I feel we must treat her as a separate murder due to lack of anything persuasive to think otherwise. There's always a possibility she was, but that is only guesswork.
It's the other way round. There is always the possibility that she wasn't, but that is only guesswork. Everything else; crime scene evidence, victimology, weapon type, timing, location, speaks very strongly in favour of Tabram being the early work of the killer responsible for the later victims.
Criminologically speaking, everything communicates in favour of her being a ripper victim, and every argument against is very seriously weakened as a result of applying WHAT WE SHOULD HAVE LEARNED ABOUT SERIAL KILLERS. This is the absolutely crucial point that should inform our judgment on the Tabram issue. In fact, it should inform our judgment on anything relates to criminology and the Whitechapel murders. If you want to research the history of the East End, architecture, Victorian police practices, or the victims' histories, be my guest. But if people want to pronounce judgment on matters that relate to victimology and suspectology, it's essential to educate yourself on other serial cases, as well as true crime in general. If people don't do that, their opinions are essentially worthless, and amount to creative writing at best. Time and time again, I find that that the people who are most thrusting and dogmatic in asserting their views are those who simply haven't done enough background reading on a subject they purport an interest in.
Anderson is telling us there were "5 successive murders from which we had no clue".
Circumstantial evidence requires firm evidence in order to be recognised.
That's just wrong.
Circumstantial evidence is a "recognised" form of evidence. That's why they call it evidence. The clue is in the description, folks.
Regards,
Ben
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