Originally posted by spyglass
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Yes, the letters/postcards were held onto, but really they had no choice but to keep them. Those are "statements" forced upon the police, if you will, not ones they chose to take down. Once the communication was given to them, they have to file it. On the other hand, what they chose to do with those letters/postcards, would reflect their belief in them as being genuine. On one hand, they are obliged to follow up on them (which, of course, was a great waste of time and resources given the number of hoaxes they received). On the other, for those they believed to be obvious hoaxes, that follow up was probably minimal and terminated once they could demonstrate that "and no further leads were available to pursue". Letter's like "From Hell", where the possibility of it being a genuine communication due to the kidney inclusion, were followed up more extensively, first to establish if the kidney was the one missing from Eddowes, and presumably there was some attempt to track who sent it (there is the description of a man, with an Irish accent I believe, who was asking for Lusk's address at a store or something - I forget the details - but he was never identified). I think there is only one letter that was ever tracked back to the hoaxer, and given the large number of letters sent, I think that suggests that if tracking who sent them a hoax letter met with any "resistance", they were reluctant to put the resources into further investigation of the hoax. Otherwise, I would think they could have identified more people who sent them hoax letters, but it seems to me they must have decided that was not a good use of their limited resources.
Hmmm, might that be because those who sent them letters were more likely to be of "higher standing" than the lower classes? Someone who had the spare money to send a posted letter is clearly not scrounging daily for a few pennies to have a place to sleep after all.
- Jeff
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