Jeff, you've used material that backs my argument too:
'He was, however, placed in a lunatic asylum, and the series of atrocities came to an end.'
If he means Coles, well that is not Kosminski as he was already "safely caged" (anybody ever noticed how defensive that expression is), and if he means Kelly that does not fit Kosminski either, as he was out and about and functioning normally for years--just as Sims writes on Mac's behalf in 1907.
Same with the second source:
'Asked about these mysterious crimes, Mr. Sagar said, despite the many stories which are told, the police never had proof who committed them. ... After he was removed there were no more Ripper atrocities.'
And it is the same Kelly-Coles timing flaw.
And we have this:
‘Inspector Robert Sagar, who is just retiring from the City Police, is entirely at variance with Mr. George R. Sims as to the identity of “Jack the Ripper”. I see he has just stated, in an interview, that the City Police fully believed this man to be a butcher who worked in Aldgate, and was partly insane. It is believed that he made his way to Australia and there died.’
Aaron was not a butcher and did not die in Oz.
This hooray-he's-dead motif runs through all the alternate suspects, but only one was was actually deceased, and it was not Aaron Kosminski (unlike his fictional variant, 'Kosminski', who was stone dead soon after being sectioned in early 1889.)
Plus we have that unidentified policeman claiming in early 1892 to the "Western Mail" that they are still watching a suspect, day and night, since Coles' murder--and that he was definitely the fiend too.
Sound familiar?
'He was, however, placed in a lunatic asylum, and the series of atrocities came to an end.'
If he means Coles, well that is not Kosminski as he was already "safely caged" (anybody ever noticed how defensive that expression is), and if he means Kelly that does not fit Kosminski either, as he was out and about and functioning normally for years--just as Sims writes on Mac's behalf in 1907.
Same with the second source:
'Asked about these mysterious crimes, Mr. Sagar said, despite the many stories which are told, the police never had proof who committed them. ... After he was removed there were no more Ripper atrocities.'
And it is the same Kelly-Coles timing flaw.
And we have this:
‘Inspector Robert Sagar, who is just retiring from the City Police, is entirely at variance with Mr. George R. Sims as to the identity of “Jack the Ripper”. I see he has just stated, in an interview, that the City Police fully believed this man to be a butcher who worked in Aldgate, and was partly insane. It is believed that he made his way to Australia and there died.’
Aaron was not a butcher and did not die in Oz.
This hooray-he's-dead motif runs through all the alternate suspects, but only one was was actually deceased, and it was not Aaron Kosminski (unlike his fictional variant, 'Kosminski', who was stone dead soon after being sectioned in early 1889.)
Plus we have that unidentified policeman claiming in early 1892 to the "Western Mail" that they are still watching a suspect, day and night, since Coles' murder--and that he was definitely the fiend too.
Sound familiar?
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