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  • Steady on, Jeffrey, you are once more hurling yourself off a cliff without knowing it.

    By that exacting standard of fact there are, eh, none that prove Sir Robert Anderson thought Aaron Kosminski was Jack the Ripper. He never committed the suspect's name in any known extant source.

    Which is why the David Cohen is just as viable, if not more so.

    There are no sources that prove Aaron Kosminski went into an asylum in March 1889, or was subjected to a witness identification, positive or otherwise, by police in a hospital near a beach.

    It is all a matter of opinion. It becomes then a question of the merit of the argument.

    We could go on, as it is quite a list of theories and not facts, but I know you have already stopped reading ...

    The fair-minded Karsten will understand what I am getting at.

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post

      There are no sources that prove Aaron Kosminski went into an asylum in March 1889, or was subjected to a witness identification, positive or otherwise, by police in a hospital near a beach.
      I'm just looking at the sources...and i intend to include the Swanson Marginalia.

      So it simply becomes a no brainer that Swanson and Anderson are talking about the same person...your the only one who can not see it because of your obsession with MacNaughten as a super cop, its laughable

      Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post
      It is all a matter of opinion. It becomes then a question of the merit of the argument.
      Well yes I agree. And the Merit to the argument is the source's back what I'm arguing, once you actually listen to what Cox says...and what MacNaughten says...Asylum (A Private asylum) March 1889

      Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post
      We could go on, as it is quite a list of theories and not facts, but I know you have already stopped reading ...
      The fair-minded Karsten will understand what I am getting at.
      I'd rather we didn't go on Jonathan your usaul style is to go off to teacher claiming the horrible man has been beastly to you in an attempt to get me ban from the boards, at which point i simply change to another platform

      And as always your still ignoring the basic credibility of Druit as a suspect..

      Yours Jeff

      Comment


      • Originally posted by Jonathan H View Post
        To Karsten

        Almost certainly.

        It is a compelling inference, as with many accepting that Israel Schwartz was Anderson's witness who refused to testify, or that Aaron Kosminski lies behind "Kosminski", as the real person was most certainly not "on the prowl" for a "few weeks" and then had his time in Whitechapel "cut short" by removal to an asylum, and so on.

        The strength of the argument lies in the accumulation of data as argued in my book. It is up to the individual reader to decide if is it compelling -- or not.

        If not compelling then it must be just another coincidence that, unknown for 124 years, Montague Druitt was related, by a marriage, to a very close friend of both Sir Melville Macnaghten and of George Sims.

        Is it likely that these two canny gents did not know this.

        I find that untenable.

        It would mean that the 'Drowned Doctor' disguise, which protected not only the surviving Druitts but also the distinguished family of their very close friend, was just an incredibly fortuitous coincidence.

        Rightly or wrongly, I regard this as also untenable.

        I argue that this previously unknown link, between Montie and Mac and Sims is the private motive -- the missing piece of the jigsaw -- that led the police chief and the famous writer to partially conceal the Ripper's identity from everybody, including Mac's colleagues at Scotland Yard; the killer was long dead but he still posed a threat to the living in terms of reputations and scandal.

        In his memoir, Mac tried to be more honest about Druitt but it was too little and too late to undercut Sims'down-market rip-off of Stevenson's "Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde" -- the disguise that consolidated the Top Hat Toff iconic image that lasts to this day.
        Thank you Jonathan!

        That is what I have expected from you and your book.

        @Jeff & Jonathan:

        It is important for me to understand the reasons why Macnaghten thought that Druitt might be the Ripper. I see no reason why Macnaghten would have been a better policeman if he would have said that Kosminski is the Ripper instead of Kosminski is a "strong suspect". Each explanation, each opinion may be helpful.

        We already were discussing the same issue on JTRForums.

        Live and let live! I think we can live side by side "in peace". Let´s just try it.

        @Jonathan:

        Do you have an opinion on Packer and Schwartz? What happened in Berner Street?

        Karsten.

        Comment


        • Originally posted by S.Brett View Post
          It is important for me to understand the reasons why Macnaghten thought that Druitt might be the Ripper. I see no reason why Macnaghten would have been a better policeman if he would have said that Kosminski is the Ripper instead of Kosminski is a "strong suspect". Each explanation, each opinion may be helpful.

          Karsten.
          Hi Karsten

          Well unless Jonathon actually has added some new information I'm unaware of...and that seems improbable..MacNaughten is quite clear that 'From Private info' he believes the ripper to be a drowned doctor

          My understanding is that the MP Farquharsen is the most probable source of the Private info... Not that we ever know what the info is...

          My guess is that MacNAughten had already come across the Private info before writing the Memo in 1894 in reply to the Sun ascertion that Cutbush was the ripper...

          Thats why MacNAughten makes lots of errors about Druit being a Doctor... because he's not working from a file but just a theory told to him about the drown man mind giving way and killing himself... Probably in a Gentlemans club where this sort of gossip might be discussed...MacANughten wasn't that discreet...

          That said MacNaughten is a good copper and he gets his hands on the kozminski file which outlines the case by Cox unto March 1889.

          MacNaughten sees that the case against Kozminski isn't that strong no firm proof apart from the City PC... So MacNAughten does the obvious and sticks to his preffered theory..

          Perhaps he had already put his theory to Swanson or Anderson at some point and they had pooh poohed it...think about what Anderson says in 1892

          'There, there is my answer to people with fads and theories'

          But in terms of your question the fact that MAcNaughten suggests he's a 'Strong Suspect'.... Anderson suspect... suggests that he didn't have the info about the later ID or Kozminski going into Colneyt Hatch which he never once mentions... Presumably because Anderson kept it secret to protect the kozminski family... and this would make more sense if he had given his world to a lady..Matilda..following the Crawford letter

          Monroe 'A Hot Potato'

          Yours Jeff
          Last edited by Jeff Leahy; 11-07-2015, 09:32 AM.

          Comment


          • Hi Jeff,

            I think it makes sense to read the book. There is a Kindle Edition...

            "Thats why MacNAughten makes lots of errors about Druit being a Doctor..."

            Lots of errors! I offer, (you offer/we offer) many explanations for specific things in our theories. Perhaps Jonathan has explanations for Druitt being a doctor and the other errors.

            Let´s be fair.

            Yours Karsten.

            Comment


            • Originally posted by S.Brett View Post
              Thanks!

              PC Smith: "the couple appeared sober"

              Schwartz (Star): "he noticed some distance in front of him a man walking as if partially intoxicated"... "The half-tipsy man halted and spoke to her"...

              Within 15 minutes the man is half-tipsy and partially intoxicated. Is it possible?
              That is a good point, but at one time I wondered if the "half-tipsy" man was not drunk at all but only walked with a limp.
              (Partly because my Person-of-interest in these crimes was said to have an awkward gait)
              Could Schwartz mistake a genuine limp, for a stagger?
              Probably not.
              Regards, Jon S.

              Comment


              • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
                That is a good point, but at one time I wondered if the "half-tipsy" man was not drunk at all but only walked with a limp.
                (Partly because my Person-of-interest in these crimes was said to have an awkward gait)
                Could Schwartz mistake a genuine limp, for a stagger?
                Probably not.
                Ahh... awkward gait... Thimbleby, Leather Apron, Mrs.Fiddymont, Mrs. Kennedy and Sarah Lewis and Co.?

                "John Thimbleby, coppersmith in Hanbury's brewery, went to the Commercial-street-station at one o'clock yesterday to say that at six o'clock that morning a man attracted his particular attention before he heard of the murder. He was hurrying from Hanbury-street, below where the murder took place, into Brick-lane. He was walking, almost running, and had a peculiar gait, his knees not bending when he walked. (This is a peculiarity of "Leather Apron's" gait). He was dressed in a dark stiff hat and cutaway coat, reaching to his knees. His face was clean shaven, and he seemed about 30 years old. Thimbleby says he can identify him."

                There was a man with a stiff knee or not? James? Please help me...

                The Berner Street Mystery it is really difficult to assess. A man, drunk, coming from a pub in Back Church Lane entering, via Sander Street, the Berner Street, looking for a fight and met Liz Stride standing in the entrance to the Dutfields Yard... is one of the scenarios... but where is the man seen by PC Smith?

                Yesterday I have posted a video that showed many men wearing hats and caps. Here another link:

                All of Jack the Ripper's victims lived in the common lodging houses of the area. This section examines these institutions.


                Two young men with a cap with peak in Berner Street at the same time?

                And why not, Jon, a man, not drunk but walked with a limp.

                Karsten.

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Wickerman View Post
                  That is a good point, but at one time I wondered if the "half-tipsy" man was not drunk at all but only walked with a limp.
                  (Partly because my Person-of-interest in these crimes was said to have an awkward gait)
                  Could Schwartz mistake a genuine limp, for a stagger?
                  Probably not.
                  Just to stress that people suffering Schizophrenia are often described as appearing Drunk

                  Yours Jeff

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Jeff Leahy View Post
                    Just to stress that people suffering Schizophrenia are often described as appearing Drunk

                    Yours Jeff
                    Rob House described in Prime Suspect a man, Andrew Goldstein, that something is entering you...it is there again and then, it is not...

                    Perhaps it is possible if something is entering you that it changes the way you walk...

                    It seems that it can happen suddenly.

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by S.Brett View Post

                      The Berner Street Mystery it is really difficult to assess. A man, drunk, coming from a pub in Back Church Lane entering, via Sander Street, the Berner Street, looking for a fight and met Liz Stride standing in the entrance to the Dutfields Yard... is one of the scenarios... but where is the man seen by PC Smith?

                      Yesterday I have posted a video that showed many men wearing hats and caps. Here another link:

                      All of Jack the Ripper's victims lived in the common lodging houses of the area. This section examines these institutions.


                      Two young men with a cap with peak in Berner Street at the same time?
                      I'm not so convinced that the Smith suspect wore a peaked cap. The official police description of the man seen by PC Smith describes him wearing a hard felt hat.
                      A deerstalker is soft, usually tweed, but at least soft enough to fold up and put in your pocket. The mention of "deerstalker" first appears a week later at the inquest, and I suspect this is an error.

                      While the deerstalker does have a peak, it is small and the crown of the deerstalker is domed, rounded, not flat as a sailors cap. In profile they are not similar, but how the description of deerstalker became added to the "hard felt hat" is difficult to explain. What we have is an either/or situation, but not both, and the official police release lacks any mention of "deerstalker".

                      However, both BS-man & the Lawende suspect wore a peaked cap, but even so, with the many varieties of peaked cap worn by the working class in the East End, as any street scene's will testify (incl. your photo's), we cannot even be sure they both wore similar hats.
                      Regards, Jon S.

                      Comment


                      • this & that

                        Hello Jeff. Thanks.

                        "Yes just in time to be made aware of the Batty Street Bloody shirt mid October 1888."

                        Perhaps you should read Tom's work on this red herring.

                        "Yes he would have seen all the reports and been aware of the main lines of enquiry."

                        Of course, KNOWING the suspects and inquiries is not the same as actually investigating the crimes.

                        "Kozminski was the suspect."

                        Yes. The one alluded to by Sir Robert. But that may or may NOT be Swanson's considered opinion.

                        Cheers.
                        LC

                        Comment


                        • speculation

                          Hello (again) Jeff. Thanks.

                          "Unfortunately Lynn there was only one lust serial killer at work mutilating bodies."

                          Whence lust killings? That is PURE speculation. Why only one? Again . . .

                          "Which in my opinion includes MacKenzie but not Mylett or Coles but possibly Farmer?"

                          Delighted you mentioned opinion. Coles is excluded ONLY because it would decisively rule out Kosminski. Farmer? Look at what her assailant muttered as he bolted. Schizophrenic? Don't think so.

                          Cheers.
                          LC

                          Comment


                          • Sir Bob

                            Hello Jonathan. Thanks.

                            Yes, indeed. It was Sir Ed Jenkinson who called him 1/19 of a man. You should hear what Stewart Evans has to say about him.

                            But apparently, the man's memory was not good.

                            Cheers.
                            LC

                            Comment


                            • assumptions

                              Hello (yet again) Jeff. Thanks.

                              "The simple geography suggests if Druitt were Jack, then given what we know about serial killers we'd expect a wider spread of kills..."

                              It also shows what can happen if we make TWO assumptions rather than one.

                              Cheers.
                              LC

                              Comment


                              • on reduction

                                Hello Jonathan. Thanks.

                                "I am sorry to see that the last gasp of the Polish Jewish suspect has been reduced to this -- a street map."

                                Of course, the whole "serial killer" theory has been reduced to this. Once the physical evidence is disregarded, Voila! Serial killer.

                                Cheers.
                                LC

                                Comment

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