Like the title suggests, I'd be interested to know how James Maybrick stands as a suspect if we consider the diary (and watch) to be inadmissable as evidence. I personally find the diary/watch to be very unreliable artifacts in lots of ways, but I can't shake the feeling that JM makes a bloody good suspect anyway!
JM plausibly had the mentality, motive, timeline and means to be JTR, but can anyone quote a fact that totally eliminates him (e.g. verifiably not being in London on the night of one of the murders)? I have not been able to find one.
JM plausibly had the mentality, motive, timeline and means to be JTR, but can anyone quote a fact that totally eliminates him (e.g. verifiably not being in London on the night of one of the murders)? I have not been able to find one.
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