Fish,
Personally, I agree with you that someone found standing near a dead body should be looked into. I also consider it a failure of the police not to have physically searched Cross (and Paul for that matter) on the spot. Personally, I think this is but one of a myriad of strange mistakes the police made that night and in the following days regarding the Nichols murder.
So observing Cross with some measure of suspicion is natural. Researching him to see what you could find is natural. Publishing your findings in Ripperologist (as an example) is natural. This would have been celebrated. But since the research into Cross's life hasn't turned up anything that puts your ears up, that makes your certainty about his guilt that much more confusing.
In short, it's not your interest in him that causes the backlash, it's the certainty you have and the constant repetition of this certainty that causes it. To the extent that I feel the field has lost two good researchers because you and Ed are not capable of discussing any element of the case objectively any more. That's a shame. But if you guys are satisfied, then I suppose that's the main thing.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
Personally, I agree with you that someone found standing near a dead body should be looked into. I also consider it a failure of the police not to have physically searched Cross (and Paul for that matter) on the spot. Personally, I think this is but one of a myriad of strange mistakes the police made that night and in the following days regarding the Nichols murder.
So observing Cross with some measure of suspicion is natural. Researching him to see what you could find is natural. Publishing your findings in Ripperologist (as an example) is natural. This would have been celebrated. But since the research into Cross's life hasn't turned up anything that puts your ears up, that makes your certainty about his guilt that much more confusing.
In short, it's not your interest in him that causes the backlash, it's the certainty you have and the constant repetition of this certainty that causes it. To the extent that I feel the field has lost two good researchers because you and Ed are not capable of discussing any element of the case objectively any more. That's a shame. But if you guys are satisfied, then I suppose that's the main thing.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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