The Jack the Ripper Mystery is Finally Solved — Scientifically

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  • FISHY1118
    Assistant Commissioner
    • May 2019
    • 3710

    #361
    Originally posted by Mike J. G. View Post

    Fishy, something you and Richard might wanna remember when it comes to science... It's not about proving a negative. It's not for anyone to try and disprove his theory.

    It's for Richard to prove that his theory is correct, and he's not come close to doing that, and if you genuinely think he has, then you might understand science less than Richard does.

    Truly fascinating.
    Hi Mike i think your reading the debate all wrong , those that are trying to prove his suspect isnt JtR do so without really offering any evidence to suggest ''his evidence'' is wrong or incorrect , thats the whole point of the dicussion im seeing going on here.

    So in theory what Richard is doing is showing Evidence that Thompson is a better suspect than those that have been mentioned , that evidence is being negated by yourself and others is somethimes mostly opinion and speculation .

    If Richards Science in relation to his findings for Thompson being The Ripper cant be reasonably Disproven , the status quo remains.
    'It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is. It doesn't matter how smart you are . If it doesn't agree with experiment, its wrong'' . Richard Feynman

    Comment

    • Pcdunn
      Superintendent
      • Dec 2014
      • 2332

      #362
      Originally posted by Richard Patterson View Post


      Mike, if it was only poetry, I’d agree. But Thompson isn’t just indulging in gothic imagery.
      1. In Finis Coronat Opus and Nightmare of the Witch Babies he didn’t write in symbolic abstraction — he graphically described women being cut open, mutilated, and punished. That’s not “flowery metaphor,” it’s sustained pathological obsession.
      2. In his 1891 essay under the pseudonym “Francis Tancred,” he openly called for prostitutes to be thrown into the Thames as “filth to be cleansed.” That’s not poetry. That’s direct prose, and it shows clear contempt for real women.
      3. This wasn’t in isolation. It aligns with his medical training (six years of dissection at Owens College), his scalpel habit (he admits shaving with it in Jan 1889), his documented Whitechapel destitution, and his obsession with a runaway prostitute.
      So no, the case isn’t “violent because of poetry.” The case is violent because of prose essays, private writings, personal obsessions, and biographical context that all point in the same direction. The poetry is just one part of a broader, consistent pattern of psychosexual hatred.

      If you think that’s laughable, fine — but it’s still documented fact.
      There's a case in the US of a teenage boy arrested, convicted, and sent to prison largely based on his violent drawings and writings of murdering women-- after a murdered woman turned up on his path to school.

      Years later, a second investigation and DNA analysis freed the young man.
      His violence was in his art, not his reality.
      Pat D. https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...rt/reading.gif
      ---------------
      Von Konigswald: Jack the Ripper plays shuffleboard. -- Happy Birthday, Wanda June by Kurt Vonnegut, c.1970.
      ---------------

      Comment

      • Pcdunn
        Superintendent
        • Dec 2014
        • 2332

        #363
        Originally posted by Fiver View Post

        Sounds to me like the "frail and slight figure" of Thompson should be downgraded to (A) Age/physical health > 1 = issues creating doubt.
        Also, Thompson once considered joining the army, but was rejected for being "too slight". I thought of this when someone further up the thread asked about the Ripper's supposed strength and whether Thompson was "powerful". I'd say no.
        Pat D. https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...rt/reading.gif
        ---------------
        Von Konigswald: Jack the Ripper plays shuffleboard. -- Happy Birthday, Wanda June by Kurt Vonnegut, c.1970.
        ---------------

        Comment

        • The Rookie Detective
          Superintendent
          • Apr 2019
          • 2026

          #364
          Originally posted by Pcdunn View Post

          Also, Thompson once considered joining the army, but was rejected for being "too slight". I thought of this when someone further up the thread asked about the Ripper's supposed strength and whether Thompson was "powerful". I'd say no.
          That's a very important point.


          Thompson essentially failed the physical exam that meant he wasn't accepted into the army.

          He didn't have the minimal requirements needed to join.

          At face value it would seem that he simply didn't have the physical prowess and strength required to have been able to dominate and throttle several women.

          But it is possible that there was a "Jekyll and Hyde" effect with Thompson.
          It is very possible that a man who initially presents as a quite, placed and physically inferior specimen, can suddenly change into something quite different.
          In a fit of rage and savagery, even a man of slight frame, could be capable of great strength and possess the ability to have enhanced strength and power.

          This may have been the reason why nobody would ever consider a man like Thompson, because based on his default physical appearance, he would seem incapable of obliterating women through initial strangulation.

          "Great minds, don't think alike"

          Comment

          • Richard Patterson
            Sergeant
            • Mar 2012
            • 631

            #365
            Originally posted by Mike J. G. View Post

            I've never said, nor believed, that your case rests on poetry, Richard. I did, however, quote a large piece of text from you in which you interpreted Thompson's poetry and used it as part of your evidence to suggest that he was the killer. It just isn't evidence, Richard. It's poetry which you have interpreted to suit your argument.

            Thompson cannot be proven to have been in the area, or to have committed acts of violence against anyone, nor can it be proven that he committed murder, much less the Whitechapel murders. It can't even be proven that the Ripper had to have been a trained medical man.

            It's not the fact that you're promoting Thompson as a suspect, it's the fact that you're acting as though it's proven beyond a shadow of a doubt that Thompson was the man and won't accept any scepticism towards that bold declaration. That's what I'm opposed to.

            There's a gulf of difference between established fact and personal speculation, Richard. You've made a good case for your chosen suspect, but you have most definitely not proven that he was the Ripper.

            If you genuinely believe that it's been proven scientifically based on the theories you've put forward, then I don't know what to tell you, mate. Science doesn't work like that, not in a million years, Richard. It's as disingenuous as claiming that a shawl scientifically proves that Kosminski was the killer.

            I admire your determination, but in the absence of actual, credible evidence that Thompson was the Whitechapel murderer, pushing your theory as "scientifically proven" is just kinda ridiculous and very disingenuous.

            No amount of numbers will change any of this. As it stands, Chapman is a far more convincing suspect, IMO, but I won't pretend to be able to prove that scientifically, and nor do I even believe it.

            Anyway, it's your life, mate, don't mind me.

            Cheers,

            Mike
            Mike,

            You’ve repeated the line that I “can’t prove Thompson was in the area,” but that’s simply not accurate. John Walsh — Thompson’s biographer and no crank — stated that Thompson evidently sought refuge at Providence Row in Crispin Street. Other biographers before my work in 1997 noted him staying at the Limehouse Salvation Army night shelter. In other words, there are independent, published testimonies that place Thompson in Whitechapel’s orbit at the critical time. That’s not fantasy, that’s record.

            Now, in the absence of CCTV footage from 1888, of course none of us can produce a “smoking gun” photograph of Thompson stepping out of Miller’s Court. But scholarship doesn’t work that way. When multiple independent sources point in the same direction, the onus shifts. If you want to reject Walsh, Boardman, or the other testimonies, the burden of proof is on you to show that Thompson wasn’t there. Simply waving it away as “not proven” is not a counter-argument; it’s an evasion.

            As for probability, it isn’t “numbers won’t change anything.” Numbers are precisely what change everything. Major Henry Smith documented a suspect with five very rare, specific traits: ex-medical student, asylum patient, connection to prostitutes, coin fraud, and Rupert Street/Haymarket. Thompson matches all five. No one else has been shown to. The chance of a random man in 1888 London matching all five is astronomical — one in tens of quadrillions. That isn’t disingenuous, that’s mathematics. Unless you can point to another candidate who independently converges on those five traits, dismissing the math is like covering your ears because the answer isn’t comfortable.

            You say science doesn’t work that way. In fact, this is how science works: you identify a rare set of conditions, you test who matches them, and you measure the probability of coincidence. You may not like the result, but that doesn’t make it unscientific.

            Finally, on the poetry: yes, I interpret it, but it’s not my foundation. The core case is documentary (Smith’s traits, Walsh’s biography, Thompson’s institutional records, geography) and statistical (the probability argument). The poetry adds psychological weight — and Thompson himself called it his “poetic diary,” which makes it relevant — but the case doesn’t collapse without it.

            So no, Mike, this isn’t “speculation dressed as proof.” It’s convergent evidence plus statistical reasoning that places Thompson head and shoulders above any rival suspect. That doesn’t mean scepticism is outlawed. But “skepticism” has to be more than a shrug; it requires counter-evidence. Right now, you’ve offered none.

            Best,

            Richard
            Author of

            "Jack the Ripper, The Works of Francis Thompson"

            http://www.francisjthompson.com/

            Comment

            • Richard Patterson
              Sergeant
              • Mar 2012
              • 631

              #366
              Originally posted by Mike J. G. View Post

              I've never said, nor believed, that your case rests on poetry, Richard. I did, however, quote a large piece of text from you in which you interpreted Thompson's poetry and used it as part of your evidence to suggest that he was the killer. It just isn't evidence, Richard. It's poetry which you have interpreted to suit your argument.

              Thompson cannot be proven to have been in the area, or to have committed acts of violence against anyone, nor can it be proven that he committed murder, much less the Whitechapel murders. It can't even be proven that the Ripper had to have been a trained medical man.

              It's not the fact that you're promoting Thompson as a suspect, it's the fact that you're acting as though it's proven beyond a shadow of a doubt that Thompson was the man and won't accept any scepticism towards that bold declaration. That's what I'm opposed to.

              There's a gulf of difference between established fact and personal speculation, Richard. You've made a good case for your chosen suspect, but you have most definitely not proven that he was the Ripper.

              If you genuinely believe that it's been proven scientifically based on the theories you've put forward, then I don't know what to tell you, mate. Science doesn't work like that, not in a million years, Richard. It's as disingenuous as claiming that a shawl scientifically proves that Kosminski was the killer.

              I admire your determination, but in the absence of actual, credible evidence that Thompson was the Whitechapel murderer, pushing your theory as "scientifically proven" is just kinda ridiculous and very disingenuous.

              No amount of numbers will change any of this. As it stands, Chapman is a far more convincing suspect, IMO, but I won't pretend to be able to prove that scientifically, and nor do I even believe it.

              Anyway, it's your life, mate, don't mind me.

              Cheers,

              Mike
              Mike,

              You’ve repeated the line that I “can’t prove Thompson was in the area,” but that’s simply not accurate. John Walsh — Thompson’s biographer and no crank — stated that Thompson evidently sought refuge at Providence Row in Crispin Street. Other biographers before my work in 1997 noted him staying at the Limehouse Salvation Army night shelter. In other words, there are independent, published testimonies that place Thompson in Whitechapel’s orbit at the critical time. That’s not fantasy, that’s record.

              Now, in the absence of CCTV footage from 1888, of course none of us can produce a “smoking gun” photograph of Thompson stepping out of Miller’s Court. But scholarship doesn’t work that way. When multiple independent sources point in the same direction, the onus shifts. If you want to reject Walsh, Boardman, or the other testimonies, the burden of proof is on you to show that Thompson wasn’t there. Simply waving it away as “not proven” is not a counter-argument; it’s an evasion.




              As for probability, it isn’t “numbers won’t change anything.” Numbers are precisely what change everything. Major Henry Smith documented a suspect with five very rare, specific traits: ex-medical student, asylum patient, connection to prostitutes, coin fraud, and Rupert Street/Haymarket. Thompson matches all five. No one else has been shown to. The chance of a random man in 1888 London matching all five is astronomical — one in tens of quadrillions. That isn’t disingenuous, that’s mathematics. Unless you can point to another candidate who independently converges on those five traits, dismissing the math is like covering your ears because the answer isn’t comfortable.

              You say science doesn’t work that way. In fact, this is how science works: you identify a rare set of conditions, you test who matches them, and you measure the probability of coincidence. You may not like the result, but that doesn’t make it unscientific.

              Finally, on the poetry: yes, I interpret it, but it’s not my foundation. The core case is documentary (Smith’s traits, Walsh’s biography, Thompson’s institutional records, geography) and statistical (the probability argument). The poetry adds psychological weight — and Thompson himself called it his “poetic diary,” which makes it relevant — but the case doesn’t collapse without it.

              So no, Mike, this isn’t “speculation dressed as proof.” It’s convergent evidence plus statistical reasoning that places Thompson head and shoulders above any rival suspect. That doesn’t mean scepticism is outlawed. But “skepticism” has to be more than a shrug; it requires counter-evidence. Right now, you’ve offered none.

              Best,

              Richard
              Author of

              "Jack the Ripper, The Works of Francis Thompson"

              http://www.francisjthompson.com/

              Comment

              • Mike J. G.
                Sergeant
                • May 2017
                • 906

                #367
                Originally posted by FISHY1118 View Post

                Hi Mike i think your reading the debate all wrong , those that are trying to prove his suspect isnt JtR do so without really offering any evidence to suggest ''his evidence'' is wrong or incorrect , thats the whole point of the dicussion im seeing going on here.

                So in theory what Richard is doing is showing Evidence that Thompson is a better suspect than those that have been mentioned , that evidence is being negated by yourself and others is somethimes mostly opinion and speculation .

                If Richards Science in relation to his findings for Thompson being The Ripper cant be reasonably Disproven , the status quo remains.
                Allo, Fishy.

                Again, it doesn't work like that. Not even remotely.

                We cannot prove that lots of people weren't the Ripper. Not because there's strong evidence for their candidacy, but because there's no evidence either way. There's simply no evidence in the Whitechapel case to successfully point the finger at anyone, from the doctor or the butcher, to the baker or the candlestick maker.

                The case couldn't be proven or disproven against a multitude of suspects in 1888 and yet you're implying that it's for those of us who don't accept Richard's theories to prove Thompson wasn't the killer. I'm sorry, but that's about as far away from science as knocking on a tree behind the local Walmart in Kentucky in the hopes of engaging in communication with a species of 7-9 foot tall ape-man.

                Unless there's evidence to suggest Thompson wasn't in Whitechapel, or was physically unable to have committed these crimes (and that could very well be the case from what several posters in here have shown) then ruling him out isn't possible, but you don't seem to be grasping the basic fact that we can't rule lots of people out. It doesn't make their potential to be the killer any stronger, it merely means that we don't know our arse from our elbow because there's no evidence one way or another and there never has been and probably never will be.

                This idea that Thompson is a better suspect than any other suspect is only apparent to you and Richard. As far as I'm concerned, he's not even remotely a better suspect than the likes of Chapman, medically trained, in the area, known to have threatened his wife with decapitation and a bonafide multiple murderer of women. And I'm not even a Chapman advocate.

                The case being put forward, this so-called "scientific proof" that Thompson was the man, seems to be "might have been in the area, known to carry a scalpel, medically trained and wrote violent poetry."

                I'm sorry, mate, but that's not scientific evidence of anything. It's a theory...

                Theories don't become scientific proof without going through a rigorous process. Richard has no more proven that Francis Thompson was the Ripper than anyone else has proven that their suspect was the Ripper.

                Again, if you are both simply saying "look, we could be mistaken, but here's an idea..."

                But that's not what we're seeing. What we're seeing is "OMG! I've found him and none of you can prove it wasn't him!"

                That's quite obviously silly, mate.

                Comment

                • Mike J. G.
                  Sergeant
                  • May 2017
                  • 906

                  #368
                  Originally posted by Richard Patterson View Post

                  Mike,

                  You’ve repeated the line that I “can’t prove Thompson was in the area,” but that’s simply not accurate. John Walsh — Thompson’s biographer and no crank — stated that Thompson evidently sought refuge at Providence Row in Crispin Street. Other biographers before my work in 1997 noted him staying at the Limehouse Salvation Army night shelter. In other words, there are independent, published testimonies that place Thompson in Whitechapel’s orbit at the critical time. That’s not fantasy, that’s record.

                  Now, in the absence of CCTV footage from 1888, of course none of us can produce a “smoking gun” photograph of Thompson stepping out of Miller’s Court. But scholarship doesn’t work that way. When multiple independent sources point in the same direction, the onus shifts. If you want to reject Walsh, Boardman, or the other testimonies, the burden of proof is on you to show that Thompson wasn’t there. Simply waving it away as “not proven” is not a counter-argument; it’s an evasion.




                  As for probability, it isn’t “numbers won’t change anything.” Numbers are precisely what change everything. Major Henry Smith documented a suspect with five very rare, specific traits: ex-medical student, asylum patient, connection to prostitutes, coin fraud, and Rupert Street/Haymarket. Thompson matches all five. No one else has been shown to. The chance of a random man in 1888 London matching all five is astronomical — one in tens of quadrillions. That isn’t disingenuous, that’s mathematics. Unless you can point to another candidate who independently converges on those five traits, dismissing the math is like covering your ears because the answer isn’t comfortable.

                  You say science doesn’t work that way. In fact, this is how science works: you identify a rare set of conditions, you test who matches them, and you measure the probability of coincidence. You may not like the result, but that doesn’t make it unscientific.

                  Finally, on the poetry: yes, I interpret it, but it’s not my foundation. The core case is documentary (Smith’s traits, Walsh’s biography, Thompson’s institutional records, geography) and statistical (the probability argument). The poetry adds psychological weight — and Thompson himself called it his “poetic diary,” which makes it relevant — but the case doesn’t collapse without it.

                  So no, Mike, this isn’t “speculation dressed as proof.” It’s convergent evidence plus statistical reasoning that places Thompson head and shoulders above any rival suspect. That doesn’t mean scepticism is outlawed. But “skepticism” has to be more than a shrug; it requires counter-evidence. Right now, you’ve offered none.

                  Best,

                  Richard
                  Richard, you named this thread "The Jack the Ripper Mystery is Finally Solved — Scientifically"

                  I'm absolutely baffled that you're unable to grasp how little scientific evidence you're offering.

                  Can you prove that it wasn't Chapman? Right now, you've offered no evidence to suggest it wasn't.

                  The thing is, Richard, in your mind it's case closed. So why are you bothered? You're not posting here to convince yourself, you're already convinced.

                  You're obviously here to convince us, but I'm afraid that the evidence you're offering isn't convincing. It's not my duty to disprove anything, it's your duty to show us why your theory is correct. Only then will it have been proven "scientifically." Good luck, mate.

                  Cheers, mate.

                  Mike
                  Last edited by Mike J. G.; Today, 07:54 AM.

                  Comment

                  • Richard Patterson
                    Sergeant
                    • Mar 2012
                    • 631

                    #369
                    Originally posted by FISHY1118 View Post

                    I think ill let Richards reply speak for itself Mike.

                    As i far as i can see, nobody on this thread has manage to come remotely close to disproving his arguement for Francis Thompson as JtR.

                    Fascinating.
                    Fishy — thank you.

                    It’s honestly refreshing to see someone engage with the actual structure of the case rather than swatting at straw-men. You’ve done what (so far) only a handful on Casebook have managed: clock the scale of what’s being presented and why it crosses the line from “interesting suspect” into statistically decisive identification. That doesn’t mean “trust Richard’s hunch.” It means: follow the documented traits, quantify how rare they are in London 1888, and then compute the probability that a different man could coincide on all of them by blind chance. That number is the engine room here.

                    Let me lay it out crisply, and then I’ll address the familiar pushbacks.

                    What the probability actually measures

                    Major Sir Henry Smith left us a compact, police-selected signature for his Rupert Street suspect:
                    1. ex-medical student
                    2. asylum history
                    3. consorts with prostitutes
                    4. coin-fraud (“polished farthings passed as sovereigns”)
                    5. Haymarket / Rupert Street presence

                    That is a deliberately rare bundle. Each item prunes the field; all five together carve a silhouette that simply doesn’t recur at scale in the 1888 male population.

                    When you model those traits conservatively (not aggressively) with base-rates from Victorian demography, asylum statistics, medical enrollments, vice prevalence, and the very small footprint of the Haymarket/Rupert Street lodging population, you land at ~1 in 20 quadrillion for a random London male to match all five by accident. Thompson matches all five. Others in the literature match one or two. No one else matches the lot.

                    And because people struggle to feel the size of that number, here’s the intuition you flagged:
                    • You are more likely to win the UK National Lottery six weeks in a row than to stumble onto another man who ticks all five by chance.
                    • You are more likely to be struck by lightning while a shark bites you than to get that five-point coincidence.
                    • You’re more likely to have a meteorite hit your garden this year.
                    • If even 1% of alien-abduction stories were true, you’d be more likely to be abducted before you finish reading this.
                    • The chance that the Sun won’t rise tomorrow is orders of magnitude higher.
                    • If the Resurrection literally happened, your odds of resurrecting one day are still many times higher than the odds that Thompson’s five-point match is mere coincidence.
                    • There are ~7.5 quintillion grains of sand on Earth’s beaches. 20 quadrillion is thousands of times bigger.

                    In short: once you accept Smith’s five-point signature as a genuine police filter (and his memoir makes clear it is), the “it could be someone else” door is functionally closed unless a second, equally matching candidate is named and evidenced.

                    Why this isn’t just “maths on paper”

                    The probability isn’t floating in a vacuum; it’s chained to primary source facts.
                    • Ex-medical student: Thompson studied medicine for six years; his sister Mary complained of the money repeatedly demanded for dissecting fees and the sheer number of cadavers he cut into. That’s not poetic license; it’s family testimony.
                    • Asylum / institutional care: Victorian terminology is messy (“lunatic asylum,” “priory,” “hospital,” “institution”) but the biography is plain: nervous collapse; institutional treatment; period of cloistered care; repeated notes from family that he “never fully recovered.” Smith’s phrasing matches the category of a man known to authorities as having been put away.
                    • Consorted with prostitutes: Thompson himself said he lived with a prostitute for about a year; she fled him in the summer of 1888; he then scoured the East End looking for her through August–September — precisely the Ripper window.
                    • Coin motif / coin fraud convergence: Smith’s suspect bilked prostitutes by “polished farthings.” Thompson’s recorded coin episode (the sovereigns) shows the coin-theme circulating in his circle; the question isn’t whether he held those exact farthings but whether the Rupert Street profile (including the coin fraud) points to a man whose wider biography slots into every other trait. It does.
                    • Haymarket / Rupert Street presence: Thompson gave Charing Cross as his postal address; lived with the Meynells off Panton Street; walked the Haymarket grid nightly; Rupert Street is a two-minute walk. That’s not “somewhere in the West End”; that’s embedded in the very micro-district Smith names.

                    Add the Whitechapel footprint (Providence Row on Crispin Street; the Limehouse Salvation Army shelter; the nun’s recollection of Kelly having used the same refuge), plus the Mr. “Moring” testimony from R. Thurston Hopkins aligning a black-haired opium-addicted poet, known to Mary Kelly, to Hutchinson’s description… and you are no longer connecting random dots; you’re tracing a single itinerary that runs from the Haymarket through Rupert Street, over to Crispin Street, and right into Miller’s Court.

                    What “science” means here

                    A couple of senior posters flinch at the word “science.” But what I’m doing is orthodox:
                    • Define the signal (Smith’s five traits).
                    • Estimate base-rates conservatively (from known Victorian data).
                    • Treat the traits as independent filters where appropriate (and note any dependence conservatively).
                    • Compute the false-match rate.
                    • Cross-check against named candidates.

                    That is the scientific method applied to a historical identification: hypothesis → quantification → prediction → falsification by counter-example. Anyone can falsify this by producing another man in 1888 who verifiably matches all five traits at the same time and place. In seven years of people trying, no one has.

                    Answering the standard counters

                    “But Smith says the man had an alibi.”
                    Two things can be true: (1) the City identified a suspect matching a rare profile; (2) a contemporary alibi was accepted for a particular window. Neither erases the identification. Victorian “alibis” ranged from pub sightings to landlord attestations — both weak when challenged across multiple nights. Smith himself still thought the man “very likely.” The alibi line proves only that in 1888 he wasn’t arrested, not that the identification was wrong.

                    “But Thompson never lived on Rupert Street.”
                    No one said he did. Smith didn’t require residency; he required presence. Thompson’s postal address, lodgings, and daily orbit put him within literal steps of Rupert Street. That’s why the Rupert Street point is counted as a location convergence — not a tenancy clause.

                    “Hospitals aren’t asylums; Priory isn’t a county asylum.”
                    This is a word game. In the 1880s, “been in an asylum” in police talk meant: known to have been put away for mental collapse. Thompson’s collapse + institutional seclusion was exactly that class of case. If you prefer, call it “asylum-class history.” It satisfies Smith’s filter.

                    “Coin anecdote ≠ polished farthings.”
                    No one has claimed the sovereign story is the polished-farthing scam. The point is that Smith’s suspect had a specific coin-fraud MO and Thompson’s circle carried coin lore around him — the convergence is part of the bundle. You don’t get to amputate one rare trait from a five-trait signature and then claim “no match.” The maths is computed on the whole bundle.

                    “Nothing proves he was in Whitechapel.”
                    This is where the “burden” misconception keeps creeping in. My job isn’t to walk a beat cop’s notebook into 2025; it’s to present the documentary path: Walsh’s footnote on Thompson’s East-End search in August–September 1888; Providence Row (Crispin Street) as his refuge; Limehouse Salvation Army nights; the nun’s recollection of Kelly’s time at the same refuge; Hopkins’s “Mr. Moring” (a black-haired opium-smoker and poet, known to Kelly, matching Hutchinson’s description) — and show how all of those align in time, space, and biography. If someone wants to claim “he wasn’t there,” they must negate Walsh, the shelters, the nun, and Hopkins — not just wave it off.

                    “But doctors disagreed about the Ripper’s medical skill.”
                    Agreed; the Met surgeons were not in consensus. That’s irrelevant to Smith’s signature, which is the one we’re matching: he explicitly looked for a man with medical schooling and asylum history working the Haymarket/Rupert Street scene and bilking prostitutes with coin fraud. That signature lands on Thompson like a seal.

                    “Poetry isn’t evidence.”
                    Correct — it’s context. The evidence is Smith’s signature, the biographical record, the geography, the shelters, the Hopkins testimony, the scalpel carried, the fire-setting episodes, the letters, the disappearance into treatment immediately after Kelly, the abrupt end of the series, etc. The poems (e.g., Nightmare of the Witch-Babies) and the essays (Tancred) simply reveal anatomical obsession, violent sacrificial thinking, and a focused hatred of “fallen” women that align with the crimes’ psychodynamics. They are not the scaffold; they are the lighting.

                    Why the “expert flinch” doesn’t change the result

                    You nailed this, Fishy: rank on a forum isn’t a proxy for grasping Bayes or compound probabilities. The “higher-ranking” pushback so far has mostly been tone and rhetoric — not a counter-calculation. If the maths were wrong, the critique would be: “Your base-rate for X is off by a factor of 100; here is the correct census table; recompute.” We haven’t seen that. We’ve seen “science doesn’t work like that,” without showing how it should work in historical identification. This is how it works: you quantify rarity, test independence, and compute collision odds.

                    Putting the police back in the center

                    A reminder: Smith was acting Commissioner of the City Police — the force with jurisdiction over Mitre Square. He wasn’t writing a pub fantasy; he was memorialising what his detectives actually did: identify a Rupert Street man with these five qualifications, deploy men to the Haymarket grid, and then check his alibi. That five-point list is a contemporaneous CID funnel. Treating it as a random memoir flourish is the mistake.

                    The Whitechapel through-line (1888–1892)

                    From August–November 1888 we have:
                    • Thompson’s desperate search for a runaway prostitute across the East End (Walsh’s “most bizarre coincidence” footnote).
                    • Providence Row (Crispin Street) as his likely lodging; Limehouse Salvation Army as his other bed.
                    • Haymarket / Rupert Street as his nightly orbit while based with the Meynells.
                    • Scalpel carried for shaving; night-wandering; violent anatomical writing pre-dating the murders; obsession with “corrupt” women in prose and letters.
                    • The series ends as Thompson is removed to treatment and then cloister. Casebook regulars know how often serial series end that way.

                    By 1892 the official investigation is closed. Thompson’s trajectory (collapse → priory → cloister → mythologised gentle poet) is complete. The only thing missing, for a century, was someone to do what you’re acknowledging now: quantify the five-trait silhouette and test the field.

                    Where this leaves the debate

                    It leaves it exactly where you put it, Fishy: no one has come remotely close to disproving the core argument because the only viable disproof is to name another 1888 man who meets the Smith five in the Haymarket grid and can withstand the rest of the Thompson-specific convergences (Providence Row, Hopkins/Moring, the East-End search window, the removal after Kelly, etc.). Hand-waving “alibi” at one slice in time — which may well have been “he slept at this coffee-house every night” — doesn’t undo the match. Victorian lodging-house alibis are notoriously porous; Smith’s own phrasing (“very likely”) shows his residual belief.

                    Finally — thanks, and what I’m actually asking from the forum

                    I’m not asking anyone to take this on faith or because I wrote a book. I’m asking for discipline:
                    • Deal with Smith’s five as a police-selected filter, not a journalist’s whim.
                    • Engage the probability model with counter-numbers if you think it’s wrong; don’t just pronounce “not science.”
                    • Address the Walsh footnote, Providence Row, Limehouse SA, Hopkins/Moring, Panton/Charing Cross/Rupert geometry, and the post-Kelly removal — all together, as a single through-line — or say plainly that you’re ignoring those planks.
                    • If you think the case is unsolved, name the 1888 man who matches the five traits as tightly as Thompson, in the same micro-district, during the same months.

                    Until that happens, the polite phrasing is: the chance this is anyone else is vanishingly small. The honest phrasing is: this is the man.

                    Appreciate your clear eye, Fishy. In a thread where rank has too often substituted for rigor, you’ve kept the spotlight where it belongs: on the maths, the documents, and the geometry. That’s how cases are solved — in 1888 or in 2025.
                    Author of

                    "Jack the Ripper, The Works of Francis Thompson"

                    http://www.francisjthompson.com/

                    Comment

                    • Doctored Whatsit
                      Sergeant
                      • May 2021
                      • 776

                      #370
                      Originally posted by Richard Patterson View Post



                      Great question, Doctored—this is exactly where people talk past each other. Let me connect the dots cleanly and show why the Rupert-Street five aren’t being used as “the Ripper’s proven traits,” but as a powerful likelihood filter that collapses the field once you combine it with Thompson’s independent candidacy.

                      Why Francis Thompson Could Be Jack the Ripper: A Simple Look at the Rupert Street Clues

                      Imagine you’re trying to solve a mystery from 1888, when someone called Jack the Ripper killed five women in London’s Whitechapel area. For over a century, people have guessed who he was—names like Kosminski or Druitt get thrown around. But what if it was Francis Thompson, a famous poet known for his beautiful poem The Hound of Heaven? Stick with me—this might sound wild, but the pieces fit better than you’d think, especially with some clues from a police boss named Major Henry Smith.
                      Smith, who helped run the City of London Police back then, wrote in his 1910 book that they tracked a suspicious guy near Rupert Street. This man had five odd traits: he’d studied medicine but didn’t finish, had been in an asylum, hung out with prostitutes, tricked people with fake coins, and lived around Haymarket, close to Rupert Street. Now, here’s the kicker—Francis Thompson matches all five perfectly. He trained as a doctor for six years in Manchester, was treated in an asylum in the 1880s, lived with a prostitute in Whitechapel who later vanished, polished farthings trickery to turning into sovereigns tale, and stayed on Panton Street, just a block from Rupert Street, in 1885-86. That’s not a coincidence; it’s like finding a puzzle piece that snaps right in.

                      But it’s not just about those five things. Thompson was in Whitechapel during the murders, roaming at night, and his poetry—like The Nightmare of the Witch-Babies—is dark and violent, with lines about chasing and hurting women, written before the killings started. He was also hooked on opium, which could explain the wild energy of the crimes. When the murders stopped in November 1888, he was in a hospital, out of sight. No other suspect lines up this neatly with both his life and Smith’s suspect.
                      Here’s where it gets mind-blowing: the odds of someone else in 1888 London matching all five traits are one in 20 quadrillion. That’s a number so huge it’s like winning the lottery a dozen times. Add Thompson’s other quirks—his medical skills, his poems, his breakdown—and the odds climb to one in 20 sextillion. It’s not about proving the Ripper had to have these traits; it’s about Thompson being the only guy who does, and Smith already noticed him.
                      Some might say, “What about other suspects?” Kosminski was a barber with no doctor training, Druitt was a lawyer far from the action. None match Smith’s description or Thompson’s timeline. The poet’s friends, the Meynells, even hid his dark side to keep his good name, which explains why this stayed buried.

                      This isn’t just a theory—it could change how we catch killers today and bring justice to those five women. If you’re into this mystery, dig into Thompson’s story. The truth’s staring us down.

                      1) What the five traits are (and aren’t)
                      • Major Henry Smith recorded a specific suspect seen/known on Rupert Street with five unusual features (ex-medical student; asylum history; lived/seen in the Haymarket; consorted with prostitutes; polished-farthings coin ruse).
                      • I am not claiming these five were a priori “the Ripper’s traits.”
                      • I am saying: if Smith’s suspect was the Ripper, those five are exactly what you’d expect to surface in a senior City officer’s private notes; if Smith’s suspect was not the Ripper, then they’re just the quirks of one West End man.

                      So the correct question isn’t “Can you prove the Ripper must have had all five?”—no one can. The correct question is Bayesian: Given that a City chief flagged a suspect with these five rare features during the spree, what are the odds an independent established suspect (Thompson) uniquely fits the same five? If the overlap is unique or near-unique, your posterior odds move sharply.

                      2) Two independent pathways that converge

                      We have two independent evidence streams:

                      A. Thompson as a standalone suspect (independent of Smith)
                      • Six years’ medical training with Dreschfeld/Owens; intensive dissection; carried a scalpel.
                      • Lived/operated in the West End/East End corridor in 1888; night-walking; laudanum history; fixation on prostitutes in prose/poems; explicit vivisectional imagery pre-dating the murders.
                      • Documented breakdown/institutional care; disappearance from circulation aligning with the end of the spree; removal to controlled Catholic settings thereafter.

                      B. Smith’s Rupert-Street suspect (independent of Thompson)
                      • A tight, unusual five-point bundle (ex-medical student; asylum history; prostitutes; coin-bilking; Haymarket/Rupert Street presence).
                      • Flagged during the spree by the City’s Acting Commissioner, not decades later by hobbyists.

                      These are independent because you can reconstruct A without ever opening Smith, and you can reconstruct B without ever opening Walsh/Boardman biographies of him. The force comes when you multiply the probabilities: what are the odds that a prior, independently-motivated suspect (A) also ticks the entire rare bundle (B)?

                      3) Why this isn’t “built on sand”

                      You asked: “Where is your proof the Ripper must have had the five?” Again—that’s the wrong standard. Bayes doesn’t require logical necessity, it uses likelihood ratios:
                      • If Thompson is the Ripper, the chance he matches Smith’s five is high (because Smith is describing an actual police focus likely linked to the real offender).
                      • If Thompson is not the Ripper, the chance he still uniquely matches that exact five is vanishingly low (because each feature is uncommon, and their joint occurrence is rarer still).

                      You don’t need certainty that “the Ripper must have lived by Rupert Street” to move the needle; you need to show that P(match | Thompson = Ripper) >> P(match | Thompson ≠ Ripper). And we do.

                      4) “But someone else could match the five…”

                      Then name a second person who independently:
                      • fits Smith’s entire five, and
                      • already had a serious, literature-supported candidacy before you invoke Smith, and
                      • also aligns with the Whitechapel timeline, anatomy, writings, movements, and post-spree removals.

                      The nearest alternative touted (Puckeridge) collapses on the evidential side (and Smith himself says the man produced an alibi). Even if you keep him in play, you’ve now got: one partial match with a police-accepted alibi vs one complete match who was already an outlier suspect for independent reasons. Posterior odds do not treat those as equal.

                      5) Why the probabilities “skyrocket”

                      Think of it in two stacked steps (numbers illustrative, principle exact):
                      • Step A (prior): From Thompson’s life/work/timeline/anatomy alone, say you put him in the top fraction of one percent of London men to consider.
                      • Step B (likelihood update): Now condition on Smith’s five. If the joint rarity of those five among random Londoners is, say, 1 in millions, and Thompson uniquely satisfies them, the likelihood ratio massively boosts his posterior odds relative to any other candidate. That’s the “skyrocket.” It’s not a trick; it’s how independent evidence streams compound.

                      6) The bottom line
                      • I am not arguing: “The Ripper must have had these five.”
                      • I am arguing: We already had a serious, source-anchored Thompson case. Independently, a senior City officer memorialized a suspect with five rare traits in a micro-zone Thompson inhabited. Thompson is the only figure who plausibly ties both streams end-to-end.
                      • Under Bayesian reasoning, that convergence is exactly what collapses diffuse priors into a dominant posterior.

                      If you want to push back, the most productive way isn’t to demand logical necessity (that’s not how uncertainty works), but to supply a concrete counter-example: a second historical individual who (i) matches all five Rupert-Street features and (ii) already stood up as a robust, independent Ripper candidate on life/timeline/anatomy/psychology before you reached for Smith. If such a person can’t be produced, the “built on sand” criticism simply doesn’t land.
                      I happily accept that you are trying very hard, and with some success, to establish that Thompson was Smith's suspect, but I see no genuine evidence that Smith's suspect was JtR. If you could prove that the five traits mentioned by Smith were demonstrated to be those not just of Thompson but of JtR too, then this thread would be worthwhile.

                      Comment

                      • FISHY1118
                        Assistant Commissioner
                        • May 2019
                        • 3710

                        #371
                        Originally posted by Mike J. G. View Post

                        Allo, Fishy.

                        Again, it doesn't work like that. Not even remotely.

                        We cannot prove that lots of people weren't the Ripper. Not because there's strong evidence for their candidacy, but because there's no evidence either way. There's simply no evidence in the Whitechapel case to successfully point the finger at anyone, from the doctor or the butcher, to the baker or the candlestick maker.

                        The case couldn't be proven or disproven against a multitude of suspects in 1888 and yet you're implying that it's for those of us who don't accept Richard's theories to prove Thompson wasn't the killer. I'm sorry, but that's about as far away from science as knocking on a tree behind the local Walmart in Kentucky in the hopes of engaging in communication with a species of 7-9 foot tall ape-man.

                        Unless there's evidence to suggest Thompson wasn't in Whitechapel, or was physically unable to have committed these crimes (and that could very well be the case from what several posters in here have shown) then ruling him out isn't possible, but you don't seem to be grasping the basic fact that we can't rule lots of people out. It doesn't make their potential to be the killer any stronger, it merely means that we don't know our arse from our elbow because there's no evidence one way or another and there never has been and probably never will be.

                        This idea that Thompson is a better suspect than any other suspect is only apparent to you and Richard. As far as I'm concerned, he's not even remotely a better suspect than the likes of Chapman, medically trained, in the area, known to have threatened his wife with decapitation and a bonafide multiple murderer of women. And I'm not even a Chapman advocate.

                        The case being put forward, this so-called "scientific proof" that Thompson was the man, seems to be "might have been in the area, known to carry a scalpel, medically trained and wrote violent poetry."

                        I'm sorry, mate, but that's not scientific evidence of anything. It's a theory...

                        Theories don't become scientific proof without going through a rigorous process. Richard has no more proven that Francis Thompson was the Ripper than anyone else has proven that their suspect was the Ripper.

                        Again, if you are both simply saying "look, we could be mistaken, but here's an idea..."

                        But that's not what we're seeing. What we're seeing is "OMG! I've found him and none of you can prove it wasn't him!"

                        That's quite obviously silly, mate.



                        Sorry Mike but you,ve got it all wrong , forgive me mate but you havent been paying attention to this thread '

                        But Richard is so much more adapte at replying to post such as yours . What can i say but Again, ''Not Even Remotely Close ''



                        Go for it Mike, show some evidence this is all wrong ?




                        Fishy — thank you.

                        It’s honestly refreshing to see someone engage with the actual structure of the case rather than swatting at straw-men. You’ve done what (so far) only a handful on Casebook have managed: clock the scale of what’s being presented and why it crosses the line from “interesting suspect” into statistically decisive identification. That doesn’t mean “trust Richard’s hunch.” It means: follow the documented traits, quantify how rare they are in London 1888, and then compute the probability that a different man could coincide on all of them by blind chance. That number is the engine room here.

                        Let me lay it out crisply, and then I’ll address the familiar pushbacks.

                        What the probability actually measures

                        Major Sir Henry Smith left us a compact, police-selected signature for his Rupert Street suspect:
                        1. ex-medical student
                        2. asylum history
                        3. consorts with prostitutes
                        4. coin-fraud (“polished farthings passed as sovereigns”)
                        5. Haymarket / Rupert Street presence

                        That is a deliberately rare bundle. Each item prunes the field; all five together carve a silhouette that simply doesn’t recur at scale in the 1888 male population.

                        When you model those traits conservatively (not aggressively) with base-rates from Victorian demography, asylum statistics, medical enrollments, vice prevalence, and the very small footprint of the Haymarket/Rupert Street lodging population, you land at ~1 in 20 quadrillion for a random London male to match all five by accident. Thompson matches all five. Others in the literature match one or two. No one else matches the lot.

                        And because people struggle to feel the size of that number, here’s the intuition you flagged:
                        • You are more likely to win the UK National Lottery six weeks in a row than to stumble onto another man who ticks all five by chance.
                        • You are more likely to be struck by lightning while a shark bites you than to get that five-point coincidence.
                        • You’re more likely to have a meteorite hit your garden this year.
                        • If even 1% of alien-abduction stories were true, you’d be more likely to be abducted before you finish reading this.
                        • The chance that the Sun won’t rise tomorrow is orders of magnitude higher.
                        • If the Resurrection literally happened, your odds of resurrecting one day are still many times higher than the odds that Thompson’s five-point match is mere coincidence.
                        • There are ~7.5 quintillion grains of sand on Earth’s beaches. 20 quadrillion is thousands of times bigger.

                        In short: once you accept Smith’s five-point signature as a genuine police filter (and his memoir makes clear it is), the “it could be someone else” door is functionally closed unless a second, equally matching candidate is named and evidenced.

                        Why this isn’t just “maths on paper”

                        The probability isn’t floating in a vacuum; it’s chained to primary source facts.
                        • Ex-medical student: Thompson studied medicine for six years; his sister Mary complained of the money repeatedly demanded for dissecting fees and the sheer number of cadavers he cut into. That’s not poetic license; it’s family testimony.
                        • Asylum / institutional care: Victorian terminology is messy (“lunatic asylum,” “priory,” “hospital,” “institution”) but the biography is plain: nervous collapse; institutional treatment; period of cloistered care; repeated notes from family that he “never fully recovered.” Smith’s phrasing matches the category of a man known to authorities as having been put away.
                        • Consorted with prostitutes: Thompson himself said he lived with a prostitute for about a year; she fled him in the summer of 1888; he then scoured the East End looking for her through August–September — precisely the Ripper window.
                        • Coin motif / coin fraud convergence: Smith’s suspect bilked prostitutes by “polished farthings.” Thompson’s recorded coin episode (the sovereigns) shows the coin-theme circulating in his circle; the question isn’t whether he held those exact farthings but whether the Rupert Street profile (including the coin fraud) points to a man whose wider biography slots into every other trait. It does.
                        • Haymarket / Rupert Street presence: Thompson gave Charing Cross as his postal address; lived with the Meynells off Panton Street; walked the Haymarket grid nightly; Rupert Street is a two-minute walk. That’s not “somewhere in the West End”; that’s embedded in the very micro-district Smith names.

                        Add the Whitechapel footprint (Providence Row on Crispin Street; the Limehouse Salvation Army shelter; the nun’s recollection of Kelly having used the same refuge), plus the Mr. “Moring” testimony from R. Thurston Hopkins aligning a black-haired opium-addicted poet, known to Mary Kelly, to Hutchinson’s description… and you are no longer connecting random dots; you’re tracing a single itinerary that runs from the Haymarket through Rupert Street, over to Crispin Street, and right into Miller’s Court.

                        What “science” means here

                        A couple of senior posters flinch at the word “science.” But what I’m doing is orthodox:
                        • Define the signal (Smith’s five traits).
                        • Estimate base-rates conservatively (from known Victorian data).
                        • Treat the traits as independent filters where appropriate (and note any dependence conservatively).
                        • Compute the false-match rate.
                        • Cross-check against named candidates.

                        That is the scientific method applied to a historical identification: hypothesis → quantification → prediction → falsification by counter-example. Anyone can falsify this by producing another man in 1888 who verifiably matches all five traits at the same time and place. In seven years of people trying, no one has.

                        Answering the standard counters

                        “But Smith says the man had an alibi.”
                        Two things can be true: (1) the City identified a suspect matching a rare profile; (2) a contemporary alibi was accepted for a particular window. Neither erases the identification. Victorian “alibis” ranged from pub sightings to landlord attestations — both weak when challenged across multiple nights. Smith himself still thought the man “very likely.” The alibi line proves only that in 1888 he wasn’t arrested, not that the identification was wrong.

                        “But Thompson never lived on Rupert Street.”
                        No one said he did. Smith didn’t require residency; he required presence. Thompson’s postal address, lodgings, and daily orbit put him within literal steps of Rupert Street. That’s why the Rupert Street point is counted as a location convergence — not a tenancy clause.

                        “Hospitals aren’t asylums; Priory isn’t a county asylum.”
                        This is a word game. In the 1880s, “been in an asylum” in police talk meant: known to have been put away for mental collapse. Thompson’s collapse + institutional seclusion was exactly that class of case. If you prefer, call it “asylum-class history.” It satisfies Smith’s filter.

                        “Coin anecdote ≠ polished farthings.”
                        No one has claimed the sovereign story is the polished-farthing scam. The point is that Smith’s suspect had a specific coin-fraud MO and Thompson’s circle carried coin lore around him — the convergence is part of the bundle. You don’t get to amputate one rare trait from a five-trait signature and then claim “no match.” The maths is computed on the whole bundle.

                        “Nothing proves he was in Whitechapel.”
                        This is where the “burden” misconception keeps creeping in. My job isn’t to walk a beat cop’s notebook into 2025; it’s to present the documentary path: Walsh’s footnote on Thompson’s East-End search in August–September 1888; Providence Row (Crispin Street) as his refuge; Limehouse Salvation Army nights; the nun’s recollection of Kelly’s time at the same refuge; Hopkins’s “Mr. Moring” (a black-haired opium-smoker and poet, known to Kelly, matching Hutchinson’s description) — and show how all of those align in time, space, and biography. If someone wants to claim “he wasn’t there,” they must negate Walsh, the shelters, the nun, and Hopkins — not just wave it off.

                        “But doctors disagreed about the Ripper’s medical skill.”
                        Agreed; the Met surgeons were not in consensus. That’s irrelevant to Smith’s signature, which is the one we’re matching: he explicitly looked for a man with medical schooling and asylum history working the Haymarket/Rupert Street scene and bilking prostitutes with coin fraud. That signature lands on Thompson like a seal.

                        “Poetry isn’t evidence.”
                        Correct — it’s context. The evidence is Smith’s signature, the biographical record, the geography, the shelters, the Hopkins testimony, the scalpel carried, the fire-setting episodes, the letters, the disappearance into treatment immediately after Kelly, the abrupt end of the series, etc. The poems (e.g., Nightmare of the Witch-Babies) and the essays (Tancred) simply reveal anatomical obsession, violent sacrificial thinking, and a focused hatred of “fallen” women that align with the crimes’ psychodynamics. They are not the scaffold; they are the lighting.

                        Why the “expert flinch” doesn’t change the result

                        You nailed this, Fishy: rank on a forum isn’t a proxy for grasping Bayes or compound probabilities. The “higher-ranking” pushback so far has mostly been tone and rhetoric — not a counter-calculation. If the maths were wrong, the critique would be: “Your base-rate for X is off by a factor of 100; here is the correct census table; recompute.” We haven’t seen that. We’ve seen “science doesn’t work like that,” without showing how it should work in historical identification. This is how it works: you quantify rarity, test independence, and compute collision odds.

                        Putting the police back in the center

                        A reminder: Smith was acting Commissioner of the City Police — the force with jurisdiction over Mitre Square. He wasn’t writing a pub fantasy; he was memorialising what his detectives actually did: identify a Rupert Street man with these five qualifications, deploy men to the Haymarket grid, and then check his alibi. That five-point list is a contemporaneous CID funnel. Treating it as a random memoir flourish is the mistake.

                        The Whitechapel through-line (1888–1892)

                        From August–November 1888 we have:
                        • Thompson’s desperate search for a runaway prostitute across the East End (Walsh’s “most bizarre coincidence” footnote).
                        • Providence Row (Crispin Street) as his likely lodging; Limehouse Salvation Army as his other bed.
                        • Haymarket / Rupert Street as his nightly orbit while based with the Meynells.
                        • Scalpel carried for shaving; night-wandering; violent anatomical writing pre-dating the murders; obsession with “corrupt” women in prose and letters.
                        • The series ends as Thompson is removed to treatment and then cloister. Casebook regulars know how often serial series end that way.

                        By 1892 the official investigation is closed. Thompson’s trajectory (collapse → priory → cloister → mythologised gentle poet) is complete. The only thing missing, for a century, was someone to do what you’re acknowledging now: quantify the five-trait silhouette and test the field.

                        Where this leaves the debate

                        It leaves it exactly where you put it, Fishy: no one has come remotely close to disproving the core argument because the only viable disproof is to name another 1888 man who meets the Smith five in the Haymarket grid and can withstand the rest of the Thompson-specific convergences (Providence Row, Hopkins/Moring, the East-End search window, the removal after Kelly, etc.). Hand-waving “alibi” at one slice in time — which may well have been “he slept at this coffee-house every night” — doesn’t undo the match. Victorian lodging-house alibis are notoriously porous; Smith’s own phrasing (“very likely”) shows his residual belief.

                        Finally — thanks, and what I’m actually asking from the forum

                        I’m not asking anyone to take this on faith or because I wrote a book. I’m asking for discipline:
                        • Deal with Smith’s five as a police-selected filter, not a journalist’s whim.
                        • Engage the probability model with counter-numbers if you think it’s wrong; don’t just pronounce “not science.”
                        • Address the Walsh footnote, Providence Row, Limehouse SA, Hopkins/Moring, Panton/Charing Cross/Rupert geometry, and the post-Kelly removal — all together, as a single through-line — or say plainly that you’re ignoring those planks.
                        • If you think the case is unsolved, name the 1888 man who matches the five traits as tightly as Thompson, in the same micro-district, during the same months.

                        Until that happens, the polite phrasing is: the chance this is anyone else is vanishingly small. The honest phrasing is: this is the man.

                        Appreciate your clear eye, Fishy. In a thread where rank has too often substituted for rigor, you’ve kept the spotlight where it belongs: on the maths, the documents, and the geometry. That’s how cases are solved — in 1888 or in 2025.
                        Author of



                        'It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is. It doesn't matter how smart you are . If it doesn't agree with experiment, its wrong'' . Richard Feynman

                        Comment

                        • FISHY1118
                          Assistant Commissioner
                          • May 2019
                          • 3710

                          #372
                          Originally posted by Richard Patterson View Post

                          Fishy — thank you.

                          It’s honestly refreshing to see someone engage with the actual structure of the case rather than swatting at straw-men. You’ve done what (so far) only a handful on Casebook have managed: clock the scale of what’s being presented and why it crosses the line from “interesting suspect” into statistically decisive identification. That doesn’t mean “trust Richard’s hunch.” It means: follow the documented traits, quantify how rare they are in London 1888, and then compute the probability that a different man could coincide on all of them by blind chance. That number is the engine room here.

                          Let me lay it out crisply, and then I’ll address the familiar pushbacks.

                          What the probability actually measures

                          Major Sir Henry Smith left us a compact, police-selected signature for his Rupert Street suspect:
                          1. ex-medical student
                          2. asylum history
                          3. consorts with prostitutes
                          4. coin-fraud (“polished farthings passed as sovereigns”)
                          5. Haymarket / Rupert Street presence

                          That is a deliberately rare bundle. Each item prunes the field; all five together carve a silhouette that simply doesn’t recur at scale in the 1888 male population.

                          When you model those traits conservatively (not aggressively) with base-rates from Victorian demography, asylum statistics, medical enrollments, vice prevalence, and the very small footprint of the Haymarket/Rupert Street lodging population, you land at ~1 in 20 quadrillion for a random London male to match all five by accident. Thompson matches all five. Others in the literature match one or two. No one else matches the lot.

                          And because people struggle to feel the size of that number, here’s the intuition you flagged:
                          • You are more likely to win the UK National Lottery six weeks in a row than to stumble onto another man who ticks all five by chance.
                          • You are more likely to be struck by lightning while a shark bites you than to get that five-point coincidence.
                          • You’re more likely to have a meteorite hit your garden this year.
                          • If even 1% of alien-abduction stories were true, you’d be more likely to be abducted before you finish reading this.
                          • The chance that the Sun won’t rise tomorrow is orders of magnitude higher.
                          • If the Resurrection literally happened, your odds of resurrecting one day are still many times higher than the odds that Thompson’s five-point match is mere coincidence.
                          • There are ~7.5 quintillion grains of sand on Earth’s beaches. 20 quadrillion is thousands of times bigger.

                          In short: once you accept Smith’s five-point signature as a genuine police filter (and his memoir makes clear it is), the “it could be someone else” door is functionally closed unless a second, equally matching candidate is named and evidenced.

                          Why this isn’t just “maths on paper”

                          The probability isn’t floating in a vacuum; it’s chained to primary source facts.
                          • Ex-medical student: Thompson studied medicine for six years; his sister Mary complained of the money repeatedly demanded for dissecting fees and the sheer number of cadavers he cut into. That’s not poetic license; it’s family testimony.
                          • Asylum / institutional care: Victorian terminology is messy (“lunatic asylum,” “priory,” “hospital,” “institution”) but the biography is plain: nervous collapse; institutional treatment; period of cloistered care; repeated notes from family that he “never fully recovered.” Smith’s phrasing matches the category of a man known to authorities as having been put away.
                          • Consorted with prostitutes: Thompson himself said he lived with a prostitute for about a year; she fled him in the summer of 1888; he then scoured the East End looking for her through August–September — precisely the Ripper window.
                          • Coin motif / coin fraud convergence: Smith’s suspect bilked prostitutes by “polished farthings.” Thompson’s recorded coin episode (the sovereigns) shows the coin-theme circulating in his circle; the question isn’t whether he held those exact farthings but whether the Rupert Street profile (including the coin fraud) points to a man whose wider biography slots into every other trait. It does.
                          • Haymarket / Rupert Street presence: Thompson gave Charing Cross as his postal address; lived with the Meynells off Panton Street; walked the Haymarket grid nightly; Rupert Street is a two-minute walk. That’s not “somewhere in the West End”; that’s embedded in the very micro-district Smith names.

                          Add the Whitechapel footprint (Providence Row on Crispin Street; the Limehouse Salvation Army shelter; the nun’s recollection of Kelly having used the same refuge), plus the Mr. “Moring” testimony from R. Thurston Hopkins aligning a black-haired opium-addicted poet, known to Mary Kelly, to Hutchinson’s description… and you are no longer connecting random dots; you’re tracing a single itinerary that runs from the Haymarket through Rupert Street, over to Crispin Street, and right into Miller’s Court.

                          What “science” means here

                          A couple of senior posters flinch at the word “science.” But what I’m doing is orthodox:
                          • Define the signal (Smith’s five traits).
                          • Estimate base-rates conservatively (from known Victorian data).
                          • Treat the traits as independent filters where appropriate (and note any dependence conservatively).
                          • Compute the false-match rate.
                          • Cross-check against named candidates.

                          That is the scientific method applied to a historical identification: hypothesis → quantification → prediction → falsification by counter-example. Anyone can falsify this by producing another man in 1888 who verifiably matches all five traits at the same time and place. In seven years of people trying, no one has.

                          Answering the standard counters

                          “But Smith says the man had an alibi.”
                          Two things can be true: (1) the City identified a suspect matching a rare profile; (2) a contemporary alibi was accepted for a particular window. Neither erases the identification. Victorian “alibis” ranged from pub sightings to landlord attestations — both weak when challenged across multiple nights. Smith himself still thought the man “very likely.” The alibi line proves only that in 1888 he wasn’t arrested, not that the identification was wrong.

                          “But Thompson never lived on Rupert Street.”
                          No one said he did. Smith didn’t require residency; he required presence. Thompson’s postal address, lodgings, and daily orbit put him within literal steps of Rupert Street. That’s why the Rupert Street point is counted as a location convergence — not a tenancy clause.

                          “Hospitals aren’t asylums; Priory isn’t a county asylum.”
                          This is a word game. In the 1880s, “been in an asylum” in police talk meant: known to have been put away for mental collapse. Thompson’s collapse + institutional seclusion was exactly that class of case. If you prefer, call it “asylum-class history.” It satisfies Smith’s filter.

                          “Coin anecdote ≠ polished farthings.”
                          No one has claimed the sovereign story is the polished-farthing scam. The point is that Smith’s suspect had a specific coin-fraud MO and Thompson’s circle carried coin lore around him — the convergence is part of the bundle. You don’t get to amputate one rare trait from a five-trait signature and then claim “no match.” The maths is computed on the whole bundle.

                          “Nothing proves he was in Whitechapel.”
                          This is where the “burden” misconception keeps creeping in. My job isn’t to walk a beat cop’s notebook into 2025; it’s to present the documentary path: Walsh’s footnote on Thompson’s East-End search in August–September 1888; Providence Row (Crispin Street) as his refuge; Limehouse Salvation Army nights; the nun’s recollection of Kelly’s time at the same refuge; Hopkins’s “Mr. Moring” (a black-haired opium-smoker and poet, known to Kelly, matching Hutchinson’s description) — and show how all of those align in time, space, and biography. If someone wants to claim “he wasn’t there,” they must negate Walsh, the shelters, the nun, and Hopkins — not just wave it off.

                          “But doctors disagreed about the Ripper’s medical skill.”
                          Agreed; the Met surgeons were not in consensus. That’s irrelevant to Smith’s signature, which is the one we’re matching: he explicitly looked for a man with medical schooling and asylum history working the Haymarket/Rupert Street scene and bilking prostitutes with coin fraud. That signature lands on Thompson like a seal.

                          “Poetry isn’t evidence.”
                          Correct — it’s context. The evidence is Smith’s signature, the biographical record, the geography, the shelters, the Hopkins testimony, the scalpel carried, the fire-setting episodes, the letters, the disappearance into treatment immediately after Kelly, the abrupt end of the series, etc. The poems (e.g., Nightmare of the Witch-Babies) and the essays (Tancred) simply reveal anatomical obsession, violent sacrificial thinking, and a focused hatred of “fallen” women that align with the crimes’ psychodynamics. They are not the scaffold; they are the lighting.

                          Why the “expert flinch” doesn’t change the result

                          You nailed this, Fishy: rank on a forum isn’t a proxy for grasping Bayes or compound probabilities. The “higher-ranking” pushback so far has mostly been tone and rhetoric — not a counter-calculation. If the maths were wrong, the critique would be: “Your base-rate for X is off by a factor of 100; here is the correct census table; recompute.” We haven’t seen that. We’ve seen “science doesn’t work like that,” without showing how it should work in historical identification. This is how it works: you quantify rarity, test independence, and compute collision odds.

                          Putting the police back in the center

                          A reminder: Smith was acting Commissioner of the City Police — the force with jurisdiction over Mitre Square. He wasn’t writing a pub fantasy; he was memorialising what his detectives actually did: identify a Rupert Street man with these five qualifications, deploy men to the Haymarket grid, and then check his alibi. That five-point list is a contemporaneous CID funnel. Treating it as a random memoir flourish is the mistake.

                          The Whitechapel through-line (1888–1892)

                          From August–November 1888 we have:
                          • Thompson’s desperate search for a runaway prostitute across the East End (Walsh’s “most bizarre coincidence” footnote).
                          • Providence Row (Crispin Street) as his likely lodging; Limehouse Salvation Army as his other bed.
                          • Haymarket / Rupert Street as his nightly orbit while based with the Meynells.
                          • Scalpel carried for shaving; night-wandering; violent anatomical writing pre-dating the murders; obsession with “corrupt” women in prose and letters.
                          • The series ends as Thompson is removed to treatment and then cloister. Casebook regulars know how often serial series end that way.

                          By 1892 the official investigation is closed. Thompson’s trajectory (collapse → priory → cloister → mythologised gentle poet) is complete. The only thing missing, for a century, was someone to do what you’re acknowledging now: quantify the five-trait silhouette and test the field.

                          Where this leaves the debate

                          It leaves it exactly where you put it, Fishy: no one has come remotely close to disproving the core argument because the only viable disproof is to name another 1888 man who meets the Smith five in the Haymarket grid and can withstand the rest of the Thompson-specific convergences (Providence Row, Hopkins/Moring, the East-End search window, the removal after Kelly, etc.). Hand-waving “alibi” at one slice in time — which may well have been “he slept at this coffee-house every night” — doesn’t undo the match. Victorian lodging-house alibis are notoriously porous; Smith’s own phrasing (“very likely”) shows his residual belief.

                          Finally — thanks, and what I’m actually asking from the forum

                          I’m not asking anyone to take this on faith or because I wrote a book. I’m asking for discipline:
                          • Deal with Smith’s five as a police-selected filter, not a journalist’s whim.
                          • Engage the probability model with counter-numbers if you think it’s wrong; don’t just pronounce “not science.”
                          • Address the Walsh footnote, Providence Row, Limehouse SA, Hopkins/Moring, Panton/Charing Cross/Rupert geometry, and the post-Kelly removal — all together, as a single through-line — or say plainly that you’re ignoring those planks.
                          • If you think the case is unsolved, name the 1888 man who matches the five traits as tightly as Thompson, in the same micro-district, during the same months.

                          Until that happens, the polite phrasing is: the chance this is anyone else is vanishingly small. The honest phrasing is: this is the man.

                          Appreciate your clear eye, Fishy. In a thread where rank has too often substituted for rigor, you’ve kept the spotlight where it belongs: on the maths, the documents, and the geometry. That’s how cases are solved — in 1888 or in 2025.
                          Thanks Richard , Its a real pleasure to see someone go into so much detailed analytical Evidence in favour of a particular suspect . Ive enjoyed reading your post and marvel at the way in which you present your case . But most of all, watching the way the usual suspect here who seem to be baffled by the amount of information on Thompson that you,ve provided and how they struggle to deal with it . Impressive to say the least. Cheers .
                          'It doesn't matter how beautiful your theory is. It doesn't matter how smart you are . If it doesn't agree with experiment, its wrong'' . Richard Feynman

                          Comment

                          • Mike J. G.
                            Sergeant
                            • May 2017
                            • 906

                            #373
                            Originally posted by FISHY1118 View Post
                            Sorry Mike but you,ve got it all wrong , forgive me mate but you havent been paying attention to this thread '

                            But Richard is so much more adapte at replying to post such as yours . What can i say but Again, ''Not Even Remotely Close ''



                            Go for it Mike, show some evidence this is all wrong ?
                            Go for it, Fishy, show me some evidence that it wasn't Chapman. If you can't prove that it wasn't Chapman, then it was Chapman...

                            See how embarrassingly silly we can be when we don't try hard enough, Fish?

                            Luckily, the Thompson Kool-Aid doesn't seem to have been passed around the entire forum yet, so that's something...

                            It's a wonder why Richard's scientifically proven theory hasn't broken the internet, but maybe the world is still struggling to comprehend all of the evidence.

                            Cheers


                            Comment

                            • John Wheat
                              Assistant Commissioner
                              • Jul 2008
                              • 3486

                              #374
                              The title of this thread is completely and utterly misleading nothing has been proven scientifically at all. There is a complete lack of evidence whatsoever that Thompson was Jack the Ripper.

                              Comment

                              • Richard Patterson
                                Sergeant
                                • Mar 2012
                                • 631

                                #375
                                Originally posted by John Wheat View Post
                                The title of this thread is completely and utterly misleading nothing has been proven scientifically at all. There is a complete lack of evidence whatsoever that Thompson was Jack the Ripper.
                                And where is the evidence for that?
                                Author of

                                "Jack the Ripper, The Works of Francis Thompson"

                                http://www.francisjthompson.com/

                                Comment

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