Originally posted by dirtyd22no
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Would we have suspected Maxwell?
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dirtyd22no
I should have explained that remark of mine more fully.
I meant I would discount anyone that the police had a close look at and cleared - where they interrogated them and 'checked them out'.
Sutcliffe while he was interviewed several times was never closely looked at as he seemed too normal and didn't fit the police prejudice as to what the culprit should be like.
I think the Yorkshire Ripper case provides many interesting parallels. One of which was 'information overload', where the blizzard of paperwork prevented clear thinking.
I also think there is a very good chance the culprit was at one stage or another interviewed but probably seemed totally harmless.
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Originally posted by Lechmere View Postdirtyd22no
I should have explained that remark of mine more fully.
I meant I would discount anyone that the police had a close look at and cleared - where they interrogated them and 'checked them out'.
Sutcliffe while he was interviewed several times was never closely looked at as he seemed too normal and didn't fit the police prejudice as to what the culprit should be like.
I think the Yorkshire Ripper case provides many interesting parallels. One of which was 'information overload', where the blizzard of paperwork prevented clear thinking.
I also think there is a very good chance the culprit was at one stage or another interviewed but probably seemed totally harmless.Three things in life that don't stay hidden for to long ones the sun ones the moon and the other is the truth
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Originally posted by CPenney View PostI think this is an excellent point - it shouldn't be taken as a disparagement of the police to speculate that he might have been stopped in the street, or interviewed in a police sweep and been released. I'm not as expert on serial killers in general as many on the boards, but it's a common refrain from neighbours to say that an arrested killer was the "last person" you'd have suspected of being a monster.
You hear that line from people with ANY crime- especially sensational murders, but I remember it being used with some of the spying cases in the '80s-'90s. It's usually from people only casually connected with the suspect- neighbors, co-workers, fellow students, etc (because these are who the media can get to give interviews). I've become convinced that it doesn't refer to the suspect, but to how naive the 'witness' is and to the style of reporting these crimes by the media.
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Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
I could see anyone listing Druitt with Tumblety & Kozminski, as they were all named suspects by police officials after-the-fact.
But why list Druitt with Maybrick & Ostrog?
The less said about Maybricks candidacy the better, and Ostrog was not even in the country at the time - or perhaps you were not aware of this?
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