Originally posted by lynn cates
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Originally posted by Jeff Leahy
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Cox:
"but from time to time he became insane, and was forced to spend a portion of his time in an asylum in Surrey"
And as Jeff wrote: Police were searching private asylums in December 1888. I guess that Cox started the surveillance after "Kosminski" was discharged from a private asylum.
The again in 1889, Macnaghten:
"he was removed to a lunatic asylum about March 1889"
December 1889 at large (The dog)
1890/1891
Anderson:
when the individual whom we suspected was caged in an asylum... the only person... identified him
Swanson:
"On suspect's return to his brother's house in Whitechapel he was watched by police (City CID) by day & night"
I guess: Return from the asylum, not from the identification. In this case "Kosminski" was perhaps for months in an asylum before he returned to his brotherīs house in Whitechapel. During this period the ID took place at a Seaside Home, the Seaside Home of the Surrey asylum or a Police Seaside Home.
Sims "Polish Jew" and the "Russian doctor":
"Both these men were capable of the Ripper crimes, but there is one thing that makes the case against each of them weak.
They were both alive long after the horrors had ceased, and though both were in an asylum, there had been a considerable time after the cessation of the Ripper crimes during which they were at liberty and passing about among their fellow men."
Karsten.
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