Having a suspect is fine. Making the case for him is fine. Altering reality isn’t. Spotting non-existent links isn’t. Claiming opinion as facts isn’t. Claiming that the case is 100% solved isn’t. Claiming that we all have some kind of moral duty to accept Thompson’s guilt certainly isn’t.
Let’s list the points made by Richard in his original post on the other thread (which was taken from Facebook and posted on here by Geddy) and examine them individually. No leaps of faith, no assumptions, no one plus one equals three and certainly no propaganda.
> That by using modern probability analysis and Bayesian maths Francis Thompson is over 100,000 times more likely to have been Jack the Ripper then any other suspect.
This can be dismissed without discussion. I’m no mathematician but Richard plugs in the information about Smith’s suspect which a child could see are inaccurate. Garbage in, garbage out. This will be discussed further down.
> That he was medically trained.
Accepted by me without question as the evidence is cast-iron. What isn’t cast-iron is the level of medical knowledge that the killer possessed. The doctors at the time weren’t unanimous and modern day experts aren’t unanimous. I’m not qualified to make a judgment either way but I’m certainly not willing to accept this as fact from someone trying to promote a medically trained suspect.
> That he had a ‘documented history of psychotic violence toward women.’
Absolutely and conclusively untrue. We haven’t a single piece of evidence of Thompson being violent (and certainly not to women). Words aren’t violence. Richard states categorically ‘violence toward women.’
> He lived within 100 metres of the ripper sites.
This is another untruth. We have Thompson mentioning seeing men outside the Providence Row mission and he may (no more that ‘may’) have stayed there at some point but we don’t know this for anything close to a certainty or indeed when if he had. To claim that he was there at the time of the murders is untrue and Richard knows it.
> He was an active arsonist.
Absolutely untrue.
As a child, in church, Thomson wanted to swing the thurible but another boy had the job. Thompson grabbed it and swung it around causing the smouldering charcoal to come out. It was stamped out with a shovel by a housekeeper. It doesn’t even sound as if it was an actual fire.
He also accidentally knocked over a lamp in a room that he was staying in. We all know how drug addicts and alcoholics are always at risk of doing things like this. There was nothing sinister about it. To assume that he did this purposely is a deliberate distortion to make a point.
Likewise when he accidentally left a pipe in his coat pocket which hadn’t ’gone out.’
If Thompson had wanted to start fires he could have done better than these pathetic ‘examples.’
How far can anyone stretch credibility to claim that this made Thompson a proven arsonist (which is a possible sign of psychopathy)? Is there anyone that would call this child/man an arsonist? Of course not.
> He wrote essays describing prostitutes as putrid ulcers and called for them to be drowned in the Thames.
Did he? I have by no stretch read everything by Thompson but I’ve read some and I haven’t yet seen him use the word prostitute (maybe he has but wouldn’t evidence of this be welcome?) He certainly wrote about immorality and women and other big religious topics. He was a deeply religious man who was often conflicted by his desire to be a poet and matters of religion. We should also remember the fact that Thompson was an opium addict so it’s hardly surprising that he should write about these subjects in an extremely dramatic way. Words don’t make a man a murderer. How would we judge a man who wrote a graphic book about a sadistic, torturing serial killer? Would we call him psychotic? Would we suggest that he was dangerous? Of course not.
> He was removed from the area after the final murder (Kelly) and that his movements aligned with the murders.
We have even no remotely detailed plan of where Thompson was for a huge part of his life and simply saying “London” isn’t good enough. He spent 6 weeks in a hospital but we don’t know exactly when but his biographer suggested that it was in October. He was placed in The Priory due to his drug issues but this was in 1889.
> He was a ‘night wanderer,’ ‘wearing disguises’ and ‘carrying scalpels.’
‘Night wanderer’ is highly dramatic. Thompson, like thousands of others, was a vagrant for sizeable periods of time. Unwashed, poorly fed, in the grip of addiction. This isn’t sinister and it certainly isn’t unique.
I don’t know where the ‘disguises’ part comes from but I’d have to ask how the penniless Thompson managed a costume change?
‘Carrying scalpels’ is yet another point that stretches the word ‘tenuous’ to its fullest tolerance. He admitted to carrying a scalpel which he used for shaving. It’s never been suggested that the ripper’s victims met their end by scalpel. I’m no surgeon but I’d ask how Thompson could have butchered Kelly with a scalpel? How many non-points?
> His writings match the tone and sadistic psychology of the ripper letters.
How many believe that the ripper letters are genuine is the first and most obvious point. Matching the tone? Come on…no one can take this seriously?
> He claims that the medical student suspect suggested by Major Henry Smith matches Thompson exactly. Points of similarity - Rupert Street, passing off polished farthings, medical student, time in an asylum. And that this mathematically proves that he was the suspect.
Richard so far hasn’t explained the Rupert Street link (it may or may not exist but it would be helpful to know what it was) Surely it can’t just be that Rupert Street was in the West End and that Thompson’s prostitute friend lived in the West End. Or that it was in the Haymarket with its links to prostitution. He would be that tenuous…would he?
That Thompson was a former medical student is of course accepted.
The passing off of polished farthings is of course absolutely untrue. We know of no example of or even the suggestion of Thompson doing this. The only coin based ‘link’ (although it’s clearly not a link) is that Thompson once spoke of finding two sovereigns in the street. How this can be considered a ‘link’ is baffling.
The suggestion that Thompson spent time in an asylum is simply untrue. He spent 6 weeks in a hospital because he was ill and at near collapse some time in 1888. His biographer Walsh places this in October but he only does this by using Thompson’s poetry so we can’t be certain. If it was in October however it would cast a serious doubt on Thompson’s availability for the Double Event and the Kelly murder. Thompson was placed in The Priory at Storrington (which also wasn’t an asylum and could by any stretch be mistaken for one) due to his drug addiction but this didn’t happen until 1889. Smith however wrote to Charles Warren to inform him about the suspect just after Chapman was killed on September 8th by which time Thompson hadn’t been in the hospital or The Priory.
The above enough to dismiss the notion of Thompson being Smith’s suspect but we can add what Smith said next in his book:
“Sir Charles failed to find him. I thought he was likely to be in Rupert Street, Haymarket. I sent up two men, and there he was; but, polished farthings and all, he proved an alibi without the shadow of a doubt.”
Need more be said?
So as we call all see the 4 ‘matches’ aren’t even approaching matches and yet this is an example of Richard’s allegedly unimpeachable mathematical approach.
…..
In addition, Thompson’s biographer John Walsh (who remember wasn’t defending Thompson from suggestions that he was the ripper) said that Thompson had a horror of the dissection room and the sight of flowing blood.
Richard contends that Thompson’s 6 years of training rebuts this point but does it? Thompson was desperately trying to please his father by becoming a respectable doctor. Walsh didn’t suggest a phobia just a horror; a dislike. So it’s not difficult to imagine somewhere persevering through something that they find distasteful in order to try and achieve an important goal. It’s important to point out of course that Thompson failed. He never finished the course and never qualified as a doctor.
Then strangely Richard claimed that Thompson skill, plus the darkness, would have allowed him to avoid seeing the flowing blood. I have to ask how. Chapman was killed in daylight and with Kelly he spent up to an hour in a lit room (butchering away with his scalpel apparently)
….
I’ll end by asking you to check out the following. As I said, everyone is entitled to favour a suspect and to set out and debate the case. But does anyone here think that someone favouring a suspect is entitled to say the following:
“The maths is solid. The evidence is vast and consistent. The logical conclusion is no longer in doubt: Francis Thompson was Jack the Ripper.”
Sadly though it gets worth as the depths really are ploughed when he states:
That the sooner that this truth spreads it will replace the cases lies and myths.
That the victims can finally be honoured.
That those accepting the ‘truth’ will be remembered by history.
That you will be seen by your family and friends as someone open-minded and with integrity and moral courage.
That you will be showing that truth and science wins through.
That you will restore the victims dignity.
That will end the 'glamorisation’ of the murders.
That you will stop the endless recycling of false suspects.
That you will be helping future generations the value of real history as opposed to myths.
That you will create closure for the victims.
That you will be contributing toward peace, healing and awareness.
None of the above is an exaggeration although it reads like one. These are exactly the claims made by Richard. Has anyone ever read a more cynical and deliberate attempt at guilt-tripping people into believing this theory; or to falsely portray the validity of a theory. Has anyone ever stooped to this kind of thing before? Has anyone ever heard anything like it?
So we have another suspect with a publicity machine. I call it ‘pretty low’ but I’ll leave it to others to form their own opinions.
The so-called case against Thompson is built entirely on shifting sands as the actual evidence (not the imagined variety) tells us.
Let’s list the points made by Richard in his original post on the other thread (which was taken from Facebook and posted on here by Geddy) and examine them individually. No leaps of faith, no assumptions, no one plus one equals three and certainly no propaganda.
> That by using modern probability analysis and Bayesian maths Francis Thompson is over 100,000 times more likely to have been Jack the Ripper then any other suspect.
This can be dismissed without discussion. I’m no mathematician but Richard plugs in the information about Smith’s suspect which a child could see are inaccurate. Garbage in, garbage out. This will be discussed further down.
> That he was medically trained.
Accepted by me without question as the evidence is cast-iron. What isn’t cast-iron is the level of medical knowledge that the killer possessed. The doctors at the time weren’t unanimous and modern day experts aren’t unanimous. I’m not qualified to make a judgment either way but I’m certainly not willing to accept this as fact from someone trying to promote a medically trained suspect.
> That he had a ‘documented history of psychotic violence toward women.’
Absolutely and conclusively untrue. We haven’t a single piece of evidence of Thompson being violent (and certainly not to women). Words aren’t violence. Richard states categorically ‘violence toward women.’
> He lived within 100 metres of the ripper sites.
This is another untruth. We have Thompson mentioning seeing men outside the Providence Row mission and he may (no more that ‘may’) have stayed there at some point but we don’t know this for anything close to a certainty or indeed when if he had. To claim that he was there at the time of the murders is untrue and Richard knows it.
> He was an active arsonist.
Absolutely untrue.
As a child, in church, Thomson wanted to swing the thurible but another boy had the job. Thompson grabbed it and swung it around causing the smouldering charcoal to come out. It was stamped out with a shovel by a housekeeper. It doesn’t even sound as if it was an actual fire.
He also accidentally knocked over a lamp in a room that he was staying in. We all know how drug addicts and alcoholics are always at risk of doing things like this. There was nothing sinister about it. To assume that he did this purposely is a deliberate distortion to make a point.
Likewise when he accidentally left a pipe in his coat pocket which hadn’t ’gone out.’
If Thompson had wanted to start fires he could have done better than these pathetic ‘examples.’
How far can anyone stretch credibility to claim that this made Thompson a proven arsonist (which is a possible sign of psychopathy)? Is there anyone that would call this child/man an arsonist? Of course not.
> He wrote essays describing prostitutes as putrid ulcers and called for them to be drowned in the Thames.
Did he? I have by no stretch read everything by Thompson but I’ve read some and I haven’t yet seen him use the word prostitute (maybe he has but wouldn’t evidence of this be welcome?) He certainly wrote about immorality and women and other big religious topics. He was a deeply religious man who was often conflicted by his desire to be a poet and matters of religion. We should also remember the fact that Thompson was an opium addict so it’s hardly surprising that he should write about these subjects in an extremely dramatic way. Words don’t make a man a murderer. How would we judge a man who wrote a graphic book about a sadistic, torturing serial killer? Would we call him psychotic? Would we suggest that he was dangerous? Of course not.
> He was removed from the area after the final murder (Kelly) and that his movements aligned with the murders.
We have even no remotely detailed plan of where Thompson was for a huge part of his life and simply saying “London” isn’t good enough. He spent 6 weeks in a hospital but we don’t know exactly when but his biographer suggested that it was in October. He was placed in The Priory due to his drug issues but this was in 1889.
> He was a ‘night wanderer,’ ‘wearing disguises’ and ‘carrying scalpels.’
‘Night wanderer’ is highly dramatic. Thompson, like thousands of others, was a vagrant for sizeable periods of time. Unwashed, poorly fed, in the grip of addiction. This isn’t sinister and it certainly isn’t unique.
I don’t know where the ‘disguises’ part comes from but I’d have to ask how the penniless Thompson managed a costume change?
‘Carrying scalpels’ is yet another point that stretches the word ‘tenuous’ to its fullest tolerance. He admitted to carrying a scalpel which he used for shaving. It’s never been suggested that the ripper’s victims met their end by scalpel. I’m no surgeon but I’d ask how Thompson could have butchered Kelly with a scalpel? How many non-points?
> His writings match the tone and sadistic psychology of the ripper letters.
How many believe that the ripper letters are genuine is the first and most obvious point. Matching the tone? Come on…no one can take this seriously?
> He claims that the medical student suspect suggested by Major Henry Smith matches Thompson exactly. Points of similarity - Rupert Street, passing off polished farthings, medical student, time in an asylum. And that this mathematically proves that he was the suspect.
Richard so far hasn’t explained the Rupert Street link (it may or may not exist but it would be helpful to know what it was) Surely it can’t just be that Rupert Street was in the West End and that Thompson’s prostitute friend lived in the West End. Or that it was in the Haymarket with its links to prostitution. He would be that tenuous…would he?
That Thompson was a former medical student is of course accepted.
The passing off of polished farthings is of course absolutely untrue. We know of no example of or even the suggestion of Thompson doing this. The only coin based ‘link’ (although it’s clearly not a link) is that Thompson once spoke of finding two sovereigns in the street. How this can be considered a ‘link’ is baffling.
The suggestion that Thompson spent time in an asylum is simply untrue. He spent 6 weeks in a hospital because he was ill and at near collapse some time in 1888. His biographer Walsh places this in October but he only does this by using Thompson’s poetry so we can’t be certain. If it was in October however it would cast a serious doubt on Thompson’s availability for the Double Event and the Kelly murder. Thompson was placed in The Priory at Storrington (which also wasn’t an asylum and could by any stretch be mistaken for one) due to his drug addiction but this didn’t happen until 1889. Smith however wrote to Charles Warren to inform him about the suspect just after Chapman was killed on September 8th by which time Thompson hadn’t been in the hospital or The Priory.
The above enough to dismiss the notion of Thompson being Smith’s suspect but we can add what Smith said next in his book:
“Sir Charles failed to find him. I thought he was likely to be in Rupert Street, Haymarket. I sent up two men, and there he was; but, polished farthings and all, he proved an alibi without the shadow of a doubt.”
Need more be said?
So as we call all see the 4 ‘matches’ aren’t even approaching matches and yet this is an example of Richard’s allegedly unimpeachable mathematical approach.
…..
In addition, Thompson’s biographer John Walsh (who remember wasn’t defending Thompson from suggestions that he was the ripper) said that Thompson had a horror of the dissection room and the sight of flowing blood.
Richard contends that Thompson’s 6 years of training rebuts this point but does it? Thompson was desperately trying to please his father by becoming a respectable doctor. Walsh didn’t suggest a phobia just a horror; a dislike. So it’s not difficult to imagine somewhere persevering through something that they find distasteful in order to try and achieve an important goal. It’s important to point out of course that Thompson failed. He never finished the course and never qualified as a doctor.
Then strangely Richard claimed that Thompson skill, plus the darkness, would have allowed him to avoid seeing the flowing blood. I have to ask how. Chapman was killed in daylight and with Kelly he spent up to an hour in a lit room (butchering away with his scalpel apparently)
….
I’ll end by asking you to check out the following. As I said, everyone is entitled to favour a suspect and to set out and debate the case. But does anyone here think that someone favouring a suspect is entitled to say the following:
“The maths is solid. The evidence is vast and consistent. The logical conclusion is no longer in doubt: Francis Thompson was Jack the Ripper.”
Sadly though it gets worth as the depths really are ploughed when he states:
That the sooner that this truth spreads it will replace the cases lies and myths.
That the victims can finally be honoured.
That those accepting the ‘truth’ will be remembered by history.
That you will be seen by your family and friends as someone open-minded and with integrity and moral courage.
That you will be showing that truth and science wins through.
That you will restore the victims dignity.
That will end the 'glamorisation’ of the murders.
That you will stop the endless recycling of false suspects.
That you will be helping future generations the value of real history as opposed to myths.
That you will create closure for the victims.
That you will be contributing toward peace, healing and awareness.
None of the above is an exaggeration although it reads like one. These are exactly the claims made by Richard. Has anyone ever read a more cynical and deliberate attempt at guilt-tripping people into believing this theory; or to falsely portray the validity of a theory. Has anyone ever stooped to this kind of thing before? Has anyone ever heard anything like it?
So we have another suspect with a publicity machine. I call it ‘pretty low’ but I’ll leave it to others to form their own opinions.
The so-called case against Thompson is built entirely on shifting sands as the actual evidence (not the imagined variety) tells us.
Comment