Originally posted by Ausgirl
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Witnesses are no use in JtR case
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Actually...
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What was this thread about, again?
Witnesses being of no use. Not true. Clearly, they are an excellent spur to internet fisticuffs.
How much has the press interfered with the accuracy of witness records, do you think? Both, I mean, in their reportage being taken as entirely factual, and as an influence on the witnesses themselves.
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To be honest...
Originally posted by harry View PostI guess I must be included as one of the arrogant,self righteous and pompous posters who support Hutchinson as a suspect.I post enough in that contex.Better that the points I raise be examined one by one and demolished,than use character traits as a rebutall.Not that I mind,it elevates me above the usual dowdy,misguided,non opinionated,dull individual I usually am.One thing though I will claim,is that when talking of walking distances,I might be one step ahead of Aberline
I also hadn't noticed that I was 'using character traits as a rebuttal.' I thought that I was using character traits to explain what I found offensive. However, I did state that assuming certain opinions to be facts was wrong.
So, I'm afraid, I was not thinking of you at all and I wouldn't have a clue if you are dowdy, misguided, opinionated or dull.
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I guess I must be included as one of the arrogant,self righteous and pompous posters who support Hutchinson as a suspect.I post enough in that contex.Better that the points I raise be examined one by one and demolished,than use character traits as a rebutall.Not that I mind,it elevates me above the usual dowdy,misguided,non opinionated,dull individual I usually am.One thing though I will claim,is that when talking of walking distances,I might be one step ahead of Aberline
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An apology...
On re-reading my preceding posts I should just like to apologise for some of my bad grammar, literals and typos. These are, in the main, the result of a slight loss of vision caused by a red mist that sometimes engulfs me (one of my many faults I'm afraid).
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Thank you...
Thank you for the very kind words Jonathan. The proverbial cheque (check) will be in the post.
As regards the Sims material I have to say that my very dear friend Keith Skinner discovered most of that before I did. I was responsible for discovering only a couple of the Sims items, i.e. the 1907 Lloyd's Weekly News article 'My Criminal Museum' (in which Keith assisted) and the Pearson's Weekly 1915 piece. Keith very often doesn't get the credit he so richly deserves.Last edited by Stewart P Evans; 08-07-2011, 01:03 PM.
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To BabyBird67
'The Lodger: The Arrest and Escape of Jack the Ripper' by Stewart P. Evans and Paul Gainey (aka 'Jack the Ripper: First American serial Killer') is one of the great books on this subject.
An absolute pleasure to read, and absorb, and then reread.
As an high school history teacher I use choice bits from this book, along with the documentary on youtube showing interviews with Evans and Gainey (and Eric Barton) and it inspires the students, every time, to see the revelation a single, forgotten primary source can have to an historical subject.
Since no academic historian had ever written on the case, Tumblety was not ever found in the US newspapers before 1993.
By 'academic' I mean a person with relatively unlimited time and resources to spend years on researching this subject. Whereas almost all the great true crime writers -- Cullen, Rumbelow, Evans, Begg, Palmer, Fido, et al -- have been, to varying degrees, constrained by both time and resources.
It means that, inevitably, the Evans-Gainey book has been superseded by other sources which have been found since.
On the other hand, the central thesis of the book; that Dr. Tumblety was the chief suspect of the 1888 police investigation remains just as compelling -- in fact more so if you add the work of R. J. Palmer into the mix.
Could Hutchinson have been the fiend? Sure.
It is just that there is no hard evidence for such a theory. By 'evidence' I mean contemporaneous sources which would show him to be a likely suspect, or at least considered a suspicious character, or explain why police at that time missed him?
Whereas Montague John Druitt remains the leading suspect to be Jack the Ripper.
His family 'believed', and so did his M.P., and several other people (unidentified), and a police chief. All members of the so-called 'better classes' like Druitt -- who was inconveniently long dead and could not defend himself -- and yet they still all believed.
Can we ever be absolutely certain? Of course not.
But this is as good as it gets.
When the Druitt story surfaced in 1891, it was so hot the reporter for 'The Bristol Times and Mirror' admitted he was suppressing details for fear of a libel action, presumably by the family.
Newspapers which repeated the story, in Feb 1891, removed the 'son of a surgeon' detail for fear of a libel action.
If you understand that act of removal then all the later glaring details about the 'Drowned Doctor' not only make sense as fiction rather than 'errors' -- they would have to be fictitious?
In 1898, the Druitt story surfaced again from Macnaghten via Major Griffiths. The threat of libel was neutralized by changing the surgeon's son into a middle-aged surgeon. That the date of suicide was kept from the 1891 story, that the murderer killed himself on the same night as the final murder, was because Mac had discovered it was not true and thus to keep this detail was quite safe: eg. not libellous for it did not match the real Druitt.
Yet, Macnaghten and/or Griffiths judged that it was still too hot to write that the family 'suspected' their member of being the Ripper. Therefore it was agreed to change 'family' into 'friends'.
So, Druitt was fictionalised to avoid an ugly law suit and to protect the family.
This fictionalising allowed Macnaghten to do something else rather cheeky. He redacted Druitt into the 1888 investigation and thus had Scotland Yard take credit for nearly catching him.
Stewart Evans, the discoverer of the Litttlechild Letter, does not get enough credit for discovering vital material by George Sims, much of which is in 'the Lodger'.
What these sources showed was that Druitt was further fictionalised by Mac during the Edwardian years, becoming more like Tumblety.
The narrow focus on the official version of the Macnaghten 'memo' has obscured that in five out of six sources which Macnaghten either wrote or manipulated, he is consistent in his belief that Druitt was the fiend: (1.) the unofficial version of his 'Report' which was (2.) projected to the public via Major Griffiths, and even more so by (3.) Sims with extra details (ones which were not true about the real Druitt) and then confirmed by his (4.) 1913 comments upon retirement, 'That Remarkable Man ...', and (5.) his memoirs of 1914 which withdrew the fictional elements -- including the bit of cheek about the police hunting him in 1888.
I am simply trying to explain why I think Druitt is the strongest suspect, and Hutchinson is a very weak one -- based on what we have.
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Yes...
Originally posted by babybird67 View Post...
As for profiling, again, you're entitled to your opinion, but I find some of the instances of notable behaviour of serial killers, such as injecting themselves into investigations, to be pretty convincing. We're learned from history that some of them do it. It would be closing our minds to deny it couldn't have happened in this case.
Your attitude to profiling doesn't seem to be shared by all the Police either.
Maxine de Brunner
Commander, Serious Acquisitive Crime, Metropolitan Police Service
You appear to have been very influenced by a certain poster on the Hutchinson threads who seems to view modern criminal profiling as the be all and end all of scientific detection and the answer to all problems; to view profiling as the infallible aid to police investigation. Please get real.
There is a lengthy essay by a leading New Scotland Yard Detective Chief Inspector who investigates murders and his conclusion on profiling was 'you might as well toss a coin'. Do not believe all you read, it is often dictated by political correctness.
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Not said...
Originally posted by babybird67 View Post...
I disagree with the opinion that because he was overlooked as a suspect at the time he should automatically be ruled out as a suspect forever. We already know the Police did not have a clue as to the identity of the Ripper and I can see very little rhyme or reason to some of the contemporary suggestions that were forthcoming, Druitt being a prime example. The Police were not infallible. They did not know who the Ripper was, despite their lists of suspects etc. I think it would be foolish NOT to keep an open mind and be prepared to rule people in to the investigation that weren't considered viable suspects at the time.
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McCarthy...
Originally posted by babybird67 View Post...
Hutchinson wasn't plucked out of a hat. He was there on the night of Kelly's murder shortly before the medical evidence suggests she died. That is compelling information. Much more compelling than someone committing suicide just after Kelly's murder. I use the word entitled because you have yourself written suspect books yet are taking umbrage at anybody else wishing to suggest it might have been Hutchinson.
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Did I say that?
Originally posted by babybird67 View Post...
So why are you taking particular exception to Hutchinson? Some of us are interested in his as a suspect. If you are not, that's fine. But why berate those of us that are, as if we don't have the right to be? I wouldn't dream of berating you for believing Druitt a viable candidate, even though I feel sorry for the man whose only link to the murders appears to me to be his untimely death!
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I am also not 'berating those of you who are'. What I am berating is the overwhelming know it all, dismissive of others, arrogant, self-righteous and pompous attitude of certain people who support the idea of Hutchinson as a suspect. Certain people who reach certain conclusions based on sometimes dubious theorising and contentious claims founded on biased reasoning and dodgy modern, very arguable, modern 'profiling'. That is a different thing entirely. Please think about what you are saying before posting.
As for Druitt, well he was named in 1894 by the second in command of the CID at Scotland Yard as a suspect. I think that I would rather take his word on that point rather than yours. And I am sure there are those on these boards who would find your know it all, out of hand dismissal of Druitt, whom they still see as a viable suspect, rather offensive. In fact it is a prime example of your dismissive attitude to anyone who does not believe what you believe. Have you been brainwashed?
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Well thank you...
Originally posted by babybird67 View Post...
Good for you! I have no criticism of your choice to write a book on it. I read your book and found it interesting, but, like many I am sure, remain unconvinced that the Ripper was Tumblety. My point is, why do you go on the offensive when others suggest Hutchinson as a viable candidate when there is the same amount of factual evidence to suggest that either man was the Ripper?
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I don't 'go on the offensive when others suggest Hutchinson as a viable candidate', in fact if I did I should never be off the boards and that would be an immense waste of time. I do sometimes 'go on the offensive' when my name is raised in debates and I notice that some posters are acting in a high-handed, self-important, self-righteous and often aggressive manner. And, to top all that, are making invalid or mistaken arguments.
The mere fact that recorded contemporary sources tell us that Tumblety was a police suspect at the time, whereas the official sources show Hutchinson as merely a witness (as witness his witness statement) makes Tumblety, in my opinion, a more viable 'candidate' for a book. Indeed, by the definitions given in the 1996 edition of The Jack the Ripper A-Z Tumblety is shown as 'Suspect', whereas Hutchinson is shown as 'Informant'.
In the A-Z authors' note on terms 'Suspect' is described as 'Suspect (if unmodified by any adjective): One who was suspected at the time of the murders or shortly afterwards by responsible people in a position to know what they were talking about.' Informant is described as 'Informant: Someone from whom anybody - police, press, or a modern theorist - received relevant information.' In view of books since written Hutchinson would now be described as a 'Non-contemporaneously alleged suspect'.
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Old Chestnut
Originally posted by babybird67 View PostWhat chestnut are you talking about Stewart? I really don't comprehend your point. At the time you wrote your book about Tumblety you presumably were as convinced as you could be by the evidence that he was the best suspect available, or you wouldn't have put your book out there suggesting so. Tumblety remains unconvincing as a suspect to many people, nevertheless, and as you yourself state, different suspects appear more convincing to you at different times. I don't understand what the problem is. If you reserve the right to be convinced by different suspects/evidence at different periods of your research, why are you so surprised and/or indignant when I would like the same freedom of choice?
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The 'Old Chestnut' of which I speak is the tendency of any who get into a debate with me raising what they see as a weakness in my objectivity in proposing Tumblety as the Ripper in my first book. There was, actually, no need to raise Tumblety, but you are apparently doing so in order to address or weaken my arguments. You may or may not have noticed that since writing my first book, a suspect based book for the reasons I have given, I have written several more, all of which support no particular suspect theory and are more reference works than anything else. In fact I have not pursued Tumblety research to any real degree since writing the book, leaving to others with greater interest, and probably greater talent, than I.
I must leave my book, with all its faults, to speak for itself as regards Tumblety, but I did state, publicly, at the time that there was no evidence to prove that he was the Ripper, but that he was, at least, a genuine contemporary suspect who had been missed by Ripperologists for a hundred years.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View PostWhich seems to be your 'escape clause' for everything you write.
Isn't it about time you showed a little respect for someone who's forgotten more about this case than you are ever likely to know.
Patient to a fault...Jon
And by the way you have many faults, but I wouldn't count patience as one of them.
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Originally posted by babybird67 View PostWhat chestnut are you talking about Stewart? I really don't comprehend your point.
Isn't it about time you showed a little respect for someone who's forgotten more about this case than you are ever likely to know.
Patient to a fault...Jon
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