I love you guys! Nice to see a little give-and-take without all the acrimony!
I'm sorry, Trevor, for perhaps seeming a bit thick yesterday. I had been up all night and was half asleep when I posted my last remarks (always a bad idea). But it stands to reason that since there is no record of Tumblety being charged as a murderer, his arrest and subsequent bail hearings must have involved the indecency charges. Therefore, he must have been detained earlier for questioning in the Ripper murders, then formally arrested on the other charges. At least that's my understanding. The newspapers carried many stories of others being "brought in" for questioning in the Ripper matter and then released without charges - or were those stories wrong? When Tumblety later spoke to a reporter in America, he connected his arrest to the Ripper case rather than to the sex charges for reasons already expounded. Again, that's my take on the matter - of course, being human, I could be wrong!!!!!
I greatly appreciate your reference to the period laws governing arrests and cautioning, along with Monty's follow-up document - original sources add so much to understanding - but I saw nothing there to conflict with my scenerio. And am I wrong in referencing the Wilde and Cleveland St. cases as examples of using rent boys, who could have been arrested and charged as accomplices, as prosecution witnesses instead? In published works on these cases, I saw no indication that any of them were arrested and cautioned, thus leaving the inference that they were induced to cooperate rather than face charges themselves. This is exactly what I think happened in the Tumblety matter. If I'm totally misunderstanding the entire set of facts, please straighten me out.
As I mentioned in another posting, police interest in Tumblety as a Ripper suspect does seem a bit strange, considering his age, physical description, etc., as does the surveillance of his movements in both the west and east ends. Does this not suggest, at least, that other forces may be involved? Scotland Yard's "Special Branch" apparently had a dossier on Tumblety as a possible supporter of Irish radicals. Wouldn't they have the resources to carry out such a wide surveillance of Tumblety, and perhaps reason to want to jail him or chase him out of the country? Just a thought.
Seeking Enlightenment John
I'm sorry, Trevor, for perhaps seeming a bit thick yesterday. I had been up all night and was half asleep when I posted my last remarks (always a bad idea). But it stands to reason that since there is no record of Tumblety being charged as a murderer, his arrest and subsequent bail hearings must have involved the indecency charges. Therefore, he must have been detained earlier for questioning in the Ripper murders, then formally arrested on the other charges. At least that's my understanding. The newspapers carried many stories of others being "brought in" for questioning in the Ripper matter and then released without charges - or were those stories wrong? When Tumblety later spoke to a reporter in America, he connected his arrest to the Ripper case rather than to the sex charges for reasons already expounded. Again, that's my take on the matter - of course, being human, I could be wrong!!!!!
I greatly appreciate your reference to the period laws governing arrests and cautioning, along with Monty's follow-up document - original sources add so much to understanding - but I saw nothing there to conflict with my scenerio. And am I wrong in referencing the Wilde and Cleveland St. cases as examples of using rent boys, who could have been arrested and charged as accomplices, as prosecution witnesses instead? In published works on these cases, I saw no indication that any of them were arrested and cautioned, thus leaving the inference that they were induced to cooperate rather than face charges themselves. This is exactly what I think happened in the Tumblety matter. If I'm totally misunderstanding the entire set of facts, please straighten me out.
As I mentioned in another posting, police interest in Tumblety as a Ripper suspect does seem a bit strange, considering his age, physical description, etc., as does the surveillance of his movements in both the west and east ends. Does this not suggest, at least, that other forces may be involved? Scotland Yard's "Special Branch" apparently had a dossier on Tumblety as a possible supporter of Irish radicals. Wouldn't they have the resources to carry out such a wide surveillance of Tumblety, and perhaps reason to want to jail him or chase him out of the country? Just a thought.
Seeking Enlightenment John
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