Originally posted by Tom_Wescott
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When a book is well-researched but about a "very unlikely" suspect, I suppose why that suspect is very unlikely is free to vary, and that there are degrees of unlikelihood. For example, a detailed bio of Prince Albert Victor could be well-researched but he is highly unlikely due to the fact that one cannot be in two places at the same time. Someone like Kelly, on the other hand, is highly unlikely only because there is zero evidence against him and that one cannot place him in Whitechapel at the time of the killings. At the risk of pulling a Patricia Cornwell, one also can't prove that his wasn't there. The completely subjective but good "psychological fit" between Kelly and the murders makes him a highly compelling character to many; if some evidence were discovered to place him in Whitechapel, surely he would become one of the more plausible suspects.
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