Originally posted by Jeff Leahy
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Arbitrary Selective Rejection and Acceptence of Coincidences
Collapse
X
-
Three things in life that don't stay hidden for to long ones the sun ones the moon and the other is the truth
-
No, Jeff
To Errata
A thoughtful post.
My theory is that Macnaghten misled the other police (and George Kebbell) as nearly all their suspects are supposedly deceased whilst only his actually was six foot under.
Nobody here agrees with me. Worse it is regarded as a slur against the character and professionalism of this police chief.
To Jeff
No, Jeff, I was not suggesting that Begg agrees with me! This is one of your worst ever bits of shameless distortion. I have always made it clear that Begg politely and firmly believes I am quite wrong about Macnaghten.
No, Jeff, Sagar was not watching Kosminski, but a butcher in Aldgate who emigrated to Australia after being released from a private asylum (I suppose you are going to ask me to look up records here to prove it was really Aaron on vacation?)
No, Jeff, Sims is a primary source for the posthumous investigation into Druitt, and into the incarceration of Kosminski, albeit second-hand.
No, Jeff, Fido was not just looking at public asylum records in early 1889 because of what Macnaghten wrote but because that is also where Anderson implicitly places the timing of the sectioning of his Polish suspect. That the Polish madman was sectioned just once is the only element the sources agree on.
No, Jeff, the Sims piece of 1907 shows that data about Kosminski was being deliberately reshaped by Sims; now the suspect lives alone, does not practice chronic self-abuse, worked in a hospital in Poland, and was sectioned by the state, not family, and was only a silhouette to the cop witness. He is also not the alternative to the Drowned Doctor as that place is reserved for an American medico suspect.
No, Jeff, Macnaghten is aware in 1898, 1903 and 1907 that Aaron Kosminski was still alive--at the same time Anderson was telling his son he was deceased, and Swanson believed he was deceased. It has nothing to do with switching asylums. It is just that Mac was correct something you are unable to face because the house of cards collapses--yet you are dangerously trying to use the same chief, who debunked the Polish suspect, as your proof that the same man went in to a private asylum in 1889?!
No, Jeff, I was not claiming you were in any way connected to Russell Edwards. Rather, you were against the shawl because you had been told it was an Edwardian table-cloth, then you switched sides when you discovered other Kosminski-advocates were, awkwardly, putting one foot in the DNA wagon--until the wheels fell off (thanks to Chris). Now you are trying to resuscitate that deflated balloon by claiming, of all things, that Macnaghten is a reliable source, e.g. the same top cop who pointedly rejected Kosminski in favor of another (who was really deceased).
Desperate times, Jeff ...
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jeff Leahy View PostYes I agree , it is speculative…but thus is any suspect theory ripperology.
I can only say that I am re-evaluating the sources about Kosminski and Cohen
Starting form scratch in 2015…
And I've checked with Martin Fido (After all he is the father of this research)
And he has at least said that its worth while research (I suggest given that he has only checked Public asylum records and there is contemporary source records that 'The Suspect' did indeed enter a private asylum).
Trusting this clarify's
Yours JefThree things in life that don't stay hidden for to long ones the sun ones the moon and the other is the truth
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jeff Leahy View PostNo I am communicating with people with new ideas that expand upon Robert houses book. Robert is clearly attached to a single asylum theory
We are saying that Kosminski enter the asylum on more than one occasion.
i.e. from December 1888 until February 1991
Rip up everything you have ever believed before…
2015 here we come!
Yours Jef
I think that's the core revelation of his book IMO.Bona fide canonical and then some.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post
To Jeff
No, Jeff, I was not suggesting that Begg agrees with me! This is one of your worst ever bits of shameless distortion. I have always made it clear that Begg politely and firmly believes I am quite wrong about Macnaghten.
Originally posted by Jonathan H View PostNo, Jeff, Sagar was not watching Kosminski, but a butcher in Aldgate who emigrated to Australia after being released from a private asylum (I suppose you are going to ask me to look up records here to prove it was really Aaron on vacation?)
Who were Aarons people?
And which one of the Cohen's went to South Africa?
Originally posted by Jonathan H View PostNo, Jeff, Sims is a primary source for the posthumous investigation into Druitt, and into the incarceration of Kosminski, albeit second-hand.
Originally posted by Jonathan H View PostNo, Jeff, Fido was not just looking at public asylum records in early 1889 because of what Macnaghten wrote but because that is also where Anderson implicitly places the timing of the sectioning of his Polish suspect. That the Polish madman was sectioned just once is the only element the sources agree on.
So we have two events that in my opinion are actually two.
There is nothing in what anybody says that excludes that possibility.
Originally posted by Jonathan H View PostNo, Jeff, the Sims piece of 1907 shows that data about Kosminski was being deliberately reshaped by Sims; now the suspect lives alone, does not practice chronic self-abuse, worked in a hospital in Poland, and was sectioned by the state, not family, and was only a silhouette to the cop witness. He is also not the alternative to the Drowned Doctor as that place is reserved for an American medico suspect.
Originally posted by Jonathan H View PostNo, Jeff, Macnaghten is aware in 1898, 1903 and 1907 that Aaron Kosminski was still alive--at the same time Anderson was telling his son he was deceased, and Swanson believed he was deceased. It has nothing to do with switching asylums. It is just that Mac was correct something you are unable to face because the house of cards collapses--yet you are dangerously trying to use the same chief, who debunked the Polish suspect, as your proof that the same man went in to a private asylum in 1889?!
However given the little information he has, and from private info, presumably faquharson he naturally favours Druit. Theres no need to a cover up or any deception. He simply believes what he believes because he knows nothing about Swanson and Andersons ID suspect, who was also Kosminski
Originally posted by Jonathan H View PostNo, Jeff, I was not claiming you were in any way connected to Russell Edwards. Rather, you were against the shawl because you had been told it was an Edwardian table-cloth, then you switched sides when you discovered other Kosminski-advocates were, awkwardly, putting one foot in the DNA wagon--until the wheels fell off (thanks to Chris). Now you are trying to resuscitate that deflated balloon by claiming, of all things, that Macnaghten is a reliable source, e.g. the same top cop who pointedly rejected Kosminski in favor of another (who was really deceased).
Desperate times, Jeff ...
Yours Jeff
Comment
-
Originally posted by Batman View PostAre you sure House doesn't say Kozminski was in and out of several different asylums?
I think that's the core revelation of his book IMO.
What I think I'm trying to say that is a new theory, is that there were two completely separate events.
That Kosminski entered a Private Asylum (Possibly on several occasions starting as early as Dec 1888) but being put out of harms way for several months in March 1889. This was the file that MacNaughten accessed.
Rob House also mentions the Crawford letter, however Crawford only sat on the sweat shop committee until April 1888. I'm postulating that Matilda Kosminski was introduced to Crawford via Montagu the Whitechapel MP. This might also give a connection to Shaftsbury and Holloway.
That Anderson met Matilda Kosminski in secret. Ask Swanson do we have anything on a chap called Kosminski? Swanson said yes and with difficulty, set up an ID at a Convalescent Seaside Home in a private asylum. This was only known to Swanson and Anderson and a handful of detectives sworn to secrecy.
When it failed it was thought best to keep track on him in a public Asylum. This was agreed with the family for political reasons.
Swanson kept track via Dr Seward who confused Cohen and Kosminski when Kosminski had actually been transferred to Leavesdon.
This is simply a revisiting of work done by Martin Fido, Paul Begg, Stewart Evans, Rob House, Rob Clack, Chris Philips, Chris Scot and Debra Ariff (Hopefully haven't missed anyone) and contains interesting new work by a German researcher. It is the nature of Ripperology to build on those who have gone before.
Trust that clarify's
Yours JeffLast edited by Jeff Leahy; 01-15-2015, 04:04 AM.
Comment
-
Ill take that as an apology to myself and Begg, mealy-mouthed as it is.
You still shamelessly break it up into bits, how youthful of you.
Sagar's suspect went to Australia after being incarcerated, and died there, so it was not Aaron Kosminski.
Unless ...
By the way I forgot to deal with Harry Cox.
You are wrong about him too, Jeff. He is writing about events in 1891, not 1889, and he also asserts that there was no proof against this man, there was nothing police could actually do--not even arrest him. That's not your Kosminski, is it, who had a star witness against him, and who even admitted by his manner at the alleged identification that he had been tumbled. Shame about that Judas witness, but at least the swine croaked soon after.
Except, to ruin a good yarn, he hadn't, had he?
Macnaghten knew that Kosminski had been sectioned much later than the so-called canonical murders--and was functioning in between--whereas Anderson and Swanson know no such thing. Macnaghten knew he was alive and not deceased, no matter how you frantically try and spin this, Jeff, and he knew it as late as 1907.
Macnaghten via Sims (who knew a lot more about the real Kosminski than Anderson or Swanson) also gave it to Anderson, with both barrels, about the rubbish of a Hebrew witness and/or a Hebrew community shielding the Polish madman:
"The Referee", Dagonet in "Mustard and Cress", April 17th, 1910:
“It was only the other day that the late esteemed head of the C.I.D. caused a storm of indignation among the King’s Jewish subjects by stating that JACK THE RIPPER was a Jew, and that the Jews knew who he was and assisted him to evade capture.
The statement went beyond ascertained facts. The mad Polish Jew, to whom Sir Robert refers, was only one of three persons who were each strongly suspected of being the genuine Jack. The final official record, which is in the archives of the Home Office, leaves the matter in doubt between the Polish Jew, who was afterwards put in a lunatic asylum, a Russian doctor of vile character, and an English homicidal maniac, one Dr.-----, who had been in a lunatic asylum.
In these circumstances it was certainly indiscreet of Sir Robert to plump for the Polish Jew, and to imply that many of the Jewish community in the East End were accessories after the fact. …
ANDERSON’S FAIRY TALES.
There is no truth to the rumour that in the course of further romantic revelations to be expected from Sir Robert we shall learn … The name of the eminent Jewish financiers who assisted Jack the Ripper to evade arrest.’
Why did Sims not quite Griffiths to say that there had been a possible witness, but that was a Gentile policeman?
Because that bit of propaganda was being retired.
For example, Macnaghten backs this stance in his 1914 memoirs; by deflating the notion of a cop witness to anything. It is Mac who had set in motion the whole idea of a witness to Kosminski that Anderson's fading yet self-serving memory then mixed and matched with Lawende and Sadler (sand the Sailor's Home) and allegedly affirming to William Grant.
Macnaghten also writes in 1914 that there were no other witnesses of note. That is not literally true, but the point here is that he was denouncing Anderson's account of four years previous--e.g. the Ripper was not a Jew, not detained by the state and not the subject of a positive identification, and police were clueless about the real killer whilst he was alive and for years after he was deceased.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post
Sagar's suspect went to Australia after being incarcerated, and died there, so it was not Aaron Kosminski.
Originally posted by Jonathan H View PostBy the way I forgot to deal with Harry Cox.
You are wrong about him too, Jeff. He is writing about events in 1891, not 1889, and he also asserts that there was no proof against this man, there was nothing police could actually do--not even arrest him. That's not your Kosminski, is it, who had a star witness against him, and who even admitted by his manner at the alleged identification that he had been tumbled. Shame about that Judas witness, but at least the swine croaked soon after.
Originally posted by Jonathan H View PostExcept, to ruin a good yarn, he hadn't, had he?
Macnaghten knew that Kosminski had been sectioned much later than the so-called canonical murders--and was functioning in between--whereas Anderson and Swanson know no such thing. Macnaghten knew he was alive and not deceased, no matter how you frantically try and spin this, Jeff, and he knew it as late as 1907.
Originally posted by Jonathan H View PostMacnaghten via Sims (who knew a lot more about the real Kosminski than Anderson or Swanson) also gave it to Anderson, with both barrels, about the rubbish of a Hebrew witness and/or a Hebrew community shielding the Polish madman:
Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post"The Referee", Dagonet in "Mustard and Cress", April 17th, 1910:
“It was only the other day that the late esteemed head of the C.I.D. caused a storm of indignation among the King’s Jewish subjects by stating that JACK THE RIPPER was a Jew, and that the Jews knew who he was and assisted him to evade capture.
Originally posted by Jonathan H View PostThe statement went beyond ascertained facts. The mad Polish Jew, to whom Sir Robert refers, was only one of three persons who were each strongly suspected of being the genuine Jack. The final official record, which is in the archives of the Home Office, leaves the matter in doubt between the Polish Jew, who was afterwards put in a lunatic asylum, a Russian doctor of vile character, and an English homicidal maniac, one Dr.-----, who had been in a lunatic asylum.
Originally posted by Jonathan H View PostIn these circumstances it was certainly indiscreet of Sir Robert to plump for the Polish Jew, and to imply that many of the Jewish community in the East End were accessories after the fact. …
However Anderson wasn't talking about Jews in general. He was talking about a community from Kalish. They protected one of their number who from time to time became insane. It was hardly their fault Aaron developed schizophrenia. They may have experienced this kind of thing before but it wasn't really understood….still isn't
Originally posted by Jonathan H View PostANDERSON’S FAIRY TALES.
There is no truth to the rumour that in the course of further romantic revelations to be expected from Sir Robert we shall learn … The name of the eminent Jewish financiers who assisted Jack the Ripper to evade arrest.’
Why did Sims not quite Griffiths to say that there had been a possible witness, but that was a Gentile policeman?
Was there a police witness? Its not impossible given the timings in Mitre Sq
Originally posted by Jonathan H View PostBecause that bit of propaganda was being retired.
For example, Macnaghten backs this stance in his 1914 memoirs; by deflating the notion of a cop witness to anything. It is Mac who had set in motion the whole idea of a witness to Kosminski that Anderson's fading yet self-serving memory then mixed and matched with Lawende and Sadler (sand the Sailor's Home) and allegedly affirming to William Grant.
Macnaghten also writes in 1914 that there were no other witnesses of note. That is not literally true, but the point here is that he was denouncing Anderson's account of four years previous--e.g. the Ripper was not a Jew, not detained by the state and not the subject of a positive identification, and police were clueless about the real killer whilst he was alive and for years after he was deceased.
There is obviously an error if he thought Kosminski dead. But I've explained a possibility why he may have thought so… That Dr Seward treated both Cohen and Kosminski and may have muddled them when kosminski was later transferred…That would explain why Swanson believed what he did and why Anderson believed what he did…
Simms, Griffis, MacNaughten , Abberline, Ried etc etc. None of them knew about the ID or Kosminski going to Colney Hatch…only Swanson and Anderson new about this and it was kept hush for political reasons…Montagu.
Only Swanson mentions Colney Hatch by name. The rest only know an Asylum and they don't know where..
Yours JeffLast edited by Jeff Leahy; 01-15-2015, 06:08 AM.
Comment
-
However in the end isn't Kozminski just a coincidental case of a public masturbator who was maybe on a watch list but who basically ended up in an asylum which sort of coincided with the end to the Ripper murders?
I don't even think that should be granted the title of circumstantial.
There is zero evidence for correlation except for the Swanson ID parade which has fundamentally flawed data on this.
A phantom Jew killer especially Hutchinson's sort, prevailed in the minds of Abberline and Swanson. This is obviously Swanson's suspect but he doesn't call him JtR? Why not? Legal issues in a private note? More like uncertainty. Abberline favoured Chapman eventually. So they split on this one.Bona fide canonical and then some.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Batman View PostHowever in the end isn't Kozminski just a coincidental case of a public masturbator who was maybe on a watch list but who basically ended up in an asylum which sort of coincided with the end to the Ripper murders?.
If he was placed in a Private Asylum then they would have required a reason and interestingly Self Abuse is one of the critia on the list…so perhaps it was just convenient.
Originally posted by Batman View PostThere is zero evidence for correlation except for the Swanson ID parade which has fundamentally flawed data on this. .
Originally posted by Batman View PostA phantom Jew killer especially Hutchinson's sort, prevailed in the minds of Abberline and Swanson. This is obviously Swanson's suspect but he doesn't call him JtR? Why not? Legal issues in a private note? More like uncertainty. Abberline favoured Chapman eventually. So they split on this one.
Its now known that the Kosminski family all moved shortly after he entered Colney Hatch. Another coincidence?
Yours JeffLast edited by Jeff Leahy; 01-15-2015, 07:15 AM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jeff Leahy View PostWell thats not quite the case as Swanson is writing Marginalia against Andersons written conclusions so they go together, if not supporting clearly Swanson accepts what Anderson is saying and appears to expand on what he is saying, confirming Kosminski is Andersons suspect (which had previously been thought to be Pizer)
Yours Jeff
The answer is from the Abberline himself, who casts the darkest doubt over Kozminski being JtR. Abberline rejected stories that the ripper was locked up or commited suicide.Bona fide canonical and then some.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Batman View PostAbberline's suspect was Chapman though. How could a man equal to that of Swanson in terms of on the ground investigation and knowledge, who worked with Swanson,reject Swanson's conclusions?
The answer is from the Abberline himself, who casts the darkest doubt over Kozminski being JtR. Abberline rejected stories that the ripper was locked up or commited suicide.
However my answer to your question would be in what the police new in March 1889. And at that time despite watching or following the suspect they did not catch him red handed (Which must have been there hope) So given what was known about Kosminski then, then Chapman and Druit must have seemed like credible suspects or at least as credible as Kosminski.
Anderson Defintively ascertained Fact in my opinion was formed at a later time when a member of Kosminski's own family approached him and asked for help protecting the family from reprisals..
This, I believe, Anderson did in secret with Swanson and formed his opinion about the suspect being protected by his family.
Knowone but Swanson and Anderson and perhaps some other officers sworn to secrecy knew. I don't believe Abberline knew, hence his preference for Chapman which would seem reasonable with that senario
Yours Jeff
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jonathan H View PostFido was not just looking at public asylum records in early 1889 because of what Macnaghten wrote but because that is also where Anderson implicitly places the timing of the sectioning of his Polish suspect.
Comment
-
Cox's suspect
Originally posted by Jonathan H View PostHe is writing about events in 1891, not 1889, and he also asserts that there was no proof against this man, there was nothing police could actually do--not even arrest him.
Comment
-
Just to add to that…that I recently gave this some re-thought..
If Cox was indeed using the Sweating Inspector investigation as a cover, then it rather points to an earlier date.
The Sweating committee made its final report in April 1889 and published in August 1889
So I personally now believe Cox and Sagar are describing events after the Kelly murder until March 1889.
Yours Jeff
Comment
Comment