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Was Jack The Ripper A Woman?

First Posted: 02/15/09 05:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 02:00 PM ET

Dna

This story was first published on May 18, 2006.

The notorious serial killer who stalked London's East End, butchering prostitutes and terrorising the population, may not have been Jack the Ripper - but Jill.

An Australian scientist has used swabs from letters supposedly sent to police by the Ripper to build a partial DNA profile of the killer. The results suggest that the person who murdered and mutilated at least five women from 1888 onwards may have been a woman.

Ian Findlay, a professor of molecular and forensic diagnostics, told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation that he had developed a profiling technique that could extract DNA from a single cell or strand of hair up to 160 years old. Conventional DNA sampling methods require at least 200 cells.

Dr Findlay, who is based in Brisbane, travelled to London, where the evidence from the still-unsolved murders is stored at the National Archive. The material, which was kept by Scotland Yard until 1961, includes letters sent to police at the time, some of them signed "Jack the Ripper". Most are believed to be fakes, but a handful are thought to have been written by the killer.

Dr Findlay took swabs from the back of stamps and from the gum used to seal envelopes, and possible bloodstains. He took his haul back to Brisbane, where - concentrating on swabs from the so-called "Openshaw letter", the one believed most likely to be genuine - he extracted the DNA and then amplified the information to create a profile. The resultswere "inconclusive" and not forensically reliable, but he did construct a partial profile and based on this analysis, he said, "it's possible the Ripper could be female".

The victims were all prostitutes, murdered and mutilated in the foggy alleyways of Whitechapel. By the surgical nature of the wounds, the killer was assumed to have some surgical knowledge.

The chief suspects, who included a barrister, a Polish boot-maker and a Russian confidence trickster, were all men. But Frederick Abberline, the detective who led the investigation, thought it possible the killer was a woman. This was because the fifth victim, Mary Kelly, was "seen" by witnesses hours after she was killed. Abberline thought this was the murderer running away, in Kelly's clothes.

The only female suspect was Mary Pearcey, who was convicted of murdering her lover's wife, Phoebe Hogg, in 1890 and hanged. She apparently employed a similar modus operandi to the Ripper.

Read more from the Independent.

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This story was first published on May 18, 2006. The notorious serial killer who stalked London's East End, butchering prostitutes and terrorising the population, may not have been Jack the Ripper - b...
This story was first published on May 18, 2006. The notorious serial killer who stalked London's East End, butchering prostitutes and terrorising the population, may not have been Jack the Ripper - b...
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12:54 PM on 01/16/2009
I actually did a self-guided tour of the murder sites with my wife & her sister & friend. We actually stood on a couple of the exact spots where victims were found. It was eerie. When it started getting dark out we aborted the tour and went to get some Indian food instead!
12:49 PM on 01/16/2009
It was me.

Shhh, don't tell, or you're next!!!
05:59 AM on 01/16/2009
And naturally, we can expect a forthcoming book that will detail the scientist's elaborate claims. Such a book will no doubt will be worth big bucks to the author. :)
01:44 AM on 01/16/2009
I guess Findley has a 50-50 chance of getting it right!!!

http://eye-on-washington.blogspot.com
12:22 AM on 01/16/2009
Cavalry charges weren't working anymore so a major supplier of swords switched production and patented the first safety razor. A straight edge razor (which requires no replacement blades) was implicated in the series of Ripper murders. Public safety advocates demanded all good men switch to the exclusively patented safety razor. This necessitated frequent purchase of replacement blades bilking the gullible public terrified by penny dreadfuls and made to feel important by the Empire forged in bloody endless wars.
09:48 PM on 01/15/2009
As female serial killers go no-one can beat Countess Elizabeth Bathory
11:15 PM on 01/15/2009
I can't think of any serial killer, male or female, who murdered more people than Elizabeth Bathory. For those who've never heard of this woman, she was a Hungarian countess who killed hundreds of young women so she could both drink their blood and bathe in it. It has even been suggested that she served as the inspiration for Bram Stoker's "Dracula", and that he only used Vlad the Impaler's title (Dracul) because he didn't think his audience would accept a female vampire.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LaurieAnn
Charity is NOT a substitute for justice.
09:46 PM on 01/15/2009
Couldn't we just get down to business and solve the Jon Benet Ramsey case?
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rabiddog6708
This Dog's bite is Worse Than his Bark
09:30 PM on 01/15/2009
This is not a new theory. Some in Scotland Yard suspcted that Saucy Jack may be a midwife.
07:52 PM on 01/17/2009
Correct. It is now "news". It could be better described as "olds".

Have been hearing theories of this sort for decades.
09:15 PM on 01/15/2009
When all else fails....blame a woman.
11:15 PM on 01/15/2009
Naturally! ;-)
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Info08
That's right, I have my eye on you
03:59 AM on 01/16/2009
Well....try not to look at it that way.

Women are rarely considered suspects in multiple murders. Take Genene Jones who posed as a nurse in a children's hospital. She would go on to asphyxiate nearly 40 children before she was finally considered by investigators.

Then there was the multiple murders at a Maryland Hospital between 1984-1985. The killer injected potassium into the iv tubes of 17 intensive care patients, killing them instantly. When the police focused on a female suspect, the DA's office simply refused to believe that a woman would have been guilty of such crimes and set her free.

When investigators wanted to do a follow up, she vanished and the trail to locating her went cold.

Female serial killers have had killing sprees that have lasted as long as 8 years when law enforcement in the past eliminated them as suspects simply because they believed a woman incapable of such crimes.
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Fernando
My Micro-bio is empty? Really?
08:43 PM on 01/15/2009
Gotta hand it to historians, when they have nothing new to talk about they are pretty creative at making stuff up.
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04:43 AM on 01/16/2009
When HISTORIANS have nothing NEW to talk about? Do you have any idea how asinine that comment is?
08:01 PM on 01/15/2009
poppycock
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MountPanic
08:20 PM on 01/15/2009
I was leaning toward "horse hockey" myself.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MountPanic
07:42 PM on 01/15/2009
Someone makes a career with a new theory every few years, but we'll never really know.

William Whithey Gull and Walter Sickert make good stories, even though those theories have been discredited.
07:26 PM on 01/15/2009
Finally that poor maligned Capuchin Monkey can rest in peace.
07:24 PM on 01/15/2009
It was probably Queen Victoria herself. Given that romantic London fog and all the case's notoriety it couldn't have been the usual sort of serial killer - a miserable little psychopathic man that no one had ever heard of. Twas the queen. No doubt.
06:47 PM on 01/15/2009
Pretty obvious that it was Osama Ben Laden added by Saddam