{"id":4621,"date":"2018-07-17T15:14:42","date_gmt":"2018-07-17T19:14:42","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/HatchetOnline\/?p=4621"},"modified":"2024-08-16T10:23:38","modified_gmt":"2024-08-16T14:23:38","slug":"the-world-of-jack-the-ripper","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/the-world-of-jack-the-ripper\/","title":{"rendered":"The World of Jack the Ripper"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">First published in Spring, 2011, Volume 7, Issue 1, <em>The Hatchet: Journal of Lizzie Borden Studies<\/em>.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><br \/>\nEveryone has heard of the name Jack the Ripper: that legendary hooligan who upset Victorian-era London in 1888 with his atrocious murders of at least five prostitutes in ten weeks. He struck by night, ripping these women open and handling their innards, displaying their bodies according to some kind of private ritual fantasy, and escaping without detection through the lurid, dark streets into history. This fiend\u2019s name transcends generations; a world citizen who may not have heard of Lizzie Borden would still recognize the name of Jack the Ripper and know a little bit about those killings.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Movies, documentaries, websites, and countless books have been dedicated to the story\u2014each emphasizing a particular suspect by providing \u201cproof\u201d or a unique clue to the identity of the miscreant, thus \u201cclosing\u201d the cold case. Unfortunately, their views have been too narrow to accomplish anything other than contributing more pieces to the puzzle. Two separate authors, friends to one another, in the previous 25 years have proposed one name that would fit the case\u2019s requirements, but, as usual, they don\u2019t reach far enough. Their theory stays confined within self-imposed parameters.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">This same suspect was recently resurrected in a 2009 television documentary. In using this suspect as a template, we can contemplate the bigger picture. While past researchers have been using a microscope, we will employ a sweeping searchlight.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span class=\"Apple-converted-space\" style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">We enter now the <i>world<\/i> of Jack the Ripper.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>He is a hunter. Focused, senses alert, his veins are screaming\u2014stealthily tracking, anticipating the attack.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>His heart beats in his ear, drumming in matching rhythm with his prey.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>They have not yet met, but their hearts are twined\u2014not in sympathy\u2014not in empathy, but as base animal creatures, one dying writhing miserably so that the other may feast, exalt, drain the life power, and discard the remains.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>You eat the creature you kill to absorb them\u2014so they only ever again exist as a shadow within you\u2014their blood your blood\u2014you own them.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>He stretches his arms wide to the stars, leans back on muscled haunches.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>He is released, and dominates once again. The night approves.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>He smiles, with blood and entrails and gory fluids dripping from his gaping maw.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>His eyes roll back, the whites show, eyelids flutter and he is back again, in control.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>He looks normal.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>He\u2019s merely a red-meat eater\u2014nothing lost, only gain.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>It is his job, it is his passion. He is what he is made for.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>He crawls, he skitters, he smells like fear and death\u2014but not his fear and not his death.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>How do you wash that away, deodorize, sanitize so there is no clue?<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>How do you have coffee in the morning, smoke a cigarette, read the newspaper?<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>He hates to put a lid on his beast and lock it away\u2014but it is a choice of survival.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>He revels in his secret life and he can\u2019t wait to get to work again.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>He knows in his marrow he is the only one fit to walk the planet and so he is alone.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span class=\"Apple-converted-space\" style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">He is the lust killer. Society breeds them in every generation. As sociopaths, they are not as unique as they like to feel, but this is the one who is deadly, who acts on his sadistic sexual fantasies. Some of this behavior is so deviant he cannot admit it, even to himself. He is anamorphic enough to defy understanding, and this naturally thwarts efforts to root him out, convict, and destroy him as a deadly alien visitor who threatens civilized society.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">He grows in slums, suburbia, and salubrious backgrounds full of privilege. He is mixed up, messed up, and rabid. The face he shows his family, his employer, and the world, is his public mask\u2014the face his victim sees, as the last glimpse of humanity on earth, is one of horror personified: a predator with bulging neck muscles, bared teeth, grunting enthusiasm, cold raging eyes, and a bitter heart of darkness.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">There is a photo of Ted Bundy on the cover of the book <i>Defending the Devil<\/i> (Nelson, 1994), where the mask slipped, and his inner monster rose up, triumphant, off the leash, not to be denied. This image captures what true evil looks like as it descends to feed upon an innocent victim. He was a biter, therefore an eater, of beautiful woman-flesh, and it did not matter if it was alive or dead. A Bundy biter is like a Ripper\u2014they both shiver in anticipation to get their hands inside their victim.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Some of the unfortunate early life experiences and unforeseen physical accidents that can contribute to the warping and colding of a male human heart have traits in common: a knock on the head; a puzzling complexity of inter-family relationships (when the grandmother is represented as the mother, and the mother is either unknown to the child or misrepresented as a sister); the perceived stigma of illegitimacy; the indulgence in violent sexual fantasies where the female becomes an object, not human at all, just a doll to be beaten and absorb the hurt and rage that is somehow tied to the act of sex; the preoccupation with sadism and violence; the sense of entitlement that allows the monster free expression adhering to no laws; and the freely chosen path of drug and alcohol abuse to lower the last and barely significant inhibition, with a concurrent over-indulgence or exposure to what society may consider pornography. These latter two stimulating factors are probably most important in the fantasy enactments that lead to murder and mayhem.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Bundy, in his live television interview, broadcast on the eve of his execution, boldly named alcohol and pornography as precipitating factors in his acting out. Of course he didn\u2019t admit he had a choice as to whether he would indeed indulge in these activities; he must have known what such stimulation would lead to, having given in to this obsessive weakness over 100 times before (his own bragging estimate). There is not much soul-searching going on in these predator-humans\u2014even as Bundy contemplated his own extinction within mere hours. He was grandstanding, he blamed society, he exhibited self-serving pity in an attempt to prove uniqueness (so as to be kept alive that doctors might study him); he had a weird capacity to justify within his mind what he had done, what death he had dealt others. This inability to fathom the consequences\u2014that if he kills so must he be prepared to <i>be<\/i> killed\u2014is forever puzzling to the representatives of the State intent on executing him, and the Society whose rule this is. He thought he was above the law. What makes him different in his own mind is an unanswered question only the dead can speak to after judgment.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">The crimes of Jack the Ripper as a lust killer were the epitome of horror, and yet they only temporarily assuaged some terrible inner need in him to fill a personal black hole with female human blood. Women were chattel in most cultures from before written history, and socially sanctioned male dominance over millennia can breed sadism and a sense of superiority and contempt. Women were cattle: they might as well have moo-ed, so little did their language matter. They were only on the planet to be receptacles for male sexual gratification. But the overwhelming dichotomy, ever-present, the conundrum the man-mind could not grasp, was the reality that this woman was also their mother, the incubator of their children, and her contribution to the planet was <i>crucial<\/i>\u2014so how can this conflict be resolved?<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">The average world citizen\u2019s IQ is not much over 99 points, so the fact that the earth\u2019s population is as civilized as it is is a wonder in itself. Women bear this with secret knowledge, and men make wars over huge populations attempting to establish boundaries, control, and dominance. And yet there are still also these few, these corrupt and licentious monsters,<b> <\/b>predators even outside of war\u2019s rules of latitude, whose exploits and depredations have the ability to shock even the hangman.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><b>Jack the Ripper Comes to America<\/b><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">A recent television documentary, titled \u201cJack the Ripper in America,\u201d reintroduced a relatively unknown name as the culprit in the Ripper slayings. Host Ed Norris, a retired NYPD detective, ex-Police Commissioner, cold-case expert, and TV and radio star, appears in this role as the lead investigator: a sort of \u201cTom Colicchio of Crime.\u201d He guides us through the process of discovery, evidence gathering, research, and the final conclusion drawn as to the identity of the Ripper. Viewers who are not aware of all the lesser-known suspects in these shocking Whitechapel killings may think he has found the solution, since he certainly exhibits a decided air of confidence when presenting his research as exciting new evidence, naming, as his choice, James Kelly.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">The program begins in New York City where Norris walks the streets and describes what the area was like in 1891. Norris is indignant that the shocking murder and mutilation of a Miss Carrie Brown, who was found in a run-down brothel, where quick access to rooms cost a quarter and a trick cost fifty cents, remains unsolved on <i>his<\/i> streets. He stops at the modern-day spot, looks at the street sign where two roads converge, and resolves to pull the case folder and read it. By investigating the Carrie Brown crime, Norris, the viewer is led to believe, will eventually be led to the identity of Jack the Ripper.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">This approach to the introduction of the Ripper material is intriguing. It subtly implies that Norris has embarked on a chivalrous crusade to solve the mystery of Brown\u2019s slaughter and, by careful investigation, following accepted detective procedure, will uncover new information that will ultimately put to rest two NYC cold cases from 1891\u2014while positing the conclusion that these killings were the work of Jack the Ripper.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">A knowledgeable and committed Ripperologist would be unimpressed. Careful consideration of case literature proves that the Carrie Brown case cannot lead to the identity of the Ripper, but by following original source material, Jack the Ripper\u2019s exploits <i>can<\/i> lead to Carrie Brown. Unfortunately, the second New York victim Norris has drawn into his investigation to bolster his case has spurious documentation. After showing a photo<b> <\/b>of her dead, drowned body, pulled from the East River on 7 August 1891, he quickly moves on. In truth, this other victim\u2019s manner of death does not match any other, and she actually still remains unidentified.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Yet, the Carrie Brown case, because of its possible relationship to the Ripper murders, remains fascinating. Norris pores over the file at the New York State archives and invites an expert opinion by Dr. Jonathan Hayes on the \u201cX\u201d that had been carved on Carrie. Norris speculates it is a Roman numeral signifying a body count of ten\u2014a number he arrives at by adding the five canonical victims of the Ripper together with his suspect James Kelly\u2019s wife (as murder victim killed by Kelly), plus three more who are not usually attributed to the Whitechapel Ripper: Annie Millwood (25 February 1888), Ada Wilson (28 March 1888), and Martha Tabram (7 August 1888).<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">These additions are troublesome and tend to affect Norris\u2019s credibility. It is interesting to note that the only source that compiles all of these names in one place is <i>The Mammoth Book of Jack the Ripper<\/i> (Jakubowski &amp; Braund, 1999). Carrie Brown is listed on page 13 in the Chronology. James Kelly also appears as the subject in a major chapter contributed by James Tully, the author of <i>Prisoner 1167<\/i> (1997). No other book before this one contains both this new suspected killer\u2019s name and a new potential Ripper victim and, at 305 pages apart, they are not yet destined to meet in print. Philip Sugden, in 1994, in <i>The Complete History of Jack the Ripper<\/i>, broke the news item about the New York murder of Carrie Brown, but gives no reference to James Kelly. Tully, in 1997, devoted his whole book to his suspect James Kelly, who was apparently in New York around the time of that murder, but he makes no mention of Carrie Brown. Because of Norris\u2019 obscure reference to Millwood and Wilson, it seems likely the documentary\u2019s researchers used <i>The Mammoth Book<\/i> as a source.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">A subsequent reference to Carrie Brown\u2019s homicide is included in author Robert Graysmith\u2019s 1999 Ripper book, <i>The Bell Tower.<\/i> She appears in a very short chapter entitled \u201cJack the Ripper comes to America.\u201d Since the continuing title of Graysmith\u2019s work is \u201cThe Case of Jack the Ripper Finally Solved\u2026in San Francisco,\u201d bringing Carrie Brown again into notice bolstered his case for an assault on America by the Ripper sometime after the London murders.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">The next noteworthy revelation in Ripper literature was the discovery of, and investigation into, James Maybrick\u2019s \u201cdiary,\u201d which spawned multiple books\u2014and the attention-deficit disorder that the reading public can experience due to multiple-theory bombardment\u2014leaving Carrie Brown, and her momentary association with the name of suspect James Kelly, forgotten.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">After the Maybrick sensation came Walter Sickert as the next big suspect (although not new), and Kelly was pretty much buried, until this November 2009 television documentary.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Granted, the online website discussion forum, Casebook Jack the Ripper, keeps all these theories and suspects organized, providing good material for researchers\u2014but with a noticeable ten year gap in any interest in Kelly as a Ripper suspect, it is an unanswered question as to why the producers resurrected him to star as chief villain on The Discovery Channel.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Ed Norris talks to various experts in their fields. Sheila Kurtz analyzes the character traits of the writer of the \u201cFrom Hell\u201d letter. The fact that this horrifying message was written in blood and accompanied by a piece of human kidney makes any attempt at an objective analysis seem foolish, proving nothing. Steve Mancusi, a \u201cNYP senior forensic artist,\u201d is a most effective material expert who methodically de-ages a photograph of the elderly James Kelly, reportedly found by Norris. The resultant face matches 1888 witness statement descriptions, although the impact is considerably lessened when they go too far\u2014adding a large mustache and a big floppy hat. The suspect now resembles anyone! It is ironic, as well, that the photograph of the aged Kelly is found on the cover of Tully\u2019s book and one of him as a young man is readily found inside.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Norris visits what he deems to be significant sites, re-created scenes, and persons: a dungeon to experience true darkness, as some London streets might have seemed before electric lights\u2014he steps back into a shadow and instantly becomes invisible which is a very stirring point; Smithfield Market to view butchers at work with bloody aprons, ostensibly to ascertain if someone covered in blood would be noticed on the street, in 1888, at night, during a get-away, and how common a sight it might be in that area; an upholsterer (James Kelly\u2019s trade), who demonstrates the ripping action of the daily chore of stripping material and padding from a piece of furniture, with stress on the needful sharpness of the blade, which has valuable impact; and Broadmoor Lunatic Asylum, where Kelly\u2019s file, photo, and \u201cconfession\u201d were made available to him.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Kelly is described as prone to fits of rage, and \u201cconfesses\u201d to \u201cenvy,\u201d and \u201cjealousy\u201d and \u201cmalice,\u201d possessing a hatred and obsession toward prostitutes, and being on the \u201cwarpath.\u201d Norris sums him up as paranoid, delusional, and cunning enough to form a long-term plan of escape, which was successful. Kelly lists, in his post-escape narrative, the places to which he had traveled in his almost forty years as a fugitive, which Norris then uses in his investigation. Norris states that serial killers are well traveled, also making the point of how difficult and time consuming such extensive travel would have been in the late nineteenth century.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><b>Three Ripper Suspects in America<\/b><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Another source Norris uses is Dr. Thomas Bond\u2019s contemporaneous original profile of the Ripper killer, which he deems \u201cnew\u201d evidence. In this case it is true, as Bond\u2019s writings had not been discovered until 1987, referenced in Donald Rumbelow\u2019s fine offering of 1988, <i>Jack the Ripper, The Complete Casebook<\/i>. Norris uses Bond\u2019s theories to eliminate two of his three likely suspects, settling on James Kelly.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">According to <i>Jack the Ripper A to Z<\/i>, by Begg, Fido, and Skinner (1991), Dr. (later Sir) Robert Anderson, the man in charge of the Ripper investigation since October 1888, brought Dr. Bond into the case<b>, <\/b>who made an examination of Mary Kelly and reported his findings to him. Anderson\u2019s favorite suspect was a Polish Jew who had been captured and admitted to the insane asylum. Two names have been put forward of men who fit this description: Aaron Kosminski and \u201cDavid Cohen.\u201d Neither are considered by Norris and his Ripper expert Richard Jones; Jones\u2019 three already established suspects, who had been considered insane and proven to have traveled to America (which meets Norris\u2019 criteria) are Severin Klosowski, Francis Tumblety, and James Kelly.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><img fetchpriority=\"high\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-5148\" src=\"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/3\/2018\/07\/tumblety.jpg\" alt=\"The Arrest of Dr. Francis Tumblety.\" width=\"650\" height=\"799\" \/><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Tumbelty\u2019s name on that list is due to a coup accomplished by Stewart Evans in 1993. At that time, Evans acquired the \u201cLittlechild Letter,\u201d found in a batch of similar correspondence sold to him by a collector. Chief Inspector Littlechild, writing to a journalist in 1913 about the Ripper case, first mentions Canadian-born Frances Tumblety as a suspect. In fact, Evans, with Paul Gainey, based their 1995 investigative work <i>The Lodger<\/i> on Tumblety as Jack. That book is also published under the title <i>Jack the Ripper, First American Serial Killer<\/i> (1996).<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Norris rightly dismisses Klosowski (aka George Chapman) because, as a wife-poisoner, he demonstrates a different M.O. from Jack. Tumbelty is considered too tall, too much of a character, and exhibited no violence towards women. In the Evans-Gainey book, Tumbelty is described as 5\u201910\u201d at age seventeen, which would make him 55 years old in 1888 during those days of terror. Also, he was well known for \u201cextremes in dress,\u201d was always \u201cpretentious\u201d and \u201cconspicuous,\u201d with \u201ctitantian stature.\u201d Additionally, he had a \u201cvery red face,\u201d a \u201clong flowing mustache,\u201d wore fancy clothes, craved attention and notoriety, considered \u201chandsome,\u201d and had a reputation for being \u201ceccentric and odd.\u201d About the only personal attribute that might match Whitechapel murder witness descriptions is the fact that he sported a large<b> <\/b>moustache (192-7).<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Referring to Evans-Gainey, again we find various descriptions from that time of the potential murderer where he averages between 30-38 years old, with a height most often given as 5\u20196\u201d to 5\u20198\u201d. Also, Tumblety, apparently, had more of a liking for young men rather than a demonstrable hatred toward women.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><b>James Kelly as the Ripper<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/b><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">The remaining man from Norris\u2019s short list, then, is James Kelly. Norris follows his pre-picked suspects\u2019 exploits and gathers circumstantial evidence to fit him up as responsible for both the Whitechapel murders and the death of Carrie Brown, although it is unclear why this one homicide victim is highlighted in this television show and considered proof of Jack\u2019s continuing work in the United States.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-5144\" src=\"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/3\/2018\/07\/mccarthy.jpg\" alt=\"John McCarthy and Thomas Boyer at Mary Jane Kelly's window, from Illustrated Police News, 1888.\" width=\"750\" height=\"728\" \/><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Norris then consults a map and plots the places where James Kelly claims in his \u201cconfession\u201d to have visited: New Jersey, Galvaston and Dallas, Texas, and Los Angles and San Francisco, California. He finds similar murders there and makes the claim that James Kelly \u201cputs himself in these cities.\u201d There is an inference that Norris has found news items from these places, confirming continuing Ripper murders there, and now that Kelly is dead and taken his \u201csecrets to the grave,\u201d Norris\u2019s case, though \u201ccircumstantial,\u201d is \u201cclose to airtight.\u201d He is satisfied he has solved the mystery of the identity of Jack the Ripper.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">In <i>The Complete History of Jack the Ripper<\/i> (1994), Philip Sugden follows Ripper suspect Severin Klosowski\u2019s criminal career. He is the first to reveal the Carrie Brown murder in New York City, naming her as a possible Ripper victim. Klosowski was Inspector Abberline\u2019s personal favorite culprit, and he did have American connections and could possibly have been in the U.S. at the time of Carrie Brown\u2019s homicide. It was the press who called up the recent nightmarish specter of Jack the Ripper with the headline \u201cChoked, Then Mutilated, A Murder Like One of \u2018Jack the Ripper\u2019s\u2019 Deeds\u2019\u201d (<i>New York Times<\/i>, 25 April 1891). Later in the article, though, the report states, \u201cThe police theory, however, is that \u2018Jack\u2019 is not in New York, but that an imitator, perhaps a crank, committed the murder.\u201d This, before an autopsy was even performed!<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">The next day\u2019s news coverage rightly made the distinction that \u201cIt would take a series of such crimes to establish the fact that the London \u2018Jack the Ripper\u2019 is in New York,\u201d and by the following day the crime had become better known as the \u201cEast River Hotel Murder Case.\u201d There was no further series of like murders identified, and the first suspect apprehended and detained, designated as \u201cFrenchy #1,\u201d held up through the whole investigation until he was finally taken to trial for murder in the second degree and sentenced to life imprisonment in July. Aamer Ben Ali served eleven years before the governor released him, due to a suspicion of planted evidence. Technically, that crime is unsolved.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">The TV documentary\u2019s theory is practical, potent, and well scripted\u2014it\u2019s just that the research is unoriginal: Dr. Bond\u2019s 1888 suspect profile had previously been brought to light, Broadmoor\u2019s files had already been breached, James Kelly had been a viable suspect since 1986 when John Morrison exposed his own theory in the newspapers, Carrie Brown had been tentatively linked to Jack the Ripper in a popular book in 1994, and other authors had plumbed world-wide news articles for \u2018Ripper-like\u2019 killings as early as 1928, deducing that he would need to find new killing fields away from the hot spot of Whitechapel, eventually landing in America.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">We can be grateful to the program\u2019s producers for the demonstration of a likely search for James Kelly that might link him to the Ripper. Although it is declared with confidence that the Ripper case is solved, author James Tully had already accomplished that. Their inclusion of Carrie Brown, in New York, to Jack\u2019s list of victims is a creative steppingstone to bring him over the Pond and into the United States.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><b>A Deeper Examination of the Suspect James Kelly<\/b><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><b><i>Profiling<\/i><\/b><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">John Douglas, known for his pioneering of serial offender predictive profiles, describes some indicative behaviors in his book <i>Journey Into Darkness<\/i> (with Mark Olshaker, 1997):<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Most of them come from broken or dysfunctional homes. They\u2019re generally products of some type of abuse, whether it\u2019s physical abuse, sexual abuse, emotional abuse, or a combination \u2026 By the time we see his first serious crime, he\u2019s generally somewhere in his early to mid-twenties. He has low self-esteem and blames the rest of the world for his situation. He already has a bad track record, whether he\u2019s been caught at it or not. It may be breaking and entering, it may have been rape or rape attempts \u2026 [has] a real problem with any type of authority \u2026 they believe they have been victims: they\u2019ve been manipulated, they\u2019ve been dominated, they\u2019ve been controlled by others. But here, in this one situation fueled by fantasy, this inadequate, ineffectual nobody can manipulate and dominate a victim of his own; he can be in control \u2026 he\u2019s finally calling the shots (36-37).<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Describing Charles Manson, Douglas highlights the fact he was \u201cborn the illegitimate son of a sixteen-year-old prostitute who had grown up with a fanatically religious aunt and sadistic uncle until he began living on the streets at age 10\u201d (37). Religionism plays a role (whether real or feigned). In a paranoid schizophrenic offender, he can believe he has the ability \u201cto communicate with God. He might consider himself highly moral and whatever he does is because God has told him directly to do it \u2026 [has] hallucinations or delusions \u2026 religious delusions \u2026 [and likely to use] alcohol or drugs [to deal with stress]\u201d (102). In a master manipulator, it would be difficult to determine whether this specific outlook was a form of reality to the offender or just another con.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-5147\" src=\"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/3\/2018\/07\/policenews2.jpg\" alt=\"Police News.\" width=\"900\" height=\"1195\" srcset=\"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/3\/2018\/07\/policenews2.jpg 900w, https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/3\/2018\/07\/policenews2-768x1020.jpg 768w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 900px) 100vw, 900px\" \/><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">In <i>Jack the Ripper A to Z<\/i> (1991), authors Begg, Fido, and Skinner include Dr. Bond\u2019s deliberations on the psychology behind the criminality of Jack the Ripper. Writing in 1888, Bond listed two points specifically, hoping to describe the outlaw:<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">10. The murderer must have been a man of physical strength and of great coolness and daring \u2026 subject to periodical attacks of Homicidal and erotic mania \u2026 The murderer in external appearance is quite likely to be a quiet in-offensive looking man probably middle-aged and neatly and respectably dressed. I think he must be in the habit of wearing a cloak or overcoat or he could hardly have escaped notice in the streets if the blood on his hands or clothes were visible.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">11. Assuming the murderer to be such a person \u2026 he would probably be solitary and eccentric in his habits, also he is most likely to be a man without a regular occupation, but with some small income or pension. He is possibly living among respectable persons who have some knowledge of his character and habits and who may have grounds for suspicions that he is not quite right in his mind at times (48-49).<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Bond\u2019s conclusions, reached after examination of prior autopsy notes on the victims recovered from Buck\u2019s Row, Hanbury Street, Berner Street, and Mitre Square, are considered \u201cmore speculative and, generally, less useful\u201d (46) by the authors. His notations from his personal viewing of the remains of Mary Kelly from Dorset Street the day after her murder are described as having \u201climited intrinsic value, since he argues for instantaneous and silent killing in every case, despite the defense wounds on Mary Jane Kelly\u2019s hands which he had observed. He accepts circumstantially impossible times of death for the cases on which he had read notes \u2026 [was in] conflict with Dr. Phillips \u2026 disputed Phillips \u2026 [and some of] his conclusions were not accepted\u201d (49-50). Dr. Bond also changed his mind on cause of death of Rose Mylett. However, they did not criticize his offender profile. Author Tully, and Ed Norris after him, both seem to be excited and impressed by this 1888 document. They consider it remarkably innovative for the time period.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><b><i>The History of James Kelly as Suspect Jack the Ripper<\/i><\/b><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">James Kelly was first introduced as a suspect to the public in 1986. One news item by Marcus Eliaso of the Associated Press, out of London, published in the Hendersonville, North Carolina <i>Times-News<\/i> of 5 December describes how John Morrison, a truck driver, aged 60, had recently erected a tombstone dedicated to the Ripper victim Mary Kelly in a Catholic cemetery in east London. Apparently Morrison had a crush on Mary Kelly, describing her as \u201cthe prettiest, the youngest. Everything about Mary Kelly was gorgeous. She was mixed up religiously, pregnant, in arrears with her rent. The poor little thing was the victim of circumstances.\u201d Considered \u201can amateur sleuth\u201d who compiled \u201cfiles of correspondence with Scotland Yard, the Home Office and Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher,\u201d Morrison had collected a kind of \u201cmuseum of drawings, maps and photographs\u201d on the Ripper case.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">The truth, he believes, is that Mary Kelly was murdered by one James Kelly, her former lover, who had escaped from a hospital for the criminally insane and gone looking for her in the East End, murdering prostitutes who happened to cross his path during his search and in the process earning the sobriquet of Jack the Ripper. \u2026 Morrison holds all rival theories in contempt. His ideas pour out in intricate detail, laced with quotations from long forgotten court cases and Home Office documents. He says it is on record that Kelly escaped from Broadmoor prison 65 days before the murders began, using a key fashioned from the wiring of a woman\u2019s corset and making off with the staff\u2019s weekly pay packet. He also says there is evidence that 39 years later he turned himself in claiming to be Jack the Ripper. Morrison claims the affair was hushed up because of the embarrassment that would be caused had it become known that Jack the Ripper had escaped from Broadmoor so easily.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft size-full wp-image-5143\" src=\"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/3\/2018\/07\/marykelly.jpg\" alt=\"Mary Kelly.\" width=\"350\" height=\"541\" \/>John Morrison followed this news release in 1987 by self-publishing his own research as <i>Jimmy Kelly\u2019s Year of Ripper Murders 1888<\/i>. (Note that his title implies one year of murders, even though Kelly traveled extensively after his escape.) Morrison, like many British authors on the subject, are notoriously insular and protective of their finite five victims in their few little acres of turf.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Author Terence Sharkey capitalized on this new theory, including it at the end of his 1987 offering, <i>Jack the Ripper, 100 Years of Investigation<\/i>, in a chapter titled \u201cPick Your Ripper<b>.\u201d <\/b>It was so new, one can almost hear the command \u201cHold the Press!\u201d to allow for it\u2019s addition\u2014literally in the last 3 pages of his book. His version of Morrison\u2019s theory adds that pregnant Mary Kelly \u201cdeserted him during his trial and fled to London from Liverpool in fear\u201d (140). Although Sharkey\u2019s treatment mentions the link between <i>The Guinness World Records<\/i> and Kelly\u2019s escape from Broadmoor, he does not credit Morrison as the first to notice the listing that James Kelly had achieved the \u201clongest escape from Broadmoor.\u201d<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Morrison\u2019s imagination was stirred and he investigated the claim for four years, convinced James Kelly was the Ripper, but even his good friend Tully could not quite take him seriously. Morrison\u2019s theory was next luridly paraphrased in<i> Jack the Ripper A to Z<\/i>, in 1991. It wasn\u2019t until Tully decided to begin his own investigation, starting from scratch, that he became convinced Kelly was an extremely viable suspect.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Over time, certain earlier details fell away from the core story\u2014Mary Kelly was pregnant and had either aborted or abandoned their child, giving James revenge and jealousy as motives; that authorities believed that since she was the primary victim the killings would stop, and therefore they no longer needed to pursue a killer and covered up the identity of the Ripper because of his status as an escaped lunatic; that this whole episode so embarrassed the government the original record of \u2018longest escape from Broadmoor\u2019 citation was removed from future editions of the \u201cRecords\u201d book after c. 1985, with no explanation from the publishers; the claim that when Kelly turned himself in to Broadmoor in 1927 he said he was Jack the Ripper in order to be re-admitted, a story which seems to have no substance. Kelly did give a statement but it was mostly specious and vague. Any supposed family relationship rumored by Morrison to exist between the Ripper victim Kelly and the suspect James Kelly also was dropped from future speculations. The bare facts that remained surrounding the life, wife-killing, trial, incarceration, escape, and liberty of James Kelly are compelling enough on their own to stand as an interesting addition to Ripper lore.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><b><i>James Kelly Fits the Profile<\/i><\/b><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Born in 1860, James Kelly was raised in confusion about his origins: when he was fifteen he found out his mother died, whom he had never met; his grandmother Teresa had been passed off as his mother; he was illegitimate; on his mother\u2019s side there was an insane cousin; he had had a stepfather who died before they met and who had no knowledge of Kelly\u2019s existence; and he had been lied to by those closest to him. Soon, he was comfortable using three different names: Jim Kelly (his real mother\u2019s maiden name), Jim Allan (his deceased stepfather\u2019s last name), and John Miller (his real father\u2019s real name). He was either suffering confusion over his identity or demonstrating an easy comfort in using an alias.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">This was the Victorian Age, which made him the guilty scapegoat for his parent\u2019s sin. He was left an inheritance in trust when he was to come of age at 25 in 1885, maybe as some compensation for his world being turned upside down, leaving him feeling somewhat entitled. His upbringing had been strictly religious, but the hypocrisy he now recognized sent him to the opposite extreme. By 1877, Teresa was dead and Kelly was worth about \u00a326,600 in today\u2019s money. With a rate of exchange figured at $2.50, in American dollars that would have been $86,5000, and only one trustee to convince each time he wanted a small advance. Kelly had become preoccupied with illicit sex and grew to believe women were whores, which might have been the outward manifestation of an innate schizophrenic paranoia.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-5142 aligncenter\" src=\"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/3\/2018\/07\/broadmore.jpg\" alt=\"Broadmoor Asylum.\" width=\"800\" height=\"567\" srcset=\"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/3\/2018\/07\/broadmore.jpg 800w, https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/3\/2018\/07\/broadmore-768x544.jpg 768w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 800px) 100vw, 800px\" \/><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">He had trained as an upholsterer, as he had to work until old enough to enjoy the benefits of his inheritance. The knife seems to have become a comfortable and natural extension of his self, as he used it to attack his lawful wife in her home they shared with her parents. The 1883 marriage was a disaster and Kelly actually claimed his wife Sarah had given him a venereal disease, although he was still consorting with East End prostitutes. In a strange twist, he had married a woman named Sarah, making her Sarah Kelly, which was his mother\u2019s name. Also, her mother\u2019s first name was Sarah as well, although Sarah Brider. He ended that marriage by stabbing her in the neck and digging at her throat. She languished in hospital for three days, and after her deposition was taken, she died. During her dying, Kelly wrote his wife a letter, signing it \u201cyour loving and affectionate, but <i>unfortunate<\/i> husband, James Kelly\u201d (Tully 37).<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Kelly\u2019s defense was \u201cI must be mad\u201d (Tully 33), and in July, the following month, he wrote his wife\u2019s mother from jail, ending with \u201cyour forgiving but unfortunate son-in-law James Kelly\u201d (Tully 39). She had lost a daughter to his murderous rage, yet Kelly was forgiving <i>her<\/i> for her witness statements\u2014he continued to consider himself \u201cunfortunate.\u201d<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">There was an embarrassing trial the same year. Kelly had been evaluated over time by the assistant surgeon of the House of Detention, who testified there was no sign of insanity, although Kelly complained of misery and suffering due to pains in his head and had acted under an irresistible impulse. He was judged guilty with mercy recommended by his jury. Kelly claimed that during the stabbing \u201che was out of his mind, and he was sorry for it. He prayed God to forgive him, and felt sure that He had already forgiven him. For that reason he felt that he should like to live in order that he might serve God\u201d (<i>London Times<\/i>, 2 August 1883).<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">The judge disagreed, ordered his death and, very shortly before sentence could be carried out, under a new government policy anticipating the new law about to be passed, an inquiry was made as to Kelly\u2019s mental stability. The finding was one of \u201cdefective mental capacity\u201d (Tully 50), and thus Kelly was admitted to Broadmoor Asylum, 7 August 1883, believing it was Divine Intervention.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>He was justified, he was jealous, he was paranoid; it was rage against a woman who would not submit to his control. He was frustrated and stabbed her in rage. He considered himself innocent. It was someone else\u2019s fault. He was \u201cunfortunate\u201d to find himself driven to the edge and having to defend his position.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><b><i>James Kelly as wife-killer<\/i><\/b><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>Well, of course the blade used as a weapon to stab and tear a woman\u2019s throat has a psycho-sexual symbolism and would be very gratifying and hard to relinquish once it had been employed in that capacity\u2014a familiar trade tool\u2014something always to hand\u2014an extension of self utilized in a most satisfying way\u2014ridding oneself of a burdensome shrewish wife which was his right\u2014intimate and personal and oh so close up\u2014you can breathe her fear and overpower her struggles\u2014dominate\u2014kind of like sex\u2014and with a woman\u2019s blood spilled all over his hands in a justifiable act\u2014she made him do it\u2014he warned her before\u2014he\u2019s hooked for life he and his knife\u2014an exciting addiction. Once he\u2019s committed to the asylum he\u2019s not going to forget that power rush of settling a score, of setting things right\u2014of taking his own\u2014he\u2019s going to have to escape. But he has patience because his bodily needs are cared for and he has time to settle his mind and there is excitement just in planning, now.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">The mother-in-law Sarah stuck by him for years, maybe harboring expectations of all that lovely lucre her murderous son-in-law could not spend once he reached age 25 in Broadmoor. She might as well be compensated for the death of her daughter, who would have been Kelly\u2019s natural heir anyway, and felt she was as deserving of that money as anyone, since the bequest was from the distant dead John Allan. How different the future would have been for both families if \u201cunfortunate\u201d James had had personal control of over $80,000 prior to 1883. A Trust can be proof one is not trusted. It is manipulation from beyond the grave and, in Kelly\u2019s case, by those who had lied to <i>him<\/i>, those <i>he<\/i> had trusted.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">As he grew, there were ten years where he was controlled by others making decisions for him about his life: that he would leave school and learn the upholstery trade by apprenticeship; that he would leave that and go to the Academy and learn clerking and bookkeeping; that he would go to work for a pawnbroker; and it was decided for him where he would live. By late 1878, he was showing signs of instability, had periodic rages, and became obsessed with moving away from Liverpool to start fresh in London where no one knew him and where he might re-invent himself. He was advanced money from his trust and tried to break into the London upholstery trade where the competition for work was huge, settling in an area on the outskirts of the East End. His job search would take him all over Spitalfields, Whitechapel, and Shoreditch, and he necessarily learned the interior routes through the alleyways, byways, and mazes of these areas.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>Port city, pubs, multinationals, strange languages, noise, horse traffic, market stalls, blind alleys, dirt and debris, peculiar and nasty aromas, music, criminals and cons and pickpockets and prostitutes, fights, shouting, cursing and drinking, life lived outside in the open on the streets, urinating, furtive coupling, babies born, and folks dying. Sure he\u2019d seen some things in Liverpool, but not on this scale.<\/i><span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">And Kelly had some money to indulge his fancy and two friends to introduce him to the low life. Eventually, he moved into the East End to be closer to work and for the cheaper lodging.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Apparently, around 1879 he left London for Brighton and later served on an American Man-o-War, according to Dr. Treadwell at Clerkenwell Prison, where Kelly was stationed awaiting his trial. Back in London by Christmas 1881, and now 21 years old, he met Sarah Brider (the daughter) and moved into her home while pursuing her to marry him\u2014a real home with an intact family already in place\u2014and at first they welcomed him. Being in close proximity to his Sarah was frustrating him, as by now he was used to having his needs met on command by prostitutes and Sarah would not give in. She was in a bad position because he was pushing her for sex outside marriage but if she gave in he would judge her as like the whores on the street. She did give in and it was a disaster\u2014neither of them knowing about love and affection and how sweetly bodies can fit together. There was guilt and recriminations: Kelly accused his Sarah of being less than a woman, of malformation, of something needing a doctor\u2019s consultation, as well as striking out verbally at her mother as being her accomplice in this subterfuge.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Kelly degenerated into depression. He was acting erratically and finally admitted to himself he had contracted a venereal disease, which he tried to treat himself. He had lost his job and yet he and Sarah married anyway in June 1883. By the end of the month, Sarah was viciously attacked in the bedroom by his hand, his knife, his paranoia, his hatred of women, his diseased mind. Thus began his odyssey through the British justice system, which leaves records like breadcrumbs: jail, trial, sentence, evaluation, reprieve from death sentence, and admitted to the asylum under Her Majesty\u2019s pleasure 1883. Still yet not of age to inherit his legacy, he was now a convicted felon, a mentally unbalanced wife-murderer.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">His destiny to fail seems to have been latently lurking in his genes, complicated by his haphazard upbringing and lack of nurture from a mother he never even met and who essentially gave him away. Upon the revelation of these lies at the worst possible age of fifteen, he was spun into chaos when faced with these major life blows, with no experience or ability to handle them. His circuits eventually overloaded and he had begun to show the evidence of the symptoms of paranoid schizophrenia. His subsequent unpredictable behavior seems to prove this\u2014his life decisions ever after were confused, irresponsible, and flawed. What is amazing was that he somehow managed to get through his life, perfect a trade he could fall back on during his restless and nomadic periods, travel the world and care for himself despite his handicap, and reach the ripe old age of 67 before giving up and returning to Broadmoor a physical and mental wreck in 1927.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">The stories surrounding Kelly\u2019s surrender to Broadmoor differ. Some say he claimed to be Jack the Ripper in order to be readmitted. He had been gone so long the institution had released him from their responsibility, formerly discharging him as a patient in 1907. In order for him to be not only accepted back but cared for in his final few years through his decline and death, there had to be a review and an official determination of his status\u2014Broadmoor does not just take in old lunatics who show up knocking on the front door. A main requirement was that he tell his story, and Kelly had just enough cunning left to concoct one that would get him in without incriminating himself. He would want to make it interesting because he was in the spotlight again and craved that kind of attention, now that his hands were clean, but was careful about any criminal admissions. That is why a purported statement that he claimed to be the Ripper just doesn\u2019t fit with Kelly\u2019s personality, motives, or modus operandi.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">But Kelly would want to <i>seem<\/i> heroic, mythical, and adventuresome. He described his travels through France, England, back and forth to America, all over the United States, and parts of Canada, by ship, by foot, and by rail. He had evaded capture through help of friends who he claimed did not know about his \u201ctrouble,\u201d and loaned him money. He showed he was too clever for the establishment to catch him, even when he was living right under their noses, within a few miles of Broadmoor itself, at various times in his existence on the loose. He appeared grandiose while belittling the system and the authorities by relating how he turned himself in two times in other countries only to again disappear. He was careful not to admit much at all in the way of criminal activity\u2014just your everyday escaped lunatic confession that would feed his need to manipulate, achieve re-admission, and leave him some mystery and cache that he could trade on in future with his fellow inmates\u2014a typical con.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Any sociopath could pull this off, but the fact was that he was aging rapidly now that he no longer had to take care of himself, now that the stresses of daily survival issues were removed from his mind, now that he was irritable and deaf. It was amazing that he could even be coherent, let alone disciplined, and careful not to admit to anything other than to the initial murder of his wife, which was the original complaint against him. His statement has often been carelessly referred to as a \u201cconfession\u201d by subsequent authors\u2014a term implying that he made admission to be Jack the Ripper. John Morrison was the one who contributed to <i>this<\/i> legend, but it is not more than speculation now.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Tully stresses \u201cKelly was never precise whenever there was a possibility of incriminating himself or others,\u201d and \u201cthe only information which we have comes from Kelly himself\u201d (73), further describing the events as \u201cKelly\u2019s authorized version\u201d (70). Tully complains, \u201che was to be even more secretive about this particular period of his life\u201d, i.e. the first half of 1888 (74).<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">His mental state deteriorated and he complained of being \u201cdosed in order to make him an idiot\u201d (93). He made feeble attempts to leave the facility, but as his health declined, so did his ability to even imagine the climb over a now-impenetrable sixteen-foot wall\u2014the wall he had gone over in January, 1888, had been bolstered by ten more feet in 1892.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Tully makes especial note that upon Kelly\u2019s death, 17 September 1929 of double pneumonia, \u201che had taken his secrets with him, most notably the details of what he did and where he lived in 1888\/9, the years in which \u2026 London was terrorized by Jack the Ripper\u201d (94).<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Kelly did devolve into madness upon his re-entry to Broadmoor. What would have motivated him, though, to wander the world in his condition? Experts say paranoid schizophrenia is an illness that prevents the person from knowing they have it\u2014but Kelly must have so valued his freedom that he was willing to fight for it, work for it, and even steal it from Her Majesty (as the Institution represents her). It would have been easier to just capitulate and be cared for by interns rather than chance an escape and try his luck at solitary survival in the vastness of world civilizations. So what was his drive? He must have been an opportunist, a salesman, and very clever. If he had a need to kill, which he knew he could not satisfy in Broadmoor, it might be the catalyst to propel him through the life he chose on the run. Ted Bundy did that, always looking to escape custody, preying on more victims in a sort of wild gluttony, while knowing his days of freedom were numbered once the system had his name and description. Authorities were convinced after Kelly\u2019s trial that he was mentally ill and committed him. He was likely an excellent actor. Upon his return 39 years later he again was assessed as mentally unfit in order to be re-admitted. How had he survived? Anyway, by May 1928, he was \u201cdelusional and mentally enfeebled\u201d (Tully 93); by December, his physical health had degenerated, and he was exhibiting paranoia and senility. But, by 1929, he was again plotting to escape! He died that same year.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">James Kelly is a marvelous suspect, a wonderful find by Morrison, and an inspired choice for a Ripper documentary thanks to Tully\u2019s years of investigation into his life, providing welcome documentation. However, through his own statement, we are only privy to what James Kelly wanted us to know, and it is self-serving, not very informative, and tends to become muddled when we get to the good parts. Killers are liars and serial killers are serial liars. Where there is mystery there will be speculation, but his statement contains no proof Kelly admitted to, nor ever killed, anyone anywhere other than his wife Sarah. We are relying on his words, but he was judged unsound. Also, the only times it can be established that he was where he says he was are when he came in from the cold to authorities in New Orleans in 1896 and in Vancouver, Canada in 1901. There were three murders in Essex, England, in 1893, when James Kelly was thought to be back in that country, and there was the Carrie Brown homicide in New York, when he was in the States, but attempting to pin any of these, or any other world-wide Ripper-style murders on little James Kelly from Lancashire is a doomed endeavor. The culprit could as easily have been Jacques, Hans, or even Jose the Ripper.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><b>Jacques the Ripper?<\/b><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">At the time of Jack the Ripper\u2019s hey-day, there were probably more than fifty like him in the world, if modern forensic profile experts are correct in their estimations. Which crimes are elevated into social consciousness, becoming infamous and notorious, is a result of diligent media reporting by the press in a highly civilized culture. Letters to the newspapers bragging about the killings were received, which added fuel to the outraged fervour of the British Empire at the time. Some say the press invented the correspondence to feed the fever and that a journalist was originally responsible for the appellation \u2018Jack the Ripper.\u2019 The name evoked such fascination that even captured killers of that era, such as Dr. Cream (1850-1892) and Frederick Deeming (1853-1892), allegedly confessed to be the Ripper to add to their own notoriety.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">According to the <i>Ashburton Guardian<\/i> of 22 February 1889, prior to the Whitechapel murders, there had been on the loose in Russia a \u201clunatic \u2026 whose homicidal mania was directed against the very class from which \u2018Jack the Ripper\u2019s\u2019 victims are selected, and who it was stated had eluded capture in his own country. It begins to look exceedingly likely that this Russian maniac reached London and there followed his evil bent.\u201d The reporter theorizes the culprit then escaped to the Americas, \u201cpursuing a similar bloodstained career\u201d in the West Indies and \u201cneighboring countries, where precisely similar crimes are now recorded.\u201d The Ripper killings stopped in London in November 1888, but in December, the very next month, \u201cfour negresses were killed in Jamaica. This was followed by news from Nicaragua where six similar atrocities were committed in January.\u201d The last Jamaican victim was found with a note conveniently attached to the body, with the words \u201cJack the Ripper\u201d written there.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">This report ties these types of crimes together globally and evinces the bigger picture, giving scale, scope, and context to a major trend of terror. The horrific depredations perpetrated upon those women of the East End of London were only a few in a series of exterminations around the world. It was the London press who whipped up the frenzy with their lurid and graphic reportage. It was really just a few months of a killer plague that merely passed through England\u2014 only to gather strength and fuel for future and further conquests in other countries and accumulating unfortunate female souls and body parts in some kind of evil and sadistic gluttony\u2014mere glimpses of which left the newspaper-reading public aghast and terrified for a time.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>The New York Sun<\/i>, 7 February, 1889, published more detailed news of the Nicraguan women who were butchered at an alarming rate that past January, 1889\u2014six victims in ten days:<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">The people have been greatly aroused by six of the most atrocious murders ever committed within the limits of this city. The murderer or murderers have vanished as quickly as \u2018Jack the Ripper,\u2019 and no traces have been left for identification. All of the victims were women and the character of those who met their fate at the hands of the London murderer. Like those women of Whitechapel, they were women who had sunk to the lowest degradations of their calling. They have been found murdered just as mysteriously, and the evidences point to almost identical methods. They were found butchered out of all recognition. Even their faces were most horribly slashed, and in the cases of all the others their persons were frightfully disfigured. There is no doubt that a sharp instrument violently but dexterously (sic) and was the weapon sent the poor creatures out of the world. Like \u2018Jack the Ripper\u2019s\u2019 victims, they have been found in out-of-the-way places, three of them in the suburbs of the town and the others in dark alleys and corners. Two of the victims were found with gaudy jewellery (sic), and from this it is urged that the mysterious murderer had not committed the crimes for robbery. In the cases of the other four a few coins were found on the persons, representing no doubt the prospective consideration for the murderer or murderers. All of the victims were in the last stages of shabbiness and besottedness. In fact, in almost every detail the crimes and the characteristics are identical with the Whitechapel horrors. All of the murders occurred in less than ten days, and as yet the perpetrator or perpetrators have not been apprehended. Every effort is now being made to bring him or them to justice. The authorities have been stimulated in their efforts by the statement that seems to be generally accepted, that \u2018Jack the Ripper\u2019 must have emigrated to Central America and selected this city for his temporary abode.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Author\u2019s Evans and Gainey (<i>Jack the Ripper: First American Serial Killer<\/i>) tell of an early author on the case, Guy Logan, who exposes the Jamaican and Nicaraguan murders in his book <i>Masters of Crime<\/i>. They quote Logan, writing in 1928:<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">I think it probable that the Whitechapel fiend, finding London at last too hot to hold him, deprived of the opportunities for his blood debauches, did betake himself abroad, and that he went to America. Further, I think it likely that he had come from the States in the first place (230).<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Although Logan calls these series of crimes \u201cmultiple murder,\u201d he is describing a traveling serial killer, only forty years after the London slayings wound down, and he wrote this, conceivably, within the killer or killers\u2019 own lifetime!<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">A study of the life story of suspect James Kelly provides a liberating factor and it opens the Ripper case up to further possibilities\u2014that the Ripper did travel, as serial killers are wont to do. He had crawled out of the dark scummy pit of his own fantasies in another country altogether, killing and causing mayhem there, escaped into the teeming sick belly of the East End of London, ripping it open and exposing her entrails, retreating this time to a warmer clime as winter hoved into England, and perpetrated more atrocities on defenseless female victims, playing god and demon in some sun-drenched party town in Central America like the devil on holiday.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><b>A World-Wide View: The Ripper in Context<\/b><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Further original research reveals a cursory collection of twenty-six news items of like crimes from around the world, all claiming relationship to London\u2019s Jack the Ripper. England may have named him, but up until that time he had been at work anonymously, and probably continues to this day: some kind of evil vampire who has seemingly passed on his cruel disease to generations from the beginnings of time to the end of time.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>Otego Witness <\/i>16 November 1888<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">(By the Daily News American Correspondent)<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Not many months ago a series of remarkably brutal murders of women occurred in Texas, the victims being chiefly Negro women. The crimes were characterized by the same brutal methods as those of the Whitechapel murders. The theory has been suggested the perpetrator of the latter may be the Texas criminal, who was never discovered. A leading Southern newspaper thus puts the argument: -\u2018in our recent annals of crime there has been no other man capable of committing such deeds. The mysterious crimes in Texas have ceased. They have just commenced in London. Is the man from Texas at the bottom of them all? If he is the monster or lunatic he may be expected to appear anywhere. The fact that he is no longer at work in Texas argues his presence somewhere else. His peculiar line of work was executed in precisely the same manner as is now going on in London. Why should he not be there? The more one thinks of it the more irresistible becomes the conviction that he is the man from Texas. In these days of steam and cheap travel distance is nothing. The man who would kill a dozen women in Texas would not mind the inconvenience of a trip across the water, and once there he would not have any scruples about killing more women. The superintendent of the New York police admits the possibility of this theory being correct, but he does not think it probable.\u2019<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>Fielding Star (<\/i>Manawatu<i>), <\/i>20 December 1890<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Eight Murders Committed<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">(Per Press Association)<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Mexico, December 19.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">An American \u2018Jack the Ripper,\u2019 who has commenced his horrible work in this city, has already committed 8 murders.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>The Colonist, <\/i>6 May 1892<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Washington, May 4.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Another body of a woman, mutilated in the same way as Jack the Ripper\u2019s victims, has been found in Chicago. This is the second within a short period.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>Poverty Bay Herald, <\/i>22 April 1893<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Is He Jack The Ripper?<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">A woman was ripped in New York on the night of the 19<sup>th<\/sup> of March, by a knife which was left sticking in the wound. The knife was traced to Frank Castellano, an Italian barber, whose record has been under police searchlight. There are circumstances connected with the case that incline the police to believe that Castellano is none other than the mysterious \u2018Jack the Ripper.\u2019<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>Otago Witness, <\/i>19 October 1893<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Four women were murdered in the \u2018Jack the Ripper\u2019 style in Ostburg, an island of Cadizan, in the four days preceding September 4. No arrests have been made.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>Star, <\/i>13 October 1899<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Two murders, similar to those committed by Jack the Ripper in England, are reported from Linz, in Austria.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>Star <\/i>(Canterbury),<i> <\/i>22 February 1902<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">An American Imitator.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">United Press Association\u2014By Electric Telegraph\u2014Copyright.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">(Received Feb. 22, 10.40 a.m.)<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">New York, Feb 21.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 60px;\"><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Eight murders of girls, after the methods practiced by \u2018Jack the Ripper,\u2019 have been committed in San Francisco.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">The research into James Kelly as Jack the Ripper does demonstrate that the five London killings of the autumn of 1888 have been taken completely out of context from the world-view of similar contemporary atrocities. The question then arises as to why were only England\u2019s victims made infamous? Why when we think Ripper do we only see the flash of poor Catherine Eddows\u2019 face etched in light, like a reporter\u2019s flashbulb, illuminating, for a moment, her post-autopsy stitches, like the bride of Frankenstein\u2019s monster? Russia, Texas, Jamaica, Nicaragua, Mexico, Chicago, Australia, Austria, Essex, England, Cadizan, and Amsterdam all had their Rippers within the same decade. Why was only London in the world\u2019s spotlight that autumn? Why are there dozens of books and several movies based on just these five \u2018canonical\u2019 victims: Mary Kelly, Catherine Eddows, Liz Stride, Polly Nichols, and Annie Chapman? We don\u2019t even know the names of the unfortunates in these other countries, or even much detail\u2014only these five are accepted in the legend of the Ripper\u2019s exploits. The total victim count of Ripper-like murders from all the citations next listed here is 94, not including lone Carrie Brown in New York City. And yet scholars still argue whether to include Martha Tabram or Frances Coles in the elite restricted list.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">There was always the question as to why these killings started here in London, in this particular place, and seemingly ended here, in this place and time. These crimes were held to be a political and sociological scandal of such magnitude that they actually reflected upon the state of the Monarchy, compelling the Queen to comment. Since that time, hundreds of hours of research and investigation has been done to qualify a Britisher as the culprit. Upon an examination of the story of the life of James Kelly, we find the whole world was open to the likes of such a degenerate killer as London\u2019s \u2018Jack.\u2019 He was not a five-victim kind of guy, who then conveniently jumped into the Thames, committing suicide before the year was over. Obviously the murders stopped in England because \u2018Jack\u2019 took his blood-thirst on the road\u2014a Victorian globetrotter when long-distance travel was not quick or easy. Killing women and then catching a train might have become his life\u2019s work, a mode of existence.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">As a typically modern phenomena, this traveling serial killer would probably have to have a tidy income to fund his lifestyle, and contribute to a clean and organized appearance; he would have a natural cunning and the ability to take care of himself in any country in the world. He couldn\u2019t look like a monster by day, nor could he be actively insane or noticeably degenerate. He would have to have a sound-enough mind to plan and choose to do what he did, to get away uncaught, and to remain unsuspected. Consider that there also could have been several Ripper-like murderers working worldwide, which expert profilers claim is possible at any given time in any country. As John Douglas would admit, man\u2019s inhumanity to woman crosses all time-zones, borders, and races throughout the history of the species.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Again, because of a study of the suspect James Kelly, we can see that London\u2019s victims weren\u2019t special, but that it was the press coverage that made them so. That it created it\u2019s own phenomenon is worth further study: the role journalism plays in making any crime into a super-crime by concentrating vast media attention on to a particular story of human interest, like focusing a microscope under a bright light source and then describing the sickening undulations of an unknown organism caught in the magnified glare.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">If these Whitechapel atrocities were an isolated series of murders specific to this time and place, beginning and ending there, then some of the historical suspect names proposed as candidates for Jack the Ripper will always be worth further investigation. The mystery is compelling and provocative when placed in 1888 East End Victorian London pea-soup foggy nights and sputtering gaslight murky darkness where a particular kind of evil lurked on silent watch with a flash of a knife. But if these killings were a set of crimes taken out of context of multiple similar crimes in other countries in the same decade, the fascination seems diluted and diffused, like a spotlight when it is spread over a wider area. The culprit becomes like a shadowy wraith, and it\u2019s more difficult to sustain the sense of mystery and thrill of atmosphere when we are forced to adjust to the threat that there may be no hope of solution or resolution. The question arises as to why London has an almost romantic attachment to the legend of \u2018Saucy Jack,\u2019 an insular and singular sense of ownership, when it is more likely he was a felonious predator-citizen of the world. If their culprit escaped to spree across continents, it is probable his identity will never be known.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-5146\" src=\"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/3\/2018\/07\/policenews.jpg\" alt=\"Police News.\" width=\"637\" height=\"904\" \/><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><b>Jack the Ripper in the World<\/b><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">These killings, world wide, were described in the newspapers as being in the style of Jack the Ripper; even if the gruesome details were not explicit, everyone knew what depredations were implied by the use of the moniker. It\u2019s very possible some of these murders were actually the result of \u2018Jack\u2019s\u2019 continuing bloodlust. The time frame is the lifespan of a potential killer expected to exhibit his criminal tendencies around age seventeen; he might continue until retirement age, if remaining at large and unchecked, as, for example, a suspect like James Kelly, (1860-1929).<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Sometime prior to 1888, Russia, \u2018a series of similar crimes\u2019: <i>Ashburton Guardion<\/i>, 22 February 1889.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1888, \u2018Not many months\u2019 before 16 November, Texas, 12 victims (\u201cchiefly Negro women\u201d): <i>Otego Witness<\/i>.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1888, 31 August to 9 November, London, England, 5 victims, dubbed \u2018Jack the Ripper\u2019 murders:<i> Jack the Ripper A to Z<\/i>, Begg, Fido, Skinner.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1888, December, Jamaica, 4 victims: <i>Ashburton Guardian<\/i>, 22 February 1889.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1889, 24 January, Managua, Nicaragua, 6 victims: <i>Poverty Bay Herald.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1890, 15 December, Mexico, 27 victims (reported day before trial of accused \u2018El Chalequero\u2019): <i>New York Times.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1890, 20 December, Mexico, 8 victims:<i> Fielding Star.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1891, April 25, New York City, New York, 1 victim (Carrie Brown):<i> New York Times.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1892, 6 May, Chicago, Illinois, 2 victims: <i>The Colonist.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1892, 23 May, Australia, multiple victims, (accused Frederick Deeming):<i> New York Times.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1892, September, Vienna, Austria, multiple victims (accused Alois Szemeredy): <i>Evening Post <\/i>(Wellington).<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1893, 22 April, New York, 1 victim (19 March, suspect Frank Castellano, also believed to be \u2018Jack\u2019): <i>Poverty Bay Herald.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1893, 13 September, Essex, England, 3 victims: <i>Tampeka Times.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1893, 19 October, Ostburg, Cadizan, 4 victims (in 4 days): <i>Otago Witness.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1894, 27 April, Amsterdam, 2 victims, suspect Hendrick de Jong: <i>New York Times.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1896, 11 June, America*, 9 victims (in two years): <i>Mataura Ensign.<\/i> (*N.Y., Buffalo, Cincinnati, Denver, ?, Denver, San Francisco (3).)<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1897, 24 October, France, \u2018nearly a score\u2019 of victims (12) (accused Joseph Vacher)<i>: New York Times.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1899, 4 January, Vienna, Austria, \u2018another Jack the Ripper murder\u2019 (accused Schgstowitz): <i>Southland Times.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1899, 13 October, Linz, Austria, 2 victims: <i>The Star<\/i> (Canterbury).<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1902, 22 February, San Francisco, California, 8 victims: <i>The Star <\/i>(Canterbury).<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1903, 4 April, Hamilton, Ohio, 5 victims (accused Knapp): <i>Evening Post<\/i> (Wellington).<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1903, 19 May, America, multiple victims, suspect Klosowski (Chapman), from 1888 to 1903, accused of murders in Russia, London and America: <i>West Coast Times.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1907, 29 July, Berlin, Germany, \u20183 little girls\u2019 victims: <i>Bay of Plenty Times.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1911, 3 July, Atlanta, Georgia, 8 victims, (*suspect possibly \u2018black man\u2019), <i>New York Times.<\/i> (*1912, 22 October, \u201cNegro Murderer Confesses\u201d to one murder: <i>Grey River Argus<\/i>.)<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1912, 12 August, Denver, Colorado, 7 victims (in six months):<i> Ashburton Guardian.<\/i><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">1929, 16 December, Dussseldorf, Germany, victim count not specified: <i>John Blunt\u2019s Monthly<\/i> (U.K.).<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><b>Works Cited<\/b><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Begg, Paul, Martin Fido, Keith Skinner.<i> Jack the Ripper A to Z<\/i>. London: Headline Book Publishing PLC, 1991.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Casebook Jack the Ripper. Web. 12 May 2011.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Douglas, John and Mark Olshaker.<i> Journey Into Darkness. <\/i>New York: A Lisa Drew Book\/Scribner, 1997.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Evans, Stewart, Paul Gainey.<i> Jack the Ripper First American Serial Killer<\/i>. New York: Kodansha America, Inc., 1996<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Graysmith, Robert. <i>The Bell Tower The case of Jack the Ripper finally solved\u2026in San Francisco.<\/i> Washington, DC: Regnery Publishing, Inc., 1999.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\"><i>Jack the Ripper In America<\/i>, Discovery Channel television documentary, 2009.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Jakubowski, Maxim and Nathan Braund, Editors. <i>The Mammoth Book of Jack the Ripper.<\/i> New York: Carroll &amp; Graf Publishers, Inc.,1999.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Marriott, Trevor.<i> Jack the Ripper: The 21st Century Investigation.<\/i> London: John Blake Publishing Ltd, 2005.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Rumbelow, Donald<i>. Jack the Ripper The Complete Casebook.<\/i> Chicago: Contemporary Books, Inc., 1988.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Sharkey, Terence<i>. Jack the Ripper 100 Years of Investigation<\/i>. Dorset Press, 1987.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; color: #000000;\">Sugden, Philip. <i>The Complete History of Jack the Ripper.<\/i> New York: Carroll &amp; Graf Publishers, Inc., 1994.<\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p><span style=\"font-family: tahoma, arial, helvetica, sans-serif;color: #000000\">He is the lust killer. Society breeds them in every generation.<\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":5,"featured_media":5145,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[60],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-4621","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-jack-the-ripper"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4621","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/5"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=4621"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4621\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":5149,"href":"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/4621\/revisions\/5149"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/5145"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=4621"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=4621"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lizzieandrewborden.com\/hatchetonline\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=4621"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}