I am a bit surprised at your post RJ.
I want to state at the outset that I admire Paul Begg and his work very much.
However,the idea that Paul Begg does not seek to persuade us in "The Facts" that Kosminski was the ripper is disingenuous.Paul may not "intend" doing so but as the scribe, what he writes is taken at face value by many,so I will try and demonstrate what I mean.
In his summary Paul states the following: Whether or not Kosminski was Jack the Ripper is unknown and will probably always remain so,but it appears that Sir Robert Anderson and Chief Inspector Donald Sutherland Swanson believed he was.They were there and they were in a position to know.
Now that comes very close to Paul "inferring" they actually knew.
Well for a kick off, they werent the only ones there at the time who were in a position to know and in actual fact Robert Anderson was not "there at the time"-not until four of the five canonical victims had already been murdered.He returned from"sick leave [!!!] on October 4th via Paris where he had been so involved in digging up dirt on Parnell for The Times in September in the beginning of October 1888 that his feet barely touched the ground- let alone touched base!He had brought it all on himself too , having written,by his own later confession ,a tissue of lies for The Times, when working to destroy the Home Rule MP ,Charles Parnell.
Abberline was "there at the time"too, hands on ,day and night and HE didnt know who the Ripper was- he didnt have any idea and he said so .So was Major Henry Smith.Major Smith ridiculed the idea,and he ridiculed Anderson for thinking what he did about Jewish people "hiding the murderer"-and this some 20 years after the event .As Chief Commissioner of the City Police and there,in the flesh,within hours of the Mitre Square victim being discovered ,Major Smith had a very keen knowledge of and a life long interest in the case.
Sir Melville Macnaughten Assistant Commissioner was there -a little after the time - June 1889-and he preferred Druitt.Monro was there at the time -directing operations-and he never came out and endorsed any of Anderson"s or Macnaghten"s "theorising".
So the statement that because Anderson and Swanson were "there at the time" and they ought to have known is a disingenuous one because it leaves out all the others who were " there at the time"and who thought otherwise -I cant give all their names at the moment but there were quite a few and none were singing from the same song sheet------except-------those who admitted-----they did NOT know!
Best Wishes
I want to state at the outset that I admire Paul Begg and his work very much.
However,the idea that Paul Begg does not seek to persuade us in "The Facts" that Kosminski was the ripper is disingenuous.Paul may not "intend" doing so but as the scribe, what he writes is taken at face value by many,so I will try and demonstrate what I mean.
In his summary Paul states the following: Whether or not Kosminski was Jack the Ripper is unknown and will probably always remain so,but it appears that Sir Robert Anderson and Chief Inspector Donald Sutherland Swanson believed he was.They were there and they were in a position to know.
Now that comes very close to Paul "inferring" they actually knew.
Well for a kick off, they werent the only ones there at the time who were in a position to know and in actual fact Robert Anderson was not "there at the time"-not until four of the five canonical victims had already been murdered.He returned from"sick leave [!!!] on October 4th via Paris where he had been so involved in digging up dirt on Parnell for The Times in September in the beginning of October 1888 that his feet barely touched the ground- let alone touched base!He had brought it all on himself too , having written,by his own later confession ,a tissue of lies for The Times, when working to destroy the Home Rule MP ,Charles Parnell.
Abberline was "there at the time"too, hands on ,day and night and HE didnt know who the Ripper was- he didnt have any idea and he said so .So was Major Henry Smith.Major Smith ridiculed the idea,and he ridiculed Anderson for thinking what he did about Jewish people "hiding the murderer"-and this some 20 years after the event .As Chief Commissioner of the City Police and there,in the flesh,within hours of the Mitre Square victim being discovered ,Major Smith had a very keen knowledge of and a life long interest in the case.
Sir Melville Macnaughten Assistant Commissioner was there -a little after the time - June 1889-and he preferred Druitt.Monro was there at the time -directing operations-and he never came out and endorsed any of Anderson"s or Macnaghten"s "theorising".
So the statement that because Anderson and Swanson were "there at the time" and they ought to have known is a disingenuous one because it leaves out all the others who were " there at the time"and who thought otherwise -I cant give all their names at the moment but there were quite a few and none were singing from the same song sheet------except-------those who admitted-----they did NOT know!
Best Wishes
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