There are numerous things surrounding Charles Lechmere that point to him as being the Whitechapel killer. I have many times said that they cannot possibly all be coincidental and therefore, none of them are likely to be. They are probably instead all pointers to his guilt, according to me.
But we must realize that Charles being the killer or a stupendous amount of coincidences wrongfully pointing in his direction are not the only alternatives. There is also a third option - that somebody wanted to frame Charles Lechmere for the murders. To check this option out is - at least according to me - a very interesting exercise. So let´s do just that now!
Introducing the evil Mr X, who has his mind set on getting Charles Lechmere convicted of murder and executed. Mr X maps Charles life and sets about his business.
He begins by killing Martha Tabram in George Yard buildings, righ beside one of the two logical routes for Charles Lechmere to work.
That does not work - many people may have been around at the relevant hours, and so Mr X has to do better. He then comes up with the idea to place Charles Lechmere at an actual murder spot. He decides on Bucks Row, where he knows that Charles passes, and somehow manages to produce a freshly killed woman right in Lechmere´s path, still bleeding for many a minute and all.
However, when Lechmere together with the newcomer Paul contacts a PC, the PC annoyingly sends them on their merry way. More frustration!
Then, as chance will have it, Robert Paul is interviewed by Lloyds Weekly, and the stand-up citizen Charles Lechmere comes forward. Mr X rubs his hands in joy - surely, now the police will send him down?
But no! They inexplicably accept what Lechmere tells them, and let him loose! Disaster!!
Mr X returns to the drawing board. He realizes that the police must be aware of Charles Lechmere´s road to work by now, and so Mr X decides to return to killing along that road. On the 8th of September, he kills Chapman.
And what does the police do? They go looking for Robert Paul!
Okay, apparently the police will need more Lechmere-specific material, Mr X reasons. He decides to kill the next victim righ next to where Lechmere´s mother and daughter live, and he comes up with the idea to also kill somebody in close proximity to Lechmere´s working place on the same night. And Stride and Eddowes die.
The frustrated Mr X has come up with a further idea by now - not only will he kill women close to spots linked to Charles Lechmere, he will also place a physical clue between one of the victims and Lechmere´s Doveton Street home. That should do it! And so, he places half of Eddowes´ bloody apron in Goulston Street and goes home and waits for the police to arrest Lechmere.
What happens? Nothing!
Back to the drawing board. Back to the working route murders, but let´s make it truly horrific this time! On the 9th of November, he kills Mary Kelly and turns her room into a slaughterhouse.
Nope. The police miss out. Again.
Mr X now despairs. Nothing he does seems to work. The watertight plan has failed. For ten months, he ponders how to go get Lechmere nicked by the police, and then he realizes that there is another killer at large that may help him - the torso killer. Mr X now concocts a plan to make it seem as if Lechmere may be responsible of the torso murders too, and he kills a woman and places her in a railway arch in the very street the Lechmere´s always returned to - Pinchin Street. And he once again decides to put a bloody apron between the murder site and 22 Doveton Street. This time over, he gets a map out and draws a line from the murder site all the way up to Doveton Street, and he picks a spot that is placed exactly on that line, St Philip´s Church up at the hospital area. Not a litte to the left of the line, not a lttle to the right of it - straight on it!
Of course, the police miss out this time too, and Mr X falls into a deep depression, ending his own life by drowning himself in the Thames. And although that fact should have had him suspected of being the killer himself, he is very unceremoniously pulled out of the water by a lighterman who reports the find to the police. They decide on a verdict of suicide caused by an unsound mind, and Mr X drifts out of history unnoticed.
It is a very elaborate list of measures Mr X takes to frame Charles Lechmere, is it not? I think everybody out here would say that the scenario is completely and utterly unlikely.
If so, then how is it in any way likely that the matters described were instead all flukes and coincidences ...? Where do we draw the line for such things? Or don´t we draw a line at all?
But we must realize that Charles being the killer or a stupendous amount of coincidences wrongfully pointing in his direction are not the only alternatives. There is also a third option - that somebody wanted to frame Charles Lechmere for the murders. To check this option out is - at least according to me - a very interesting exercise. So let´s do just that now!
Introducing the evil Mr X, who has his mind set on getting Charles Lechmere convicted of murder and executed. Mr X maps Charles life and sets about his business.
He begins by killing Martha Tabram in George Yard buildings, righ beside one of the two logical routes for Charles Lechmere to work.
That does not work - many people may have been around at the relevant hours, and so Mr X has to do better. He then comes up with the idea to place Charles Lechmere at an actual murder spot. He decides on Bucks Row, where he knows that Charles passes, and somehow manages to produce a freshly killed woman right in Lechmere´s path, still bleeding for many a minute and all.
However, when Lechmere together with the newcomer Paul contacts a PC, the PC annoyingly sends them on their merry way. More frustration!
Then, as chance will have it, Robert Paul is interviewed by Lloyds Weekly, and the stand-up citizen Charles Lechmere comes forward. Mr X rubs his hands in joy - surely, now the police will send him down?
But no! They inexplicably accept what Lechmere tells them, and let him loose! Disaster!!
Mr X returns to the drawing board. He realizes that the police must be aware of Charles Lechmere´s road to work by now, and so Mr X decides to return to killing along that road. On the 8th of September, he kills Chapman.
And what does the police do? They go looking for Robert Paul!
Okay, apparently the police will need more Lechmere-specific material, Mr X reasons. He decides to kill the next victim righ next to where Lechmere´s mother and daughter live, and he comes up with the idea to also kill somebody in close proximity to Lechmere´s working place on the same night. And Stride and Eddowes die.
The frustrated Mr X has come up with a further idea by now - not only will he kill women close to spots linked to Charles Lechmere, he will also place a physical clue between one of the victims and Lechmere´s Doveton Street home. That should do it! And so, he places half of Eddowes´ bloody apron in Goulston Street and goes home and waits for the police to arrest Lechmere.
What happens? Nothing!
Back to the drawing board. Back to the working route murders, but let´s make it truly horrific this time! On the 9th of November, he kills Mary Kelly and turns her room into a slaughterhouse.
Nope. The police miss out. Again.
Mr X now despairs. Nothing he does seems to work. The watertight plan has failed. For ten months, he ponders how to go get Lechmere nicked by the police, and then he realizes that there is another killer at large that may help him - the torso killer. Mr X now concocts a plan to make it seem as if Lechmere may be responsible of the torso murders too, and he kills a woman and places her in a railway arch in the very street the Lechmere´s always returned to - Pinchin Street. And he once again decides to put a bloody apron between the murder site and 22 Doveton Street. This time over, he gets a map out and draws a line from the murder site all the way up to Doveton Street, and he picks a spot that is placed exactly on that line, St Philip´s Church up at the hospital area. Not a litte to the left of the line, not a lttle to the right of it - straight on it!
Of course, the police miss out this time too, and Mr X falls into a deep depression, ending his own life by drowning himself in the Thames. And although that fact should have had him suspected of being the killer himself, he is very unceremoniously pulled out of the water by a lighterman who reports the find to the police. They decide on a verdict of suicide caused by an unsound mind, and Mr X drifts out of history unnoticed.
It is a very elaborate list of measures Mr X takes to frame Charles Lechmere, is it not? I think everybody out here would say that the scenario is completely and utterly unlikely.
If so, then how is it in any way likely that the matters described were instead all flukes and coincidences ...? Where do we draw the line for such things? Or don´t we draw a line at all?
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