Useful evidence
Hello Simon,
I suppose on the face of it, not much, apart from the fact that the piece of apron is the only thing we can be sure the killer touched not found by the bodies. We can't even be sure that he/she left it in Goulston street. It seems likely though. The graffito was said to resemble the handwriting in one of the letters the police received, but that doesn't prove anything, unless the police had some idea of who the letter writer was. As so much is missing from the police files, we can't rule anything out, except that wiping it off was considered a huge mistake by some police officials.
At the time, not much, today it would have proved very important. And perhaps in another hundred years - nano techniques and so on. I learned to write with an iron-nibbed pen and got quite a lot of the ink on me and it follows that in that process some of me got into the ink. Future cold case maybe?
Best wishes,
C4
Originally posted by Simon Wood
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I suppose on the face of it, not much, apart from the fact that the piece of apron is the only thing we can be sure the killer touched not found by the bodies. We can't even be sure that he/she left it in Goulston street. It seems likely though. The graffito was said to resemble the handwriting in one of the letters the police received, but that doesn't prove anything, unless the police had some idea of who the letter writer was. As so much is missing from the police files, we can't rule anything out, except that wiping it off was considered a huge mistake by some police officials.
At the time, not much, today it would have proved very important. And perhaps in another hundred years - nano techniques and so on. I learned to write with an iron-nibbed pen and got quite a lot of the ink on me and it follows that in that process some of me got into the ink. Future cold case maybe?
Best wishes,
C4
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