Originally posted by Darryl Kenyon
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There have been lots and lots of people endorsing any old theory, whether it is a royalist **** and bull story or a fake diary for instance.
Anybody who treats a man who was FOUND at a murder site, alone with a freshly killed victim, as a person of interest at best is probably somebody who has taken a spanking on the Ripper forums in a Lechmere related topic, and so they try - as best as they can - to belittle the theory, sobbing as they go along.
Any such person as described above is automatically a suspect if no other viable suspect can be found and if the person in question has no obstacle that nullifies him as a suspect.
So what you are saying Fish that 130 years later anyone with an iota of common sense should see that Lech is at least a very good suspect.
Yes, that is true. There are, however, two levels involved. I read up on the case for more than thirty years without realizing how Lechmere is a very good suspect and inevitably also the killer. And although I will not brag, I would say that I do have a iota of common sense.
So it is perfectly legal not to understand how viable Lechmere is as the killer as long as you have not had the matters pointing to him laid out for you. But once you DO, and once you have soaked them up and digested them, there is really no excuse for not accepting him as a very good suspect.
As I have said before, Andy Griffiths - probably anticipating another sketchy case - took me to the side as we shot the docu and said that he thought that we probably had got the killer. He had no problems to follow the trail - and he had the exact right profession to do so.
Another thing to keep in mind is the Mizen scam, missed out on by generations of Ripperologists before it was focused on some years ago.
But the police, who were there hadn't a clue that Jack was right in front of them. Or at the very least someone who should raise a suspicion or two.
The police probably never turned back to investigate Lechmere after the Nichols murder. And at that stage, many of the matters I point to as suspicious, were not known. They did not know about the name swap, how the geography would go on to fit the ensuing cases and so on. Plus, as I have said numerous times, they were probably relieved to see Lechmere walk out their door. After all, he had embarrased the police rather badly, setting what must have looked ike a shining example of what a good citizen should do.
So every single police officer, patrolman or higher up was a complete dimwit , and not one of them saw through the sinister name issue or the Mizen scam?
As I just pointed out, NOONE saw the potential of the Mizen scam for 125 years or so. And yes, there were probaly dimwits among the police - but equally, there would have been good policemen. But there are also good amateur sleuths out there, and that still did not mean that Lechmeres status as a suspect was erected until a hundred years plus after the murders.
The exact same thing has happened in Sweden, with the Palme assasination in 1986. It was not until last year that a very obvious suspect was pointed out by the state prosecutor as the likely killer. The reason that it took so long - in the biggest case in Swedish criminal history - was that the police (lo and behold) had forgotten to check out one of the men they KNEW had been at the murder site!
There are two ways we can settle this. We can either say "It is not likely that the police could have missed out on Lechmere if he was really the killer", and then we dismiss him on statistical grounds. Or we accept that the many pointers in his direction cannot all, each and every one of them, be mere coincidences. And once we do, we must also accept that the police may well have missed out in 1888.
What did they think ? He was a nice looking chap so it couldn't have been him.
Actually yes, to a degree at least. Ever heard of criminal anthropology? It was the "science" that made the victorians go "Of course!" when it was revealed that the killer and rapist Vincenz Verszeny had a thick neck and deranged relatives.
But us far superior intellectual beings 130 years later know better of course. Even though we were not there and we are looking at almost certainly incomplete evidence.
So are you out here merely to have it confirmed that there is absolutely no chance that we can solve the case? And you back it up with the insight that scientific progress has not solved a single criminal case in retrospect?
Be it court transcripts or otherwise.
Not for me and lots and lots of others, as you say. I am afraid.
Regards Darryl
But we canīt all be. Some will inevitably be afraid, just as you say.
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