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.

jack the ripper Was Jack the Ripper a woman?

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.

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