The diary notwithstanding, there are other reasons to dismiss Maybrick’s candidacy as JTR. In a previous post (found under “General Suspect Discussion") I noted the likelihood of the killer having no private place to perform the killings—hence his use of public streets and alleys. One could argue that this applies to Maybrick—his home was not private, and he lived in another town.
However, Maybrick was a businessman of means. He could have easily afforded a cheap flat in the Whitechapel area. With his money and affluent appearance, he could have lured prostitutes there, and performed his depravities in privacy. Maybrick was intelligent and educated, with no indication of psychosis or delusion. His survival instincts would have been well intact. As JTR, if he were discovered in the act, he would have been tried and hanged, or attacked by vigilantes. He had to know this. Why take unnecessary chances?
And how did Maybrick get JTR’s apparent strong working knowledge of human anatomy? How could he have such high comfort level performing mutilations/organ removals on the unfamiliar streets of the East End? The level of comfort and familiarity displayed by JTR, both in the Whitechapel setting, and in the area of anatomy, does not match our knowledge of Maybrick and his life.
However, Maybrick was a businessman of means. He could have easily afforded a cheap flat in the Whitechapel area. With his money and affluent appearance, he could have lured prostitutes there, and performed his depravities in privacy. Maybrick was intelligent and educated, with no indication of psychosis or delusion. His survival instincts would have been well intact. As JTR, if he were discovered in the act, he would have been tried and hanged, or attacked by vigilantes. He had to know this. Why take unnecessary chances?
And how did Maybrick get JTR’s apparent strong working knowledge of human anatomy? How could he have such high comfort level performing mutilations/organ removals on the unfamiliar streets of the East End? The level of comfort and familiarity displayed by JTR, both in the Whitechapel setting, and in the area of anatomy, does not match our knowledge of Maybrick and his life.
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