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The Canonical Five

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  • SirJohnFalstaff
    replied
    Originally posted by wigngown View Post
    SirJohnFalstaff,

    Interesting. I don't think I've ever heard that theory about the killer being himself, murdered.

    Best regards.
    Actually, the first time I heard of Jack The Ripper was in a highly inaccurate Reader's Digest book. They said it was rumored that the murderer was a Canadian doctor, lynched by prostitutes, and his body was found in the Thames a month later. Talk about confusion.

    But the more I read about the Victorian underworld, the more I see the possibility. Jack was bad news for everyone.

    Leave a comment:


  • Rosella
    replied
    Jail, asylum, illness, death, physical incapacity. None of those are good news of course, except for potential future victims.

    Leave a comment:


  • Paddy
    replied
    Originally Posted by Pierre
    What if something good happened and made him stop?
    Personally I think something good did happen. He was probably sent away for a while to rest and have a change of air or take the waters...whatever they did in those days.

    Pat....

    Leave a comment:


  • Elamarna
    replied
    Originally posted by Pierre View Post
    What if something good happened and made him stop?

    Kind regards, Pierre
    Quite possibly Pierre, however is not it your view that he started again later in 1889, so assume something went wrong again?

    Just as likely is that for some reason, he was not able to carry on after Kelly, although like you I think he did kill again in 1889.

    s

    Leave a comment:


  • Mayerling
    replied
    Originally posted by Pierre View Post
    What if something good happened and made him stop?

    Kind regards, Pierre
    Might have happened. Reminds me of a picture I saw as an April Fool joke recently of the Titanic sailing at a reasonably safe distance past the iceberg, and entitled "A Close Shave".

    Jeff

    Leave a comment:


  • Mayerling
    replied
    Originally posted by wigngown View Post
    SirJohnFalstaff,

    Interesting. I don't think I've ever heard that theory about the killer being himself, murdered.

    Best regards.
    Hi wigngown,

    I could think of some murderers who were killed by murderers - Albert Anastasia and Abe Reles, two founders of "Murder Inc.", the underworld's assassination squad, both died murder victims (Anastasia while getting a haircut at the Park Central Hotel in Manhattan, in 1958), and Reles, supposedly trying to flee "protective custody" as a witness against his boss Louis "Lepke" Buckholter, fell from a 14 story window from the "Half Moon Hotel" in Coney Island in 1942. Other gangsters were killed by hired killers, hired by their rivals. But the idea of the Ripper being murdered just was used in that novel I mentioned above in the message to Sir John Falstaff.

    Jeff

    Leave a comment:


  • Mayerling
    replied
    Originally posted by SirJohnFalstaff View Post
    I'm not a researcher, meaning I didn't get involved to uncover some truth in this big enigma. I am a fiction writer, who got dragged in by this whole cluster of crime, sociology, media, justice, immigration entanglement.

    For me it's absolutely fascinating.

    But if you ask me my opinion, I can only go with my knowledge base and gut feeling: Jack the Ripper killed 6, from Tabram to Kelly, and he was killed afterwards, by some criminal elements who wanted business to go back as usual.

    This doesn't reflect the fiction I'm writing.
    Hi Sir John,

    Actually there was a novel, written as one of a pair of novels, about forty years ago that briefly suggested what you just said. The two novels were supposed to be continuing the "life" of Sherlock Holmes' nemesis, Professor James Moriarty. The author of both novels shared the same name as a prominent fiction novel, and I am sorry for my memory failing to recall his name. The first novel, "The Return of Moriarty", shows a different version of the events at the Reichenbach Falls, where Holmes has gone into some aftereffect from his drug addiction, and Moriarty realizes he does not have to fear his enemy anymore. But Moriarty faces other enemies at home, including his second-in-command, Col. Sebastian Moran (who realizes that with Moriarty out of the picture, he becomes the head of the London underworld). The Professor lies low until he can resume his proper place.

    In the course of the novel Moriarty thinks of some of his past life events, and his early successes in building his criminal empire. He then comes to an early blight on his success - which included money laundering in the creation of some early London nightspots and restaurants (we see Oscar Wilde throwing his weight around to get a table for his party when he had not set up a previous appointment for one). But the Professor also owned brothels, and finds that some "independent genius" is smashing the London brothel business by cutting up prostitutes. The events of 1888 are shown in some detail, and the key murder is actually that of Catherine Eddowes, because she thinks she knows who is the Ripper. Moriarty and Moran learn of this and send for Eddowes, who comes and tells them it's a guy named "Drut" or "Drewt", and describes him. After Eddowes is killed by the Ripper, Moriarty has Moran seek this "Drut", and the Colonel finds Montague Druitt after the murder of Kelly. Confronting Druitt, and getting him drunk, he has the school master/ barrister sign a letter of resignation to Valentine, and then arranges for Druitt to drown by putting rocks in his pockets while he is sleeping it off. While in his cups he tells Moran the murders were to bring the social evil to public attention (a tip towards Bernard Shaw's suggestion).

    The book was written about 1976 so the early investigations of Farson and Cullen were well known at that time, hence the attempt to link them together - although badly done (Montague did not resign, for example). But it was the first time that anyone (as far as I know) had the Ripper himself murdered - here made easy as Druitt did die by drowning presumably as a suicide.

    Jeff

    Leave a comment:


  • Pierre
    replied
    Originally posted by SirJohnFalstaff View Post
    I'm not a researcher, meaning I didn't get involved to uncover some truth in this big enigma. I am a fiction writer, who got dragged in by this whole cluster of crime, sociology, media, justice, immigration entanglement.

    For me it's absolutely fascinating.

    But if you ask me my opinion, I can only go with my knowledge base and gut feeling: Jack the Ripper killed 6, from Tabram to Kelly, and he was killed afterwards, by some criminal elements who wanted business to go back as usual.

    This doesn't reflect the fiction I'm writing.
    What if something good happened and made him stop?

    Kind regards, Pierre

    Leave a comment:


  • wigngown
    replied
    SirJohnFalstaff,

    Interesting. I don't think I've ever heard that theory about the killer being himself, murdered.

    Best regards.

    Leave a comment:


  • SirJohnFalstaff
    replied
    I'm not a researcher, meaning I didn't get involved to uncover some truth in this big enigma. I am a fiction writer, who got dragged in by this whole cluster of crime, sociology, media, justice, immigration entanglement.

    For me it's absolutely fascinating.

    But if you ask me my opinion, I can only go with my knowledge base and gut feeling: Jack the Ripper killed 6, from Tabram to Kelly, and he was killed afterwards, by some criminal elements who wanted business to go back as usual.

    This doesn't reflect the fiction I'm writing.

    Leave a comment:


  • Errata
    replied
    Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
    Hello Wig. Thanks.

    There is absolutely NO evidence to indicate one hand involved in more than the first two murders.

    Cheers.
    LC
    What's the evidence linking the first two murders? I'm assuming you mean Nichols and Chapman, but preliminary analysis of both crimes would appear to reveal a whole lot of differences between the two crimes. Not the least of which was scope.

    Leave a comment:


  • John G
    replied
    Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
    Hello John.

    "How do you know the skill set for Eddowes murder isn't the same as Nichols and Chapman?"This was stated at inquest.

    Also, Howard Brown has posed elsewhere a clipping in which some of he medicos claimed a different hand.

    Cheers.
    LC
    Hello Lynn,

    Was it expressly stated at the inquest? Experts engaged by Trevor Marriott were of the opinion that Eddowes killer exhibited an exceptional level of skill-so much so that they concluded the organs could not have been removed at the scene of crime.

    Thus, Philip Harrioson opined:

    "To remove the kidney from its membrane as is documented shows a high level of skill and anatomical knowledge." (Marriott, 2013).

    He added:

    "To work in such an intricate manner and to remove the kidney and uterus carefully and without damaging the surrounding tissue with a six inch knife would be very difficult...The emphasis is on carefully because only a person with an expert knowledge of anatomy would be able to remove the organs on the manner described and would find it very difficult if not impossible in almost total darkness". (Marriott, 2013)

    Regarding, Chapman Dr Phillips seemed to be of the opinion that the pelvic organs were removed with "one sweep of the knife" However, Philip Harrison noted, "To remove the appendages, the uterus, the fallopian tubes, and ovaries in one frenzied attack and one slice of the blade would be almost impossible." (Marriott, 2013).

    That suggests to me that Dr Phillips may have got a little carried away with his assessment. In fact, as an aside, how much surgical knowledge would any of the Victorian GPs have had?

    Moreover, in respect of Eddowes, Dr Biggs as stated that "Much of the description is vague and potentially ambiguous." (Marriott, 2013)

    This is would lead me to conclude that the contemporary medical reports, and the opinions of the GPS who, by today's standards, may have carried out a somewhat perfunctory post mortem., cannot be relied upon.

    Leave a comment:


  • wigngown
    replied
    Thank you lynn.

    Best regards.

    Leave a comment:


  • Michael W Richards
    replied
    Originally posted by Observer View Post
    Yes, and we all know the alternative theories, or should I say fairy tales,, you have come up with, which disputes one hand slaying the Canonica l 5
    Im wondering when following the evidence became less valid an approach to sheer speculation? I don't believe it has actually. The evidence suggests one thing, you folks who try to tack any unsolved murder onto Jack despite the lack of any hard evidence say another.

    In reality the "alternate" theory is the one without any corroberative evidence and sustained by only opinion....that has a single murderer running amok for years let alone over the key 2 1/2 months, making all the unsolved kills by himself...which is why some of you include Torsos with your list.

    Leave a comment:


  • Observer
    replied
    Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
    Hello Sleuth. Thanks for starting this thread.

    In my estimation, the C5 is tosh.

    Cheers.
    LC
    Yes, and we all know the alternative theories, or should I say fairy tales,, you have come up with, which disputes one hand slaying the Canonica l 5
    Last edited by Observer; 04-15-2016, 05:19 AM.

    Leave a comment:

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