Working title of my next article revealed!

Jack the Ripper, Other serial killers 5 Comments »

Not to be a tease, but my next article looks like it already has a print destination. That’s a relief because it gives me a deadline and a reason to get crackin’ on the writing of the thing.

This piece will be much longer than my Mary Kelly piece in Ripper Notes #28. It will also be more in my main line of research into Ripper studies. Which means, yes, it will be a comparative study between Jack and some other serial killer.

I can’t and won’t reveal too much just yet; I’m in the middle of writing the piece and it’s all a bit early to be revealing too much. So I won’t yet reveal who I’ll be comparing Jack to.

But I will reveal, at this time, the working title of my next article (though I’m withholding the giveaway subtitle). Consider it a taste-test to stir up interest. And of course, the title may change between now at the time it sees print; I may find a more suitable title later in composition, or during the editing process with my editor.

But for now, here it is, not to be taken overly-literally: BROTHERS BY BLOOD!

Keep in touch, folks!

First-person sources

Jack the Ripper, Other serial killers 6 Comments »

It’s no secret that I’m working on more articles on the Jack the Ripper crimes. I hesistate to spill the beans on the results of my latest research before the essay is finished and accepted for publication, but I am too excited not to say anything.

I just landed an exciting one-on-one interview with a first-person source for my next article. If all goes as planned, not only will the insights gained be beneficial to my article, but the interview itself will become a sidebar article which ought to be of considerable interest.

I won’t say just now who the interview is with, but I will tease this much: the focus of my next article is a comparative study between Dennis Rader of the BTK murders, and Jack the Ripper. My source will be an eye-popper, I promise.

Stay tuned!

The pitfalls of Ripperology

Other serial killers No Comments »

While researching my next article, I came across this insightful quote. It comes from Wichita homicide investigator Ken Landwehr, the man who headed up the effort to capture the BTK Strangler, and who ultimately succeeded. It’s no easy task solving any murder, but serial murder is perhaps the hardest of all to solve. So when someone like that offers advice, it’s usually worth one’s time to listen to him. While he is speaking to a fellow detective on how to approach solving the BTK case, I believe his insights can be applied, usefully, to Ripperology as well.

“Here’s where detectives get themselves lost,” Landwehr told Relph the day they first talked about BTK. “They get lost on some guy’s story. A guy looks good as a suspect; if you have maybe twelve criteria for being the right guy for a crime, and this guy meets ten of the twelve, then he’s looking good. And so the detective gets enthralled, chases his story - and goes off on a tangent, a wild goose chase. Because if the guy’s DNA doesn’t match the DNA from the crime, it’s not him. And then you have to drop him like a rock.”

Relph began to apply this advice while reading about BTK and working on other cases.

“How do you not get lost in all these thousands of pages of evidence,?” Relph asked.

“Don’t try to get into all that peripheral evidence,” Landwehr said. “Just read the actual case files. Focus on the essentials.”

(Wenzel, Potter, Kelly and Laviana, “Bind, Torture, Kill: The Inside Story of the Serial Killer Next Door,” HarperCollins, p. 145, 2007.)

Although DNA is not a useful reference in the Ripper killings, the rest of Landwehr’s insights could help dispense with a lot of wasted effort in the field of Ripperology, I believe. How often to authors and researchers get so caught up in the story of a suspect, they begin to ignore the evidence in the Ripper crimes that does not support the conclusion that their pet suspect was the Ripper? More often than most of us would like to believe; it’s a common mistake of most suspect-oriented books in this field.

Also, many Ripper researchers similarly fall into the other pitfall Landwehr warns against: obsessing over the peripheral evidence. It’s often hard to know what peripheral evidence is relevant and what peripheral evidence is not, but it can serve as a great distraction. The best way to approach the Ripper case, then, is to stay focused on the essentials and the case files (such as they survive to this day.)

Good advice from a fellow who actually led a successful effort to capture a serial who nearly got away with it, like our man Jack did. Words we in the field of Ripperology might all do well to heed in our own research and writing.

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