Just for fun, who's the worst suspect you can come up with?
A few rules: the suspect has to be a real person, so your suspect can't be Sherlock Holmes or Dr. Who, and it has to be someone who could conceivably have been in London in 1888, so it can't be someone who wasn't born yet, or who was conspicuously somewhere else-- Theodore Roosevelt, for example. It can't be someone who was clearly dead by 1888, such as Jane Austen, but it could be someone recently dead, if you have a really good faked death-conspiracy theory.
Since people have taken WS Gilbert and Lewis Carroll seriously, the bar is high.
Mine: Rasputin. There's a period in his life before and during the time of the murders that is unaccounted for, except by family anecdotes that don't appear until a long time after the fact. Shortly after, he spent time in a monastery, doing penance for something, sometimes referred to as "theft," but nothing more specific than that. Afterwards, he became a wanderer and mystic, and then joined the flagellants.
Before the assassination that killed him, there was a previous attempt on his life by a woman who was a reformed prostitute, who became a disciple of a church elder. She stabbed Rasputin in the abdomen in such a way that some of his entrails fell out. She claimed she killed the anti-Christ, and had acted on behalf of all the women he had harmed. What exactly she meant isn't clear, but the church elder conducted something we would probably term a "support group" for the women Rasputin had harmed, so they, or at least some of them, were alive.
Anyway, this is the guy I am going to champion, at least on April 1st, from now on. I wish I'd though of this thread 26 days ago.
A few rules: the suspect has to be a real person, so your suspect can't be Sherlock Holmes or Dr. Who, and it has to be someone who could conceivably have been in London in 1888, so it can't be someone who wasn't born yet, or who was conspicuously somewhere else-- Theodore Roosevelt, for example. It can't be someone who was clearly dead by 1888, such as Jane Austen, but it could be someone recently dead, if you have a really good faked death-conspiracy theory.
Since people have taken WS Gilbert and Lewis Carroll seriously, the bar is high.
Mine: Rasputin. There's a period in his life before and during the time of the murders that is unaccounted for, except by family anecdotes that don't appear until a long time after the fact. Shortly after, he spent time in a monastery, doing penance for something, sometimes referred to as "theft," but nothing more specific than that. Afterwards, he became a wanderer and mystic, and then joined the flagellants.
Before the assassination that killed him, there was a previous attempt on his life by a woman who was a reformed prostitute, who became a disciple of a church elder. She stabbed Rasputin in the abdomen in such a way that some of his entrails fell out. She claimed she killed the anti-Christ, and had acted on behalf of all the women he had harmed. What exactly she meant isn't clear, but the church elder conducted something we would probably term a "support group" for the women Rasputin had harmed, so they, or at least some of them, were alive.
Anyway, this is the guy I am going to champion, at least on April 1st, from now on. I wish I'd though of this thread 26 days ago.
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