleīs dogs for them and eating out of the gutter. And lunging at people with a pair of scissors in a very unstealthy and commotional manner, the way mentally challenged people are likely to do. To call Kosminski the Ripper does not work for me on any plan.
I would also say that although it would be wise of the contemporary police to investigate what Kosminski was about in late 1888, to check if he fit the bill, they would be more inclined to believe he did so if he was showing signs of schizophrenia and odd behaviour at that stage than if he seemed completely rational. The victorians did not have a sound picture of what a sexual serial killer is comprised of. Paradoxically, if they believed Kosminski seemed to be their guy, he was quite likely not to be so.
Fish we are going to have to disagree if you thought that Jack was a cool calculating killer, in virtually all his kills [talking C5 and Tabram here], there was enormous risk. Doesn't the FBI report on Jack pin him down as a disorganised personality? You say - who turns into a meek and generally totally harmless schizophrenic. Yet this same schizophrenic attacks women [if the letter is to be believed] , and his sister, he is also put on some form of ID with great difficulty, we don't know what the difficulty is but he could have shown some violent form of resistance? What we do know is - In a very short time the suspect with his hands tied behind his back, he was sent to StepneyWorkhouse and then to Colney Hatch, Swansons words. Doesn't sound very meek and harmless when taken off the streets.
We always seem to have the idea that the police were looking just at people who were wandering the streets aimlessly with a vacant look in their eyes. Yet Pizer was their Num 1 suspect for a while. He wasn't meek and harmless. In fact to me the police looked at all angles, yes including people who had just recently been released from an asylum but people like Jacob Isenschmid had shown violent behaviour. Even today with the advances in treatment for schizophrenic individuals [ none of this available in Victorian London], we still here cases of people being let out back into society deemed cured only for them to attack and kill again, and sometimes very shortly after release.
One last point when Kosminski was taken to the asylum the case notes are from what they have been told, eating out of the gutter etc. I have often wondered if they are wholly truthful. Kosminski's family if they suspected him of being Jack would want him put away for good but possibly not want the shame that he was one of their family and the repercussions that could bring. Maybe they embellished some of the details regarding his mental state.
Regards Darryl
The trouble I have with Kosminski is that for years a lot of ripperologists were saying "Ah, but Kosminski couldn't have been Jack, he was a harmless imbecile" per asylum reports 91 onwards etc. Now, and it is a now because we do not know if the letter is legit or not, we are seeing, "Well alright he may not have been harmless, but these are a different sort of attacks". Also the dog incident shows that he wasn't wandering around drooling at the lips from at least that time, Dec 89 [off top of my head] , being able to attend court etc. What I am getting at is nothing is showing definitively what he was like and his state of mind in 1888. However what we can get at is that two senior police officers both strongly suspected him of being Jack. I am not saying we should take their word as gospel but they would almost certainly have delved into Kosminski's movements, state of mind etc in the fall of 1888 and until further evidence comes to light we are really no more than making conjectures [ on his mindset, actions, in the fall of 88], with the scant evidence available.
Regards Darryl
Personally, I am having trouble with the idea that we should believe in Kosminski on account of how he was a mentally challenged man - but we are not to believe in these mental challenges having played a role when he killed away in the autumn of 1888. At this stage, he would have been able to plan, to kill silently, to leave the victims on the ground as unfinished business while making good his escape - in other words, he would NOT have acted in accordance with the kind of mental shortcomings that were the things that drew attention to him initially, but instead as a cool and calculating man.
Itīs a bit like eating the cake and keeping it at the same time, is it not?
So we are looking at a very stealthy and sharp killer, a fearless and silent assailant, able to do all of these things, who turns into a meek and generally totally harmless schizophrenic only AFTER the killing spree, walking peopleīs dogs for them and eating out of the gutter. And lunging at people with a pair of scissors in a very unstealthy and commotional manner, the way mentally challenged people are likely to do. To call Kosminski the Ripper does not work for me on any plan.
I would also say that although it would be wise of the contemporary police to investigate what Kosminski was about in late 1888, to check if he fit the bill, they would be more inclined to believe he did so if he was showing signs of schizophrenia and odd behaviour at that stage than if he seemed completely rational. The victorians did not have a sound picture of what a sexual serial killer is comprised of. Paradoxically, if they believed Kosminski seemed to be their guy, he was quite likely not to be so.
With our advanced knowledge and understanding of mental health now we are able to discriminate more between an anxious, erratic and disturbed individual from that of a ritualistic killer who followed patterned behaviour. Any acts of rage by Kosminski were definitely not of a pattern. They were infrequent, fairly mild and erratic. We know of the canonical victims there were clear distinct patterns such as occurring at the weekend and being late at night. The murders whilst grisly were in the mind of the killer following some kind of ritual. Ted Bundy was a ritualistic killer (particularly post mortem) who demonstrated patterned behaviour and he was never a named suspect until after he was caught by chance because of the description of his car. I believe Jack was more like Bundy than he was Kosminski.
The trouble I have with Kosminski is that for years a lot of ripperologists were saying "Ah, but Kosminski couldn't have been Jack, he was a harmless imbecile" per asylum reports 91 onwards etc. Now, and it is a now because we do not know if the letter is legit or not, we are seeing, "Well alright he may not have been harmless, but these are a different sort of attacks". Also the dog incident shows that he wasn't wandering around drooling at the lips from at least that time, Dec 89 [off top of my head] , being able to attend court etc. What I am getting at is nothing is showing definitively what he was like and his state of mind in 1888. However what we can get at is that two senior police officers both strongly suspected him of being Jack. I am not saying we should take their word as gospel but they would almost certainly have delved into Kosminski's movements, state of mind etc in the fall of 1888 and until further evidence comes to light we are really no more than making conjectures [ on his mindset, actions, in the fall of 88], with the scant evidence available.
Regards Darryl
But you are stating the beginning, not the end. If Kosminski didn't appear to be that convenient peg, it would be universally accepted that Kosminski was Jack the Ripper. What we want to know is whether he was just a convenient peg or whether he was more, maybe much more than that.
With our advanced knowledge and understanding of mental health now we are able to discriminate more between an anxious, erratic and disturbed individual from that of a ritualistic killer who followed patterned behaviour. Any acts of rage by Kosminski were definitely not of a pattern. They were infrequent, fairly mild and erratic. We know of the canonical victims there were clear distinct patterns such as occurring at the weekend and being late at night. The murders whilst grisly were in the mind of the killer following some kind of ritual. Ted Bundy was a ritualistic killer (particularly post mortem) who demonstrated patterned behaviour and he was never a named suspect until after he was caught by chance because of the description of his car. I believe Jack was more like Bundy than he was Kosminski.
Do we see the reference to Kosminski as a 'sudden burst' of interest between banalities because Kosminski means something too us? Would it seem that way if the name was Smith or Jones?
It would still stand out as odd to me. All this good Christian sympathy and concern flanking a brief splurge of hot gossip in the middle... to me, it just doesn't feel right.
The victorians did not hang people for masturbating in public. Can I rule out that an outraged person (or even a merely baffled one) would say that people ought to hang for such things? No, I cannot. I can only entertain my own belief that this is not what the letter refers to.
So we have another example of something two people with an interest in the case do not agree about. I am not surprised.
So, you are proposing that the faker was elderly enough to refer to the victims as ‘girls’? I have a senior rail-card, but I don't call middle-aged women 'girls'. How old would a modern-day faker have to be to think of Jack the Ripper's victims as 'girls'?
Sometimes I despare about the possibilities to have anything you write out here understood. I said that elderly people are more likely to call middle aged women girls, and that should be uncontroversial in the extreme. I did not claim that the faker was elderly enough to call the women girls, instead I pointed out that Dott was seemingly born in 1867, and thus a young man.
How hard can it be?
Alternatively, of course, the use of the word ‘girls’ is odd, as you acknowledge, so maybe proposing an old faker is just a wishful explanation, and the simpler proposition is that the letter writer isn't referring to the Ripper's victims at all.
I am not suggesting an elderly faker, though. Or a young one, for that matter. Or middle-aged. I have no idea if the letter was faked in the first place, although I do agree with those who say that it seems improbable that Kosminksi was in the policeīs searchlight in 1889. Lastly, I do not agree at all that that it would somehow be a simple (or simpler) proposition that the letter was not about the Ripper victims. I think it is by far the likelier thing that it refers to these victims. Hoax or not.
And there is no evidence that Dott was the letter writer.
The writer does not say Kosminski should have hung. He expresses wonder that ‘he hasn’t hung’. That’s an expression of bafflement, not outrage.
That, Iīm afraid, is not for us to interpret into some sort of fact. It is clear that the writer claims that Kosminski would have done something that should have had him hung, and it cannot be ruled out that expressing a disbelief that this has not happened can originate in outrage. However, I am not in any shape or form interested in having a semantic discussion about it.
I’m sure suddenly appearing, shouting, and brandishing a pair of scissors, would be very frightening to young women, even today, and, if it is ‘our’ Kosminski, I imagine that masturbating in front of them might have seriously shocked some sensibilities and caused the letter writer to wonder that he was still at liberty, ‘have been hung’ being an obvious exaggeration, as the whole thing suggests.
The victorians did not hang people for masturbating in public. Can I rule out that an outraged person (or even a merely baffled one) would say that people ought to hang for such things? No, I cannot. I can only entertain my own belief that this is not what the letter refers to.
So we have another example of something two people with an interest in the case do not agree about. I am not surprised.
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