Originally posted by Hunter
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Is Kosminski the man really viable?
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostI forget who asked her but, I understand Berkin was asked if that "knowledge" developed after 1987 when the marginalia surfaced or long before. I have been waiting to see some kind of response from Berkin.
Originally posted by Wickerman View PostBecause her opinion is third party we do not know what she claims is factual. It is not unreasonable to contemplate that Mary Berkin might choose to promote her grandfather's image by also asserting that he claimed to know the name of the killer.
We have the notes of a senior policeman speaking off the record...he calls Kos the "suspect" seven times and the "murderer" once.
Why are Berkin's comments so hard to understand?? I mean it's not the Goulston Street Graffiti for the love of God.Managing Editor
Casebook Wiki
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Originally posted by RivkahChaya View PostI mean, if he could provide an alibi for one of the murders, wouldn't that have settled things? maybe not for us, but for the police at the time, who believed they were looking for one person?Originally posted by Sir Robert Anderson View PostAre we looking for more than one person?
I meant that if Kosminski had an airtight alibi for the Annie Chapman murder, and that one alone, the police in 1888 (or 89) would have eliminated him from consideration for all the murders, rather than say "OK, perhaps he didn't do that one, but still did the other ones"; or "OK, maybe he just did the ones we have a witness for, and someone else did the others."
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Originally posted by RivkahChaya View PostI meant that if Kosminski had an airtight alibi for the Annie Chapman murder, and that one alone, the police in 1888 (or 89) would have eliminated him from consideration for all the murders, rather than say "OK, perhaps he didn't do that one, but still did the other ones"; or "OK, maybe he just did the ones we have a witness for, and someone else did the others."Managing Editor
Casebook Wiki
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Hi All,
Who said this—?
"It is easy to suspect a man," said a well-known Scotland Yard detective to a representative of the Sunday Chronicle. "Frequently it is not difficult to suspect the right man. But unless there is an unbroken chain of circumstances connecting the suspected person with the actual crime it is both useless and harmful to make an arrest.
"Again, there are often people who could, if they would, supply these missing links, but the ordinary man or woman hesitates very much before giving evidence which may cause a fellow-being - murderer though he may be - to lose his life.
"Often we cannot take credit for finding the man, because suspicion, however strong, without legal proof has to be kept quiet.
"We have thus frequently to submit to the public verdict that we have utterly failed in some important case when as a matter of fact we have morally succeeded."
Regards,
SimonNever believe anything until it has been officially denied.
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I believe we are looking for 1 and only 1 person possibly a local of the Whitechapel area who was at one point a butcher and thus in possession of some sort of cover-all which he used to wipe the weapon after the act. Thoughts on this theory welcomed
Mr Holmes
You asked for comments on this idea.
To my knowledge it goes back at least to 1965, when Robin Odell
wrote a book called "JtR: Fact and Fiction". This did not (unusually for its time) name a suspect but identified "Jack as plausibly a Jewish slaughterman or schochet.
It remains, so far as I am aware, a reasonable hypothesis, but no name has ever been advanced as to an individual of that profession or to suggest one.
You might like to search out Odell's book. I hope that helps.
P.S. Here are a couple of relevant links:
Phil H
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Originally posted by Simon Wood View PostHi All,
Who said this—?
"It is easy to suspect a man," said a well-known Scotland Yard detective to a representative of the Sunday Chronicle. "Frequently it is not difficult to suspect the right man. But unless there is an unbroken chain of circumstances connecting the suspected person with the actual crime it is both useless and harmful to make an arrest.
"Again, there are often people who could, if they would, supply these missing links, but the ordinary man or woman hesitates very much before giving evidence which may cause a fellow-being - murderer though he may be - to lose his life.
"Often we cannot take credit for finding the man, because suspicion, however strong, without legal proof has to be kept quiet.
"We have thus frequently to submit to the public verdict that we have utterly failed in some important case when as a matter of fact we have morally succeeded."
Regards,
Simon
RH
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Hi Rob,
Me, too.
Our anonymous Scotland Yard detective continued—
"Perhaps the most terrible crime during the last decade which was not followed by a conviction was the killing and mutilating of a number of unfortunate women in Whitechapel. Day after day these murders occurred. Failure again? Yes. But listen to this.
"We found our man. He was engaged in a large way of business in the city of London, was married, had a family, and was generally respected. For some time he had been known as eccentric, and various escapades had caused his friends a good deal of anxiety.
"Frequently, as we learned later, he stayed out all night about the time when these outrages were committed. His description agreed with that of a man seen in Dorset-street, Whitechapel, on the night when Mary Jane Kelly was cut to pieces, and at that time he was very near to actual arrest by a policeman.
"His family knew of the circumstances, knew that he was not only a madman, but a man possessed of considerable surgical knowledge, and with their full consent and the knowledge of the police he was put away in an asylum.
"Since that man's removal there has not been another such crime in London . . ."
Regards,
SimonNever believe anything until it has been officially denied.
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Originally posted by Sir Robert Anderson View PostI am curious as to why you say that, because it makes Swanson etc. sound like a pack of idiots. Up until JtR, they had no experience with serial killers or murderers of strangers without a motive....they would have been inclined to think each of these women was done in by someone they knew. Obviously as things progressed they started to realize that they were up against something new but I am certain that there was debate within the police as to how many victims were actually Jack's work.
I am wondering why there seems to be no record of an interview with Kosminski or his family in order to establish his whereabouts for the murders. Maybe this did happen, and we just don't have the record, but you'd think the police in general would know it happened, it it would be mentioned in memoirs somewhere.
That was all I had to say.
Tangentially, I added that, because back then, the consensus among investigators seems to have been that all the Whitechapel/Spitalfields murders were by one person, Kosminski needed an alibi for just one in order to be cleared of all five of them.
I didn't mean, by saying that, that the detectives back then were stupid for thinking all the murders were done by one person, and people who disagree now were extra clever. I said it because I know a lot of people on the board don't think there was a single killer, and I was just acknowledging that. I thought, if I merely said "Funny they don't seem to have interviewed him, or asked for an alibi, especially since an alibi for one of the murders would have cleared him of all five," because I saw a number of people posting "Hey, we don't know there was one killer-- Kosminski might just have killed one of the victims, etc."
So now I have you thinking I called the police stupid.
I didn't.
But really, I do think there was a point at which the police pretty much agreed that JTR killed no less than the C5, so that having an alibi for any of those murders meant that a suspect was not JTR. The suspect could still have killed Emma Smith or Rose Mylett, or someone else entirely, and likewise, having an alibi for the Emma Smith murder did not exculpate a person from the C5 murders.
So, is there a record some place of inquiries regarding Kosminski's whereabouts during the C5 murders? Maybe there is, and I just don't know about it, but all the time people are emphasizing that there is this flawless witness who won't come forward, nobody mentions anything else, like Kosminski not having an alibi for any of the murders.
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Originally posted by Sir Robert Anderson View Post
We have the notes of a senior policeman speaking off the record...he calls Kos the "suspect" seven times and the "murderer" once.
At no time, nowhere, does Swanson call the suspect a murderer, in his opinion.
What Swanson does do, is speculate that if the witness had given the evidence that was expected of him, the suspect would then become the accused (ie; the murderer).
Swanson does not say that in his opinion Kosminski was the murderer, but that is what your sentence is intended to imply.
Once again, Swanson calls Kosminski "the suspect", but.... if the I.D. had gone according to plan the "suspect" would then have become the "accused", simply a natural consequence of procedure in law. Swanson was wrong to call him the "murderer" (which is a conclusion), he should have said the "accused", but we do know what he means.
Why are Berkin's comments so hard to understand?? I mean it's not the Goulston Street Graffiti for the love of God.
Mary Berkin is relating what she has been told, precisely the same situation that I am in with my own grandfather. However, you choose to interpret her words as evidence, they are hearsay, and we cannot presume they represent the verbatim truth.
Regards, Jon S.Regards, Jon S.
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Hello Simon,
Is it Wensley?I confess that altruistic and cynically selfish talk seem to me about equally unreal. With all humility, I think 'whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might,' infinitely more important than the vain attempt to love one's neighbour as one's self. If you want to hit a bird on the wing you must have all your will in focus, you must not be thinking about yourself, and equally, you must not be thinking about your neighbour; you must be living with your eye on that bird. Every achievement is a bird on the wing.
Oliver Wendell Holmes
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Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
Three senior policemen all holding the same opinion can appear impressive, or at least significant. However, we are not talking about three independent opinions. It would only take one written report, emanating from Swanson, to spread one opinion among the three men.
You're not making a great deal of sense here.
I doubt there's ever been a murder investigation where 3 police officers have independently discovered clues and arrived at a conclusion, only to find their fellow officers had found other clues and arrived at the same conclusion, prior to discussing notes. So, there will always be someone informing the others of significant events.
What are you saying here? MacNaghten and Anderson were idiots who simply believed everything Swanson told them? Did they lack the capacity to review the situation, ask questions and form an opinion? It begs the question: how did these idiots reach senior positions in the police force? And, more to the point, how on earth did they function as human beings acting out the bare essentials such as buying food?
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