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READ
THE TEXT:Who
was Jack the Ripper?
The
Police arrested many suspects.....but who was really guilty?
Who was the Ripper? What was his motive? How did he get away with murder?
The terror that befell London's Whitechapel district in the Autumn months
of 1888 remains unparalleled in the annals of crime. At the time of the
murders, detectives had never before experienced the apparently motiveless
brutality of the world's first serial killer. The increasingly frustrated
Police Force, pressured by an angry public and QUEEN VICTORIA herself,
were to arrest several suspects on flimsy evidence.
No-one was above suspicion...SIR CHARLES WARREN, Chief of Metropolitan
Police, was to be suspected of his involvement in a
"cover up" and even Queen Victoria's own grandson
PRINCE EDWARD, was at one
stage considered to be a "Ripper Suspect". Numerous suspects
have been presented, many are too ridiculous to be considered.
The prime suspects who are today eligible for the title of "Jack the
Ripper" are as follows.......................
JOHN PIZER
John Pizer was a shoemaker,
a Jew who just happened to fulfil the public's view of the Murderer's profile,
that being of a butcher, slaughterman or craftsman - a man with access to
5 inch blades and in possession of a leather apron. Pizer not only had a
stabbing convictions against him, but also displayed a well known dislike
for prostitutes. He unfortunately fitted a dubious description which had
been circulated; that of a short man with a dark beard and moustache and
a foreign accent. Furthermore the press portrayed Pizer as having a "cruel
sardonic look". However, Pizer's solid alibi ended with a
compensation payment to him from the libel courts and the frustrated Police
Force left once again to chase the shadows.
After the death of Annie Chapman,
the Coroner suggested that the murderer probably had an anatomical
knowledge
of dissection - this information heightened suspicions against members of
the medical profession, an accusation angrily refuted by eminent surgeons
to such an extreme that the Police dropped
this line of enquiry.
However, 3 major suspects have since been disclosed based upon this assumption............
THOMAS
NEIL CREAM, an American doctor
THOMAS CREAM had also been arrested in connection with the poisoning
of prostitutes and habitually writing to the Police giving false names and
false accusations of a number of crimes. Cream was hanged
by the neck for the murder of the Lambeth prostitutes in 1892.
His departing
words were......" I am jack the Ri...." as the rope broke
his neck. Suspicions of Cream followed revelations that an American had
been making enquiries as to the availability of certain organs at medical
schools in and around the Whitechapel district. Coupled with this, the letter
received by the Police prior to the double killings of Liz Stride and Kate
Eddowes notably contained many "Americanisms".
Unfortunately however, Cream was actually incarcerated at the time of the
last Murders.
MICHAEL
OSTROGG, a Russian doctor
Michael Ostrogg came under scrutiny by the London Police and his
whereabouts at the
time of the Whitechapel Murders could never be satisfactorily accounted
for. Ostrogg was a confidence trickster
who went by numerous aliases, including that of a Dr. Grant, and also
as a former surgeon in the Russian Navy. He spent much of his time in
Police custody for various fraudulent and thieving offences. Ostrogg became
a high profile suspect when it was stated in the "Police Gazette"
around the time of the Murders that "special attention is called to
this dangerous man", after failing to report to the Police on charges
of suspicion.
ALEXANDER PEDACHENKO, another Russian
Doctor
Another Russian Doctor, ALEXANDER PEDACHENKO was
linked at this time to the murders and it was suggested that
"Ostrogg" was one of the many aliases used by Pedachenko. He was considered
a Russian lunatic, with distinct criminal
tendencies, who had trained as a barbers surgeon and he had since joined
the staff of the Maternity Hospital. It seems he was merely a
suspect of convenience for a short time.
The 3 Doctors theories are questionable especially with
regard to the first "Jack The Ripper" letter which states in the
footnote "Ha,Ha, they say I am a Doctors now!"
Probably the most "romantic" suspects have been "PRINCE
EDDIE", the Queen's Grandson, and SIR
WILLIAM GULL, the Royal Physician. Suspicions
were heightened for both the suspects following the night of the double
murders in Whitechapel. SIR CHARLES WARREN had ordered the removal
of the writing from the wall before Police photographers could record
it, which led to many theorists believing that there was a "cover
up" by the authorities to protect someone of great importance.
This, coupled with Queen Victoria's interest in the case led to the inevitable
accusations. "Jack The Ripper" was fast becoming the most celebrated
mystery worldwide, and for Royalty to have been involved made for the
most sensational storyline for the newspapers.
PRINCE
ALBERT VICTOR - THE DUKE OF CLARENCE
Prince Albert was believed to have made twilight
trips to the East End to indulge in homosexual practices
in a brothel in Cleveland Street. He had supposedly learned disembowelling
techniques on deer hunting excursions and was alleged to have had "syphilis
of the brain"thus making him mad enough
to commit the Murders. The crime theorist Stephen Knight claimed
that "Prince Eddie" secretly and illegally married Annie Crook,
a Catholic girl. Subsequently, to avoid a Royal scandal, the authorities
had Annie locked away in a lunatic
asylum.
She
was supposedly pregnant at the time.
The key victim to link Royalty with the murders
was Mary Kelly, who was evidently nursemaid
to the prince and his wife at around this time. She had proposed to blackmail
the government by making her story public knowledge. It was then
that the Royal Physician, WILLIAM GULL, allegedly
became involved and in an attempt to silence the scandal picked
up all possible prostitutes whom Mary Kelly may have informed.
He was to pick the women up in the Royal carriage, slaughter them inside
the carriage, and then dispose
of the body, which explained the lack
of noise and blood at the scene of the murders.
The Royal theories are based largely on conjecture and have only come to
light in recent years.
AARON KOSMINSKI - a Jew
AARON KOSMINSKI, a Polish Jew , a hairdresser and resident of Whitechapel
since 1882 was a man with an extreme hatred of women, especially prostitutes.
He was clearly the most insane of all the suspects. Kosminski was described
as having strong homicidal tendencies and a history of related crimes.
Following the night of the double killings, a letter was received by George
Lusk, leader of the Whitechapel Vigilance Committee, stating that the
writer had fried and eaten half
a kidney, removed from the body of Kate
Eddowes. Clearly this man was deranged. The uneaten half of the kidney
accompanied the letter in a box. The organ was found to be human and
belonged to a woman in her forties
suffering from Brights disease - as did Catherine Eddowes. However, the
style of writing did not in any way resemble the first "Jack The Ripper"
letter received by the police, and was concluded to be the writings of
a lunatic. Kosminski was therefore high
profile. It was never proven that Kosminski was the perpetrator
of these ghastly crimes but he was removed from society in 1890, and placed
in the Mile End Infirmary for the insane. Kosminski degenerated to the
point where he was unable to answer simple questions. He died in 1919
of gangrene of the leg and was medically described as "demented
and incoherent".
MONTAGUE
JOHN DRUITT
Montague John Druitt was a "gentleman", a schoolmaster,
keen cricketer and of "good family". It wasn't until 1959 that
Druitt was pronounced a probable suspect. Sir Melville Macnaghten's
case notes described Druitt as "sexually insane" and
it was said that even "his own family suspected him of being the Whitechapel
Murderer". Druitt's personal circumstances link him with the killings
too. He had studied medicine for a time before switching profession to
become a barrister and was a very educated man. Any barrister would appreciate
the need for a suspect to be well away from the scene of the crime if
his case were to be defended with success. Druitt was found playing
cricket as far away as Dorset in South West England after the murders
of Mary Nichols and Annie Chapman, although his whereabouts in
the actual nights of the murders remain unresolved. The primary reason
for Druitt becoming a high
profile suspect was that he feared he was going insane like
his mother before him, In a suicide note Druitt wrote "Since Friday
I felt I was going to be like Mother and the best thing for me was to
die". The note was discovered on his person on 31st December 1888.
He had drowned in the River Thames,
his pockets full of stones. Druitt was seen alive on 3rd December, 1888,
almost one month after the last Murder and 2 days after his dismissal
from his teaching job in Blackheath. Druitt's death remains a mystery,
as does his alleged connection with the Ripper Case. It is true, however,
that the Police closed the Ripper file following Druitt's suicide. The
dreadful killings perpetrated by "Jack The Ripper" were never repeated
beyond Druitt's death.
Was this coincidence or conjecture?
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