Jack the Ripper
Will this killer’s identity ever
be proven?
This infamous serial killer
terrorized London in 1888 and to this day his identity is a well-kept secret.
All five of his victims were woman and their gruesome deaths took place within
a one mile radius in or near the Whitechapel district of London’s East End. The
district was notorious for squalor, violence and crime. At the time,
prostitution was legal unless it created a public disturbance.
Jack’s modus operandi was sadistic
butchery—mutilation and disembowlment. This led to rampant speculation that the
killer possessed a certain amount of medical and/or anatomical knowledge.
The killer allegedly sent a
multitude of letters to the London Metropolitan Police Service (aka Scotland
Yard) taunting the officers about his crimes and promising future horrific murders.
Various suspects emerged and have
been speculated on throughout the decades since his appearance.
Walter Sickert—a German born famous Victorian painter. He was known
for painting prostitutes and some people believe he inserted clues and symbols
into his artwork. It is also believed that Sickert was impotent (many serial
killers throughout history have been proven to be impotent or suffering from
sexual problems and the act of killing becomes their only means of sexual
fulfillment). In her book, Potrait of a
Killer: Jack the Ripper—Case Closed, author Patricia Cornwell claims to
have found mitochondrial DNA evidence on several of Jack the Ripper’s letters
which were a match to several letters written by Sickert ???
Carl Feigenbaum—a German merchant sailor and a known psychopath. He
confessed to mutilating women and was working at Whitechapel on every date that
a woman was killed. He emigrated to America in 1890 and was subsequently
convicted of killing Julianna Hoffman and sent to the electric chair.
Aaron Kosminski—a Polish barber. His mitochondrial DNA was found on
victim, Catherine Eddowes shawl (a ha!). Kosminski had settled in London in
the early 1880’s. He had a strong hatred of women, homicidal tendencies and was
sent to an asylum in 1889. Recently, two British researchers identified
Kosminski as the Ripper. They conducted genetic testing of blood and semen on a
shawl found near the body of Catherine Eddowes, the killer’s fourth victim. The
researchers have been analyzing the shawl for years and compared it with
samples from living descendants of both Eddowes and Kosminski. It is the only
surviving piece of physical evidence linked to the murders.
Montague John Druitt—an Oxford educated man from a good family. It
was put forth that he was ‘sexually insane’. Many experts believe he was the
killer. He was seen in the district at the times of the murders and after his
body was found floating in the Thames as an apparent suicide the murders
stopped…
Frances Spurzheim Craig—a reporter who covered the police courts
and inquests on the Whitechapel murders. In 1884 he married Elizabeth Weston
Davies, who is commonly believed to be a prostitute who went under the name of
Mary Jane Kelly. Yep, that Mary Jane
Kelly—the Ripper’s fifth and final victim. The theory is that Craig discovered
Elizabeth was a prostitute and she went into hiding in the district. And he
used the age-old plot device of killing others to disguise the real murder—that
of his wife. Because isn’t the husband always the best suspect…
Prince Albert Victor Christian Edward—Queen Victoria’s grandson.
This theory was bandied about but later disproven by way of his alibis. Prince
Eddy was not even in London on the dates of the murders.
These are just the top contenders.
Jack the Ripper’s identity has been hotly debated for over a century. There
have been numerous books and movies about this very subject and to date, over
one hundred suspects have been named. Jack’s identity will probably never be
proven to anyone’s satisfaction. Who do you
think it was?
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