In some ways the police force were not to blame for not capturing Jack the Ripper because of the harsh conditions that they had to work in. A newspaper article describes the streets of Whitechapel as "containing some headquarters of infamy" and "The sights and sounds are an apocalypse of evil" This gives a very negative image of the streets of Whitechapel and leads us to feel sympathetic towards the Police because they had to work in these conditions. The conditions would also affect a policeman's efficiency and make him less alert. //Jack The Ripper lived and killed in a time where the detection of the guilty was not the science it is today. There where no crime scene analysts, DNA or hair and fiber comparison under microscopes. The best they could hope for was an eyewitness that wasn't too drunk to recall what he had seen and articulate it to the proper authrorities. The simple reason the Ripper was never caught was that forensic science was not yet advanced enough for serial murder. Stranger murder is among the most difficult to solve. It is a challenge for modern law enforcement with all the available tools at their disposal. How much more difficult for the likes of Inspector Frederick Abberline trying to basically 'pull a rabbit out of a hat'. The Ripper was not caught simply because the police were not equipted with the tools needed to catch a killer of this type.
The Jack the ripper murders as we know, were in 1888. At 5 were attributed to him that year.
The files kept by the Metropolitan Police show that the investigation opened in 1888 encompassed eleven murders from 3rd April 1888 to 13th February 1891 and were known as the Whitechapel Murders. Amongst this eleven murders investigated by the police, five are almost universally agreed upon as having been the work of the Ripper. However there were other murders and there is no absolute proof that the Ripper killed only the 5 or even this 5. Numerous authors proffer numerous possibilities of identity for the Ripper and the actual number of murders. So the whole Ripper scenario is just shrouded in mystery - everyone can have their pet theory that cannot be proven or disproven. In fact apart from the fact that there were murders, nothing is known for sure - perhaps 'Jack the Ripper' was a woman?
With few exceptions Jack The Ripper killed prostitutes in the Whitechapel district of London located in the east end of the city. Katherine Eddows was murdered in what is known as The Mile. The Mile was policed by the City of London police while the other murders were in the Metropolitan Police jurisdiction.
Most of the Ripper's murders were found in one small geographical area, about 1 square mile, in London's poverty-stricken east end. But there were other murders outside that area around the time of Jack The Ripper's killings that have not been ruled in or out as Ripper murders.
The unsolved 'Jack the Ripper' murders.
He didn't. Jack the Ripper was never caught.
The six murders generally attributed to Jack the Ripper occurred between 7 August and 9 November 1888.
A series of murders in Whitechapel London during the 1880's
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Thomas Bates was a witness that saw the ripper while he was walking from the place of one of his murders.
Most of the murders were in the juridiction of the Metropolitan Police, which included all areas of London except for the one square mile in the middle of London which is refered to as the City. With the murder of Katherine Eddows the Ripper crossed that line and her murder was investigated by the City Police. As with all things Ripper, there was internal strife and bickering, which I'm sure worked for the killer instead of against him.
He killed and ripped woman's bodies. The police received a boasting letter from a man claiming to be the killer. It was signed Jack The Ripper.