Originally posted by Fisherman
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As opposed to Tom Wescott, whose name you invoked earlier - "While I'm not convinced of Lechmere's guilt in any of the murders, I found the argument quite compelling." Note that Wescott makes a clear distinction between "compelling" and "convincing". And that 18 people people found his review helpful.
Or there's Rick, who 12 people found helpful - "Holmgren's theory is, to say the least, a nonsensical and weak attempt to crowbar yet another suspect into the Jack the Ripper narrative. Although engaging in its prose and providing a decent wider context from which to argue its case, it never really convinces, even when arguing for Lechmere as the killer of Mary Ann Nichols. Hugely important aspects of the Whitechapel murders are brushed aside or selectively picked over. Fundamental, factual errors abound with the links to the torso deaths, particularly in relation to Hebbert and Elizabeth Jackson. The so-called motivation for the kills (with accompanying random photographs) is laughably bad. No doubt the book will sell but I can't help but feel that Holmgren has now played his full hand. And it's a poor one. Stripped bare of TV's gadgetry from which this theory has so long relied, we're left with very little, and what we are left with is tenuous at best."
Or D P Cooper, who 6 people found helpful - "There is no viable case against Cross."
Or ALLOYD, who 5 people found helpful - "Very readable and holds one's attention but does not convince me, I'm afraid. The thesis that Charles Lechmere was Jack the Ripper has never been particularly strong in my view, and adding the torso mysteries further weakened the case against him."
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