In all seriousness I am wondering something. Without the infamous diary and watch for evidence, what ties James Maybrick to the crimes? That he did business in London in a street not far from Miter Square doesn't depend on the diary. But are the dates when he was allegedly in London able to be matched up with murder cases?
I asked about something along this line on Montague John Druitt, so I will use the same criteria to ask about Maybrick.
In the C5, Elizabeth Stride doesn't really fit the pattern. So we will toss her out. Some question Eddows, I cannot see this, I will keep her as a suspect. Some are doubtful about Mary Kelly. The crimes had been getting more and more gruesome, so I will not rule that out either. (My only question there was whether or not the witnesses were correct about seeing her when the body in the room had to be dead. If so, the killer got someone else, and she quietly disappeared.)
So the list will go like this:
Undiscovered murder
Martha Tabram
Polly Nichols
Anne Chapman
Mary Jane Kelly
Undiscovered murder/or murders
Catherine Eddows was murdered in Mitre Square. As noted, Maybrick's London business address wasn't far away. Date is essential to lock this one on Maybrick, but if he was in London at the time, he was certainly close to the crime scene.
As for the "FM" evidence in Miller's Court: Let's say the diary is one hundred per cent correct on this statement. Might that not point to only a single murder, that of the victim in Miller's Court. How would that tie Maybrick to any other murder? I put this forward, because what can certainly be interpreted as FM is certainly in the picture of the victim.
But Nichols and Chapman are two that no one disagrees were JtR victims. Can we prove Maybrick in London at the time of their deaths? Nichols and Chapman are key. If Maybrick can not be placed in the area at the time of these two deaths, he was not responsible for all the JtR (Whitechapel, remember at the time) murders.
Hope to stir up a good discussion, don't come here just to fight, please.
God Bless
Darkendale
I asked about something along this line on Montague John Druitt, so I will use the same criteria to ask about Maybrick.
In the C5, Elizabeth Stride doesn't really fit the pattern. So we will toss her out. Some question Eddows, I cannot see this, I will keep her as a suspect. Some are doubtful about Mary Kelly. The crimes had been getting more and more gruesome, so I will not rule that out either. (My only question there was whether or not the witnesses were correct about seeing her when the body in the room had to be dead. If so, the killer got someone else, and she quietly disappeared.)
So the list will go like this:
Undiscovered murder
Martha Tabram
Polly Nichols
Anne Chapman
Mary Jane Kelly
Undiscovered murder/or murders
Catherine Eddows was murdered in Mitre Square. As noted, Maybrick's London business address wasn't far away. Date is essential to lock this one on Maybrick, but if he was in London at the time, he was certainly close to the crime scene.
As for the "FM" evidence in Miller's Court: Let's say the diary is one hundred per cent correct on this statement. Might that not point to only a single murder, that of the victim in Miller's Court. How would that tie Maybrick to any other murder? I put this forward, because what can certainly be interpreted as FM is certainly in the picture of the victim.
But Nichols and Chapman are two that no one disagrees were JtR victims. Can we prove Maybrick in London at the time of their deaths? Nichols and Chapman are key. If Maybrick can not be placed in the area at the time of these two deaths, he was not responsible for all the JtR (Whitechapel, remember at the time) murders.
Hope to stir up a good discussion, don't come here just to fight, please.
God Bless
Darkendale
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