This is the full-text of A.P. Wolf's Jack the Myth, originally published by Robert Hale in 1993. It is reprinted here in its entirety, with new revisions, by the kind permission of A.P. Wolf. You may start reading it from the beginning, or you can jump to specific chapters by clicking the links below.
Chapter 6 - More Suspects
The murder cases from the last chapter also give us another criterion which
is equally well known from thousands of other cases of serious crimes: that
the Ripper probably did not start out his odious career with murder and
mutilation but with lesser crimes - perhaps even very minor offences - and
the police were very likely to have been aware of these crimes.
A curious component of criminal mentality - especially that of many serial
killers - is the strange desire to be involved somehow with the
investigations of their own crimes. Sometimes, they march boldly into a
police station to complain about the inefficiency of the police officers
investigating their own crime, or write long letters of accusation against
various people - usually officials of some nature - totally unconnected with
the crime, and sometimes even offering to help the police in their
investigation. This behaviour sometimes results in the criminal revisiting
the site of the murder and Colin Wilson feels that this is largely to gloat
over their dead victims, but this could be too simple an explanation. Wilson
also believes that such serial killers are motivated to contact the police
or others because of a suicidal element that is involved with sex crime but
again this could be a gross over-simplification of the motives behind such
behaviour. This strange behaviour - both the revisiting of the murder site
and the bizarre desire to be involved in the investigation - could perhaps
have its origins more in the combination of the powerful guilt mechanisms of
the individuals concerned and an overpowering desire to be there on the
’pulse’ of things. But no matter to the psychology of the behaviour, it
suits our present purpose to know that it exists as a few examples will
illustrate.
John Haigh was a classic example, walking into Chelsea Police Station with a
woman on his arm in 1949 to report the disappearance of a woman that he had
murdered two days earlier. To assist the police even further he gave them
his business address where he had murdered Mrs Oliver Durand-Deacon and then
melted her body down in a tub of acid. It didn’t take the police long to
realize that they had a mass-murderer on their hands who specialized in
killing people whose fortune he wanted to ‘inherit’.
When the remains of two bodies were found in a stream in Scotland in 1953
the police and forensic experts really had their work cut out for them as
the bodies had been hacked to pieces and the skin removed from the faces so
that identification would be impossible. For the same reason the fingertips
of one body were also removed. But when a wild, dishevelled man burst into a
Lancaster police station to complain about the disappearance of his wife,
and police harassment - when there had been none - the police knew they had
a suspect. Not satisfied with that performance the man, Dr Buck Ruxton, made
another appearance at the police station a few days later where he wept
across the counter complaining that his neighbours were spreading malicious
rumours that he had killed his wife and maid. Eventually the forensic trail
also led back to him and he was finally and successfully prosecuted for the
brutal murder of his wife and maid but many involved in the case remained
convinced that if the good doctor had not lost his nerve and gone whining to
the police he would have got away with the perfect double murder.
In 1946 Neville Heath took a woman to his London hotel room and in the
course of a sadistic session - in which it seems the woman was a willing
partner - lost control of himself and killed her. He then travelled down to
Bournemouth murdering another woman on the beach and then explaining to yet
another lady he met that a woman had been murdered by persons unknown in his
hotel room in London. She strongly advised him to go to the local police,
which he astonishingly did, explaining to the perplexed officials - who
immediately recognised him from his description which had appeared in every
national newspaper in the country - that he might be able to help them with
their enquiry. He was not intending to confess, his offer of help seems to
have been genuine enough from his own point of view as he had a few days
after the first murder written to the officer in charge of the investigation
in London offering his help and promising to supply the weapon that was used
to mutilate and murder the woman which he had found by chance in his hotel
room. He had also complained bitterly to the other guests at his Bournemouth
hotel that a man capable of such a terrible act must have been a ‘sexual
maniac’.
Graham Backhouse led the Bristol police a merry trail of murder and mayhem
when he complained to them that he was the victim of a conspiracy to murder
him. The police were at first impressed with the evidence of threatening
phone calls and letters accusing Backhouse of various misdeeds, and when his
wife was blown up in his car - her own car had mysteriously broken down at
the time - by a home-made bomb they were convinced that someone was indeed
determined to murder Mr Backhouse and placed him under strict police
protection. The first doubts must have crept into their minds when Backhouse
made an angry phone call demanding that the police be removed from his
property at once. When a few days later the police were called back to
Backhouse’s farm it was to find a bleeding and wounded Backhouse and a
neighbour dead on the floor of the kitchen. He claimed that the neighbour
had attacked him, so he had shot him twice with a shotgun in the chest.
Backhouse’s explanation was that this was the man who had sent the letters,
made the telephone calls and tried to blow him up in his car. At first the
police were inclined to believe him, but the forensic experts called to the
crime scene were not so easily convinced and believed that Backhouse had
staged the attack and had, in fact, murdered his neighbour in cold blood.
They eventually went on to prove this and when it was found that Backhouse
had increased the insurance premium on his wife from £50,000 to £100,000 a
month before the car bomb attack they knew they had their man and his
motive. It is obvious that if Backhouse had not demanded the police to
withdraw their protection and then gone on to murder his neighbour, things
would have cooled down. He would have also been allowed to raise the money
he needed in a more conventional manner, but instead he directly implicated
himself by complaining about the very police who were there to supposedly
protect him.
Deeply religious and a member of an organization, the Alliance of Honour,
that demanded of its members purity in body as well as mind, Norman Thorne
nevertheless murdered and mutilated his fiancee, Elsie Cameron, in 1924 on
his chicken farm in Sussex. She had tried to force him into marriage by
claiming to be pregnant from him, while he maintained that they had never
had sexual intercourse, and he was anyway in love with another. So he
murdered his fiancee, dismembered her and then buried her in the soil of one
of his chicken coops. Seven days later - all spruced up and in his best
Sunday suit - he presented himself at the local police station and expressed
his desire to assist them in every way he could in the search for his
missing fiancee. Later he even had the cheek to have a photograph taken of
himself and the investigating police officers stood together in the very
chicken coop where his once intended bride lay under the ground in several
gruesome bundles.
Dr Thomas Neill Cream was a legendary example of a murderer who just
couldn’t leave his wicked deeds to die like his poisoned victims in 1891. He
murdered his prostitute victims almost long distance so to speak, by giving
them small bottles of ‘medicine’ to take later. He then proceeded to write
letters to all and sundry accusing a variety of public figures of the
murders. He even marched into Scotland Yard on one occasion and demanded
that the police stop following him about - which they weren’t - and there is
no doubt about the fact that when he was hanged in 1892 he had put the rope
round his neck himself.
The final case is perhaps the most audacious out of the lot and concerns a
murderer who became known as the ’Zodiac Killer’ because he always used the
symbol of the Zodiac when communicating with the police about his crimes.
Between 1968 and 1969 ’Zodiac’ shot or stabbed a number of victims killing
five of them and almost every time he had just killed someone, he directly
phoned the San Francisco police to tell them where they could find the
bodies, and then ranted and raved at them for their continuing incompetence
and inefficiency in catching the killer.
So as can be seen there is yet another criterion which could possibly point
to the identity of Jack the Ripper. Someone who acted in a similar fashion,
presenting themselves to the police to offer assistance, berating the police
for their incompetence, complaining of police harassment or writing strange
letters to the press or people in authority.
Using these main criteria we will attempt to profile the suspects that are
left after winnowing the Ripperologists pack of 139 down to a reasonable
number by a process of radical elimination. But before doing that there are
several other factors of modern murder investigation to be considered which
may be of great help later.
The FBI Psychological Profiling Unit believe that in many cases of
mutilation murder the more vicious the mutilation, particularly to the face
of the victim, then the closer the relationship between murderer and victim.
Remember the post-mortem report on Mary Jane Kelly where it was detailed
that her face was almost totally devoid of flesh. Sir Melville Leslie
Macnaghten, the chief constable of Scotland Yard CID shortly after the
Ripper murders, made the crucial observation about the murders that the
’fury of the mutilations increased in each case’ and this is indeed a most
pertinent observation.
Another point that emerges from modern police hunts for serial killers is
that as the police operation gains momentum, the killer has less and less
room in which to operate. As the hunt intensifies the killer’s territory
becomes squeezed and he is forced to operate in ever decreasing circles
until he either stops murdering, moves away, commits suicide, gives himself
up, or starts to murder on his own doorstep. The ’Jack the Stripper’ murders
of the mid 1960’s are a classic example of this. The killer left his
victims, strangled and naked, in the River Thames. It was obvious that the
killer was committing the crimes elsewhere and then dumping the bodies in
the river. However, police activity became so intense in the killer’s area
that he was forced to dump his last victim at the actual murder site - his
place of work. He then went on to commit suicide as the police had tightened
the net to such an extreme that the killer knew he was about to be
apprehended and furthermore had absolutely no chance of ensnaring more
victims. His murderous career was well and truly over. This must have been
even more so for Jack the Ripper than for the serial killer today, because
he did not possess the easy mobility that we do now. The modern serial
killer often makes use of the motorway systems available today in most
countries and this makes him damn difficult to catch. But the Ripper was
probably confined to foot and as the police net drew closer round him he may
have been forced to kill increasingly nearer to his home base.
Chief Inspector Walter Dew, famous as the detective who arrested Crippen,
was personally involved with only one of the Ripper murders - that of Mary
Jane Kelly - but in his book ‘I Caught Crippen’ he also made a valuable
observation concerning the Ripper and his victims. He was amazed that the
prostitutes of the Whitechapel area even after the horrific murder of Annie
Chapman proved to be such easy targets for the killer and he posed the
question: ‘Is it feasible that there was something about him which placed
him above suspicion?’
The answer to his question must surely be yes. Though in saying so we
mustn’t forget the impoverished circumstances of the Ripper’s victims. In
every case - excepting perhaps that of Long Liz Stride - the women were
forced to go out on the streets late at night to try and earn the four pence
by selling their bodies to pay for their bed for the night. Mary Jane Kelly
was killed in her room that is true, but it shouldn’t be forgotten that she
was months behind with her rent and on the point of being turned out of her
lodgings. In other words she was also a desperate woman. This is an
important point to note and it’s likely that the women killed by the Ripper
were more concerned about securing their four pence than over the appearance
of their potential customer. Extreme poverty produces people who are
prepared to take extreme risks. But that doesn’t rule out the point that
Inspector Dew raises for it would have certainly been easier for the Ripper
if he had been someone above suspicion, a familiar face well-known to the
Dorset Street prostitutes, the boyfriend of someone they all knew, a
policeman, or someone who was prepared to help them out with a few pence
when they were down on their luck. It is certainly tempting to think that
this could have been the case, and the important statement of the FBI that
the more vicious the mutilation the closer the relationship between killer
and victim, plus Sir Melville Macnaghten’s observation that the ‘fury of the
mutilations increased in each case’ also leads one in that direction. This
then is another useful criteria: to look for someone whose position or
relationship to the victims would allow him to carry out the murders without
undue difficulty.
Finally to the Ripper himself. What sort of man should we be looking for?
Has one hundred years intensive study into the criminal mind brought us
closer to being able to identify the type of killer the Ripper was?
Perhaps.
If one studies similar cases that have occurred since Jack the Ripper then
certainly different types of killers are easily recognizable. There appear
to be four distinct types of killer in these serial murders. One is the
full-blown psychotic. A chronic paranoid schizophrenic, who hears voices
ordering him to kill, voices from demons or other strange sources like in
one case from ‘Jesus Christ and Company’. Herb Mullin killed over a dozen
people in California in the early 1970’s because voices had told him to do
it and he assured his captors that it was Satan himself who was behind the
deeds. The ‘Son of Sam’, David Berkowitz, who killed six people and wounded
another seven in random shootings in New York during 1976 was similarly
driven by the voices of demons. Peter Sutcliffe, the ‘Yorkshire Ripper’ also
claimed that demons had been behind his vicious murders. The mass murderer
and cannibal Albert Fish who claimed to have murdered 400 children in the
USA between 1910 and 1934 had been suffering from delusions for years where
voices had been urging him to kill. Fish is a highly important case as it
shows that the full blown psychotic maniac can appear to an outsider to be
quite normal, so normal that one of the psychiatrists, Frederick Wertham,
who examined him in jail described him thus: ‘a meek and innocuous little
old man, gentle and benevolent, friendly and polite. If you wanted someone
to entrust your children to, he would be the one you choose’. A man in fact
who could pull a curtain down on the complete and utter maniac inside and
display to the world this gentle fatherly figure, but when the curtain
lifted here was a man whose voices told him to murder hundreds of small
children. He would then eat them and send boasting letters to the parents of
his victims describing ‘how sweet her tender little body was, roasted in the
oven. It took me nine days to eat her.’
So it is clear that it would be a great mistake to think of a paranoid
schizophrenic as always being the wild, dishevelled and disorganized killer
with blazing eyes and drooling saliva that is usually in our imagination,
and it is a mistake that many authors and researchers have made and still
continue to make today. No, sometimes these killers are unusually adept at
hiding their demons and voices, like Earle Leonard Nelson who travelled the
USA strangling and mutilating women in the 1920’s, with his Bible clutched
in one hand and a comforting prayer on his lips to disarm his victims. As
Ronald Markman, the well-known American forensic psychiatrist and attorney
remarks:
‘Psychosis is a medical condition in which the person loses contact with
reality in a profound manner. Thoughts, perceptions, feelings, and behaviour
become severely disorganized and the personality begins to deteriorate. The
psychotic person displays distorted perceptions, delusion, and
hallucinations, and is compelled by these misperceptions to respond to
people or situations in a bizarre, disorganized ‘crazy’ fashion… Psychosis
comes and goes. A person who seems perfectly normal one minute can
deteriorate into a psychotic ‘episode’ within minutes. If he commits a
terrible crime during his psychotic episode, he may believe he is actually
doing his victim a favour’.
Ted Bundy - who was featured in an earlier chapter - was a perfect specimen
of the strange beast that typifies the second category: the controlled,
calculating murderer. Intelligent, cool, charming and with a smile that
could and did disarm a hostile jury trying him for murder, in fact one of
the females on the jury later became his girlfriend while he was in prison.
Here was a man who carefully planned his kidnapping of young girls, donning
false plaster casts on his arm or using crutches so that the young girls
helped this handsome smiling young man back to his car, probably hoping for
a date with him. But when the handcuffs were snapped on their wrists with
astonishing speed and they were brutally shoved into the back of the car,
they quickly saw the other side of Bundy. He was cold and calculating with
absolutely no feelings for his victims, they were mere objects to serve his
dreadful purpose. His treatment of the girls he kidnapped, brutally raped
and then murdered was horrific.
Norman Collins is another extreme example of the controlled killer, to all
intents and purposes a normal healthy young man who had no trouble getting
regular dates with the girls of Ann Arbor. Seven brutal murders later in
1970, he sat in court as if carved from stone as the evidence of his
appalling crimes was read out. If anyone had dared to suggest to either of
these two killers that devils or demons were behind their work they would
have been extremely offended.
They enjoyed the power of having their victims completely under their
control, their sexual slaves to abuse and then snuff out when they had
satisfied their lust. This is the type of killer that Markman calls
‘Sociopaths’. They do not kill because they feel threatened but ‘because
they totally lack inner restraints, or conscience, in the first place.
Sociopaths kill when the outer restraints - policeman and other restricting
circumstances - are missing and the death of the victim means removing an
obstacle or enjoying a godlike rush of power over another person’.
The out and out sex maniac is another category. A man who just cannot
satisfy his sexual appetite and has to go out and rape… and then to avoid
capture he murders his victims. This is the type of killer who given
unlimited freedom to indulge his highly charged sexual appetite would
probably not kill again. This category of sex criminal is not like the
controlled killer at all. Generally he has no charm or manners and carries
out his attacks in a brutal haphazard manner. John Duffy, the ‘Railway
Rapist’ of the 1980’s in the London area clearly belongs to this group, a
brute of a man, skilled in martial arts, a wife beater who picked his
victims as opportunity presented them, forced them into brutal sex and only
began murdering his victims when one girl he had raped met him in a social
context later on and almost identified him. He was simply after brutal sex
with different partners, a desire that he could have employed in a brothel
if he had possessed the wealth to do so, the murder was necessary only to
avoid capture.
The fourth type is somewhat rarer than the others: the frustrated little man
whose ego is not strong enough for him to engage in normal social and sexual
activity. John Reginald Christie is the classic example, murdering seven
women so that he could have sexual relations with them, because he was
incapable of doing so while the women were still alive. Joachim Kroll did
exactly the same thing in Germany in the 1960’s and 1970’s, killing his
young female victims because he was too shy to attempt sexual contact with a
living person.
Of course there are other types of serial killers and of course there are
murderers who just can’t be categorized. Revenge, jealousy, love and dozens
of other human emotions or conditions can all power the motivation to commit
murder - even something so simple as ‘not liking Mondays’ can provide the
motive for mass murder as one famous case showed. But it is clear that as
the picture of the serial killer has emerged over the last one hundred
years, we can see that the killers are, in general, very particular types of
animal that usually fall into one of the aforementioned categories.
What also emerges is that the killers of category one, the psychotics driven
by demons and devils, are not sexual murderers in the real sense of the
word. They are savage slayers and mutilators, but they do not kill to
satisfy their physical sexual lust. However the killers of category two,
three and four are most certainly sexual murderers, as they intend to have
sexual contact with their victims, dead or alive. This is perhaps the most
important distinction to be made in the case of Jack the Ripper - and one
that legions of authors, theorists and Ripperologists have blatantly
disregarded for over one hundred years - because as already mentioned Jack
the Ripper had absolutely no sexual contact with any of his victims.
Subsequently, this seems to strongly indicate that he fits into the category
of murderers who felt themselves guided and driven by demon voices, the
psychotic paranoid schizophrenic. Here lies also the importance of the
chapter devoted to the murder and mutilation of Mary Jane Kelly, as often
this type of killer is driven by quasi-religious motivations, like Earl
Leonard Nelson, who was mentioned earlier. He was a serious devotee of the
Bible and it would appear from the mutilations carried out on Mary Jane
Kelly that Jack the Ripper had also studied his Bible. But perhaps it is
still too early to assume that the Ripper belongs to this or that category.
However, at least we have another criterion to apply to our suspects, and
this is helpful because we can safely assume that Jack the Ripper will fall
into one of the categories we have listed above. It will be necessary, to
give us firm ground, to repeat the criteria when we come to examine the
suspects, but before that it is also necessary to reduce the Ripperologists’
pack of suspects down to a manageable level.