Originally posted by Theagenes
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Kosminski and Victim DNA Match on Shawl
Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
X
-
Originally posted by JLFrye View Postthere are a lot more reasons why people say it "never existed"
Did I forget anything?
Joking aside, that lack of it appearing on the list is the biggest problem provenience-wise, but it's hardly a deal-breaker that trumps the DNA, should it hold up as some people are trying to pretend.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Theagenes View PostNo it doesn't. Just makes him the most likely suspect by far.G U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
Comment
-
Originally posted by robhouse View PostWhat the police (or Anderson) "knew" is not really the issue. Kozminski was not charged with a crime. Legally speaking he was innocent, and would have been treated like any other inmate. If the police went to extraordinary (and extralegal) measures to have Kozminski "taken care of" somehow, I certainly do not know. But as I have written before, IF they did, it certainly would have been kept very quiet.
Keep in mind also, that the majority of Kozminski's asylum records are missing, probably destroyed or discarded. We have his Colney Hatch entries, then a 16 year gap where we know nothing.
RH
Comment
-
Originally posted by robhouse View PostHe was listed as "Not Dangerous" on a "Statement of Particulars" at the time of his entry to Colney Hatch. This was a form, and the question was probably asked of whoever brought him there, which means, in all likelihood his brother Woolf. In other words, Woolf was asked "Is your brother dangerous?" to which he replied "No." The asylum, in all likelihood, had no idea he was dangerous. Or no more than other patients they had. Even at Leavesden there were dangerous inmates. And let's not forget that he threatened to attack his own sister with a knife, and threw a chair at an asylum attendant. And that, according to Macnaghten, he had "strong homicidal tendencies." And, as has been pointed out, many serial killers are model inmates, quite, docile etc.
RH
Well, I've just ordered your book on Amazon. I look forward to its arrival. But in the meantime …
I know that procedures in the late-nineteenth century were not what they are now, but surely you'd expect the police, if they were convinced that their 'Kosminski' was our Aaron Kosminski, to have a word with the authorities. After all, they 'knew' their Kosminski was in an asylum, even if the dates of his incarceration and death don't match Aaron's.
I'll buy the throwing of a chair as a sign of something less than total docility, and the knife incident doesn't sound good, although the cops shot a young kid dead a couple of years back, only about 400 yards from where I'm sitting now, for threatening them with a knife. According to many witnesses (it was in the street on a busy afternoon) the kid wasn't doing any such thing - just holding a bread knife which he'd just picked up in a coffee shop, and looking confused and terrified.
So a threat perceived is not necessarily a threat intended.
I'm agnostic on Kosminski's guilt, or innocence. Look forward to the book.Mick Reed
Whatever happened to scepticism?
Comment
-
Originally posted by GUT View PostLong way from Solved, if having sex with a prossie makes him our best suspect, it just shows how weak it all is. IMHO.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Theagenes View PostI do think this is problem with Kosminski, While he may have appeared docile once confined, if the Met police knew he was the killer, you think they would have gotten rid of him quietly. Could he have been lobotomized, chemically or physically?
RH
Comment
-
Originally posted by mickreed View PostHi Rob
Well, I've just ordered your book on Amazon. I look forward to its arrival. But in the meantime …
I know that procedures in the late-nineteenth century were not what they are now, but surely you'd expect the police, if they were convinced that their 'Kosminski' was our Aaron Kosminski, to have a word with the authorities. After all, they 'knew' their Kosminski was in an asylum, even if the dates of his incarceration and death don't match Aaron's.
I'll buy the throwing of a chair as a sign of something less than total docility, and the knife incident doesn't sound good, although the cops shot a young kid dead a couple of years back, only about 400 yards from where I'm sitting now, for threatening them with a knife. According to many witnesses (it was in the street on a busy afternoon) the kid wasn't doing any such thing - just holding a bread knife which he'd just picked up in a coffee shop, and looking confused and terrified.
So a threat perceived is not necessarily a threat intended.
I'm agnostic on Kosminski's guilt, or innocence. Look forward to the book.
I take your point about the knife threat, but remember, we don't know anything about this incident... how serious it was. These things can go both ways. The incident may have been very serious, hence his family finally deciding to have him put away. Whether the police were involved is unknown, but I wouldn't be surprised. Also remember, the police certainly knew a lot more about Kozminski than we do now, and Anderson at least was convinced he was the Ripper. Swanson may also have been convinced.
RH
Comment
-
Originally posted by PaulB View PostI didn't say the provenance of the shawl didn't matter. You do have a habit of twisting my words. I specifically said that IF the DNA findings were solid - meaning that the DNA of Eddowes and Kosminski was on the shawl - then the provenance wouldn't be as important as some people perceive it. We would have to accept that somehow an apron with the DNA on it of a murder victim and a leading suspect in her murder passed into the hands of Amos Simpson's family, despite the fact that there was no immediate acceptable explanation of how that happened.
In other words, you can't dismiss the DNA evidence (assuming it is solid) just because the received provenance is crap.
If the DNA checks out then we need to question who put the DNA on that shawl, because the shawl didn't come from Mitre Square. I would feel a lot better about all this if someone could produce a document from the Simpson family dating back even a century. Forget 1888, give me 1910, 1920. A family photo with the shawl in it, a diary mentioning it, SOMETHING other than a guy showing up post-Diary in the 90s going 'Hey, this shawl was Eddowes''.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
Comment
-
Originally posted by robhouse View Post
Keep in mind also, that the majority of Kozminski's asylum records are missing, probably destroyed or discarded. We have his Colney Hatch entries, then a 16 year gap where we know nothing.
RH
I wonder whether other departments had similar archives, and what happened to them when the LCC became the GLC and then was finally abolished by Thatcher.
No doubt some went to what is now the LMA but did they all?Mick Reed
Whatever happened to scepticism?
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jonathan H View PostAs I wrote.
This is the only way the "Kosminski" theory can be upheld: by flatly ignoring primary sources, not secondary ones, that contradict it.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
Comment
-
Originally posted by robhouse View PostI have thought about this a good deal. In my opinion, the police would have gone to extralegal measures to make sure Kozminski was taken care of somehow. But I don't really want to get into the deep end of speculation here.
I take your point about the knife threat, but remember, we don't know anything about this incident... how serious it was. These things can go both ways. The incident may have been very serious, hence his family finally deciding to have him put away. Whether the police were involved is unknown, but I wouldn't be surprised. Also remember, the police certainly knew a lot more about Kozminski than we do now, and Anderson at least was convinced he was the Ripper. Swanson may also have been convinced.
RH
Comment
-
Originally posted by mickreed View PostWhen I left school in 1959, my first job was with the London County Council which ran Leavesden from 1930. I was in an entirely different department, but part of job involved going to the archives in the basement and bringing up files, some of which contained records going back to the early-nineteenth century at least (long pre-LCC). If I knew then what I know now …
I wonder whether other departments had similar archives, and what happened to them when the LCC became the GLC and then was finally abolished by Thatcher.
No doubt some went to what is now the LMA but did they all?
RH
Comment
-
Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View PostIt's not a habit of mine, Paul. I just dabble in twisting your words! I'm learning much from Chris 'Twisty Magee' Phillips, though.
If the DNA checks out then we need to question who put the DNA on that shawl, because the shawl didn't come from Mitre Square. I would feel a lot better about all this if someone could produce a document from the Simpson family dating back even a century. Forget 1888, give me 1910, 1920. A family photo with the shawl in it, a diary mentioning it, SOMETHING other than a guy showing up post-Diary in the 90s going 'Hey, this shawl was Eddowes''.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
Here is the thread where it's discussed:
Comment
Comment