To Garry Wroe
Well, I have thought about it and read about it.
How could any positive identification have led to the arrest, let alone conviction of the said suspect if he was already 'safely caged' in a madhouse as Anderson claimed in the first, magazine version of his memoirs in 1910 -- as details subsequently dropped.
I think you are putting the cart before the horse.
We do not have hard evidence that Aaron Kosminski was ever the subject of a witness confrontation. Swanson may be only repeating a tale he was told by Anderson. If not then he makes several errors which bring his memory into question: 'Kosminski' was not deceased soon after, and the Ripper murders did not stop at his incarceration for Coles was murdered only days later -- and Swanson sure acted like that was a murder by the same hand back in 1891.
Macnaghten makes no reference to such a witness confrontation re: this suspect, and 'Kosminski' begins with him in the extant record (and he knew 'Kosminski' was still alive and that he was at large long after the Kelly murder).
For myself, Evans and Rumbelow argue this theory very persuasively:
'It may benefit the reader to pause and consider the implications of this coincidence. Over two years after the last generally accepted Ripper killing (Kelly) we have a Polish Jew maniac named Kosminski locked up and within a week a Ripper suspect is subjected to a failed identification as the Ripper by a Jewish witness.' (p. 251)
(Plus BS man does not match Lawende's Jack the Sailor, though 'Knifeman' does)
Well, I have thought about it and read about it.
How could any positive identification have led to the arrest, let alone conviction of the said suspect if he was already 'safely caged' in a madhouse as Anderson claimed in the first, magazine version of his memoirs in 1910 -- as details subsequently dropped.
I think you are putting the cart before the horse.
We do not have hard evidence that Aaron Kosminski was ever the subject of a witness confrontation. Swanson may be only repeating a tale he was told by Anderson. If not then he makes several errors which bring his memory into question: 'Kosminski' was not deceased soon after, and the Ripper murders did not stop at his incarceration for Coles was murdered only days later -- and Swanson sure acted like that was a murder by the same hand back in 1891.
Macnaghten makes no reference to such a witness confrontation re: this suspect, and 'Kosminski' begins with him in the extant record (and he knew 'Kosminski' was still alive and that he was at large long after the Kelly murder).
For myself, Evans and Rumbelow argue this theory very persuasively:
'It may benefit the reader to pause and consider the implications of this coincidence. Over two years after the last generally accepted Ripper killing (Kelly) we have a Polish Jew maniac named Kosminski locked up and within a week a Ripper suspect is subjected to a failed identification as the Ripper by a Jewish witness.' (p. 251)
(Plus BS man does not match Lawende's Jack the Sailor, though 'Knifeman' does)
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