| *'''Danny Wallace:''' ''London, the 1st of September 1888. A woman's body is laid out on a slab at the Old Montague Street mortuary. A young man has come to identify the body through his tears. It is his mother, who was found lying dead in the middle of the night two days earlier on the cobbled streets of {{Wiki|Durward Street|Buck's Row}}, one of the seedy, reeking passages around Whitechapel. Her killer strangled her, then, in a fit of striking brutality, slit her throat right down to her vertebrae, before slicing deeply into her stomach. At any other time, the murdered woman, a homeless [[Courtesan|prostitute]], would have had no more than half a column in the tabloids before decomposing away to general indifference. The case would have been quickly closed. [[Mary Ann Nichols]], though, would not be soon forgotten. She will be forever remembered as the first victim of Jack the Ripper. The murderer, a nightmare for Victorian England, remains the most famous serial killer in history, more than 130 years after his crimes. Jack the Ripper, though, is a faceless killer. Despite the ''countless'' legends he's inspired, the mystery of his identity has never been solved.<br><br>You're listening to ''Echoes of History: Behind the Legends'', the podcast that tells you the true stories of some of history's most legendary heroes. As the ''Assassin's Creed'' franchise turns 15, travel back through 2,500 years of history to meet the men and women whose destiny lead them to greatness. Uncover their stories and bring their legends back to life. Episode three, Jack the Ripper.<br><br>At the end of the 19th century, London was leading the world. The capital city of the [[British Empire|empire]] on which the sun never sets dominated the global economy. Its 4 million inhabitants made it the most populous city on the planet. To the west, in affluent neighborhoods like [[Piccadilly Circus]], the ruling classes flaunted their wealth. The east end, however, was at the opposite end of the spectrum, where slums were rife with those the prosperous Empire refused to touch. Unemployed, prostitutes, young criminals, and penniless immigrants, all of whom survived amid the utter indifference of high society. Their misery blended into the thick, polluted London fog. It took a series of sordid murders, including that of poor Mary Ann Nichols, for the light to shine all the way down here.<br><br>From Buck's Row, where the first body was found, {{Wiki|Hanbury Street}} is just a few minute's walk away. [[Annie Chapman]], 48, was one of the regular faces wandering this poorly-lit street as soon as night fell. For a few {{Wiki|Penny (British pre-decimal coin)|pence}}, the price of a {{Wiki|Client (prostitution)|trick}}, she could treat herself to a warm potato or spend the night in a pauper's shelter. On the 8th of September 1888, her lifeless body was found at dawn by a local resident at Number 29 Hanbury Street, lying in the backyard of a shabby back of flats. Like the first victim, her throat had been cut and she'd been viciously mutilated. The killer took his sadism further, this time, though. Not satisfied with taking her intestines, he also removed her vagina, uterus, and bladder. [[Metropolitan Police Service|Scotland Yard]] assigned several of its [[Police|officers]] to the area, but the investigation led nowhere. Thousands of women, each in the same state of destitution, continued to sell their bodies in the streets of Whitechapel without a care in the world. Their nonchalance was fostered by the fact that the killer disappeared for almost three weeks...until night fell on the 29th of September, when he resurfaced. Twice. The first body, belonging to 45-year-old [[Elizabeth Stride]], was found in Berner Street a little after midnight. As a poor working girl, she was often seen in and around that street. Her throat was slit, but she was not mutilated; the killer must have been interrupted during his merciless ritual. Another body was then found less than an hour later, but this time, the killer seems to have taken his time to complete his frenzied attack. The face of [[Catherine Eddowes]], a 45-year-old, drunkard, had been entirely slashed open. Her throat was cut, she was disemboweled, and her intestines were placed next to her body. The pathologist even reported that a kidney was missing. This time, Scotland Yard was on the warpath. Hundreds of police officers swarmed over the two crime scenes and patrolled tirelessly around Whitechapel, looking for even the slightest clue. Catherine Eddowes' murder was particularly intriguing: it took place in [[Mitre Square]], a little open area just a few streets away from [[City of London|the City]]. How could the killer have committed such an atrocity in such a highly-frequented area with nobody noticing a thing?<br><br>The police chief, Sir {{Wiki|Charles Warren}}, was determined to arrest the bloodthirsty madman who had evaded capture for almost a month. He was further irritate by the fact that the killer was openly mocking the police. In {{Wiki|Dear Boss letter|a letter}} sent on the 25th of September 1888, the murderer boasted the following in red ink: ''"I am down on whores and I shant quit ripping them till I do get buckled."''<br><br>He signed it "Jack the Ripper". The {{Wiki|Central News Agency (London)|daily news}} decided to publish the letter in its first October issue, and Scotland Yard stuck up hundreds of copies around London, in the hope that someone would recognize the killer's handwriting. But, rather than helping the investigation, the posters created mass hysteria. Anxiety spread, fueled by questions that were left without answers. Who was this uncatchable criminal, flitting around with ghostly silence? Was he a [[doctor]]? A butcher? Or a vengeful spirit, come to punish women for walking the wrong path? When would he strike again? At least now, the mystery had a name: Jack the Ripper. The legend was born.<br><br>All available police resources were put on the case to unmask the serial killer. [[Raid]]s were organized in hovels and shelters, thousands of people were interrogated, with their whereabouts and alibis double-checked whenever there was the ''slightest'' doubt. But the investigation made no headway. Sir Charles Warren resigned on the 10th of November, his hand forced by {{Wiki|Henry Matthews, 1st Viscount Llandaff|his Minister}}. The night before, a fifth body had been found. After more than a month of inaction, Jack the Ripper had struck again at the very heart of Whitechapel. The tortured body of [[Mary Kelly|Mary Jane Kelly]], a 23-year-old prostitute, was found at her home, a cramped room at 13 {{Wiki|Dorset Street (Spitalfields)|Miller's Court}}. The autopsy report was not for the faint-hearted. Deep lacerations had disfigured her, she'd been disemboweled, and her breasts had been cut off. Worse still, her organs had been scattered around the room. The police and the forensic pathologists were more determined than ever. More than 80 suspects were arrested, but they were all released again due to lack of evidence. As the investigation ground to a halt, the general public expressed a pressing desire to help "solve" the mystery; every {{Wiki|Tom, Dick and Harry}} had their own theory. For those living in affluent neighborhoods, the Ripper must've come from the slums he was torturing, as depravity leads to depravity! Jack was therefore thought to be a travelling seaman, an [[alcohol]]ic laborer, a butcher, or a {{Wiki|knacker}}. A ''fine'' example of the hypocritical nature of [[Puritans|Puritanism]] in Victorian high society was the fact that most of these prostitutes' customers were known to come over from the well-to-do neighborhoods in the west end. For the poor, Jack bore the face of an aristocrat. A bipolar ''bourgeois'', he'd bleed his prim and proper during the day, and satisfy his murderous impulses at night, just like {{Wiki|Robert Louis Stevenson|Stevenson}}'s {{Wiki|Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (character)|Dr. Jekyll}}, who'd {{Wiki|Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde|emerged}} just two years before the murders. This hypothesis was supported by descriptions of the killer, albeit approximate, given by some witnesses. The fleeting figure they described was one of an elegant man from a ''chique'' area, wearing a top hat and a [[leather]] jacket, and finished off with a [[cape]].<br><br>Despite the description, time continued to pass in London, and the mystery deepened. In 1892, Scotland Yard admitted defeat. Four years of investigations had led nowhere useful, and no further victims had been found. Had Jack the Ripper committed suicide? Was he a foreigner who moved on? With the case closed, these questions would never be answered. But the legend lived on. Although Scotland Yard's case would remain forever unsolved, self-proclaimed investigators—some rather dishonest—regularly claimed to have "finally" solved the mystery. The end result is ''long'' list of suspects covering no less than 333 names, including celebrities such as ''{{Wiki|Alice's Adventures in Wonderland|Alice in Wonderland}}'' author [[Lewis Carroll]] and even {{Wiki|Richard Mansfield}}, the actor who played Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde at the theater.<br><br>One of the ''wildest'' theories was that put forward by Dr. {{Wiki|Thomas E. A. Stowell|Thomas Stowell}} in 1970. Despite having ''zero'' evidence, he claimed that the Whitechapel murderer was a member of the upper echelons of English aristocracy, suffering with {{Wiki|syphilis}} and madness. He claimed that the killer was committed to an asylum by his family in an attempt to protect him from the police after the first four murders, before he escaped to kill Mary Jane Kelly, the final victim. Although he did not give a name, Stowell insinuated that it was the {{Wiki|Prince Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence and Avondale|Duke of Clarence}}, an heir to the throne who died young in 1892, aged just 28 and for whom the rumor mill had already been running unfounded for a while. But this accusation was quickly refuted, as the young Duke was not in London at the time of the murders. Stowell agreed to withdraw his accusation and publicly apologized in a letter to ''{{Wiki|The Times}}'' on the 5th of November 1970. The paper published his letter four days later, but, in an incredible twist of fate, Stowell died the night before. This coincidence ensured that his speculation lived on in the minds of conspiracy theorists; some even openly claimed he was silenced.<br><br>More recently, on the 6th of September 2014,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2746321/Jack-Ripper-unmasked-How-amateur-sleuth-used-DNA-breakthrough-identify-Britains-notorious-criminal-126-years-string-terrible-murders.html|title=Jack the Ripper identified by amateur sleuth as Aaron Kosminski|author=Edwards, Russell|date=6 September 2014|publisher=''Daily Mail''|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140907010815/https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2746321/Jack-Ripper-unmasked-How-amateur-sleuth-used-DNA-breakthrough-identify-Britains-notorious-criminal-126-years-string-terrible-murders.html|archivedate=7 September 2014|accessdate=15 January 2024}}</ref> the ''{{Wiki|Daily Mail}}'' stated it had a world exclusive to reveal Jack the Ripper's true identity. It all started with Russell Edwards, a rich property developer who acquired a shawl said to have belonged to Catherine Eddowes, the fourth victim, at an auction.<ref name="ScienceBlog">{{Cite web|url=https://www.science.org/content/article/does-new-genetic-analysis-finally-reveal-identity-jack-ripper|title=Does a new genetic analysis finally reveal the identity of Jack the Ripper?|author=Adam, David|date=15 March 2019|publisher=''{{Wiki|Science (journal)|Science}}''|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20211020161554/https://www.science.org/content/article/does-new-genetic-analysis-finally-reveal-identity-jack-ripper|archivedate=20 October 2021|accessdate=15 January 2024}}</ref> Edwards had it examined by a molecular biology expert, who found traces of semen on the fabric.<ref>Louhelainen, Jari; Miller, David (12 March 2019). "Forensic Investigation of a Shawl Linked to the "Jack the Ripper" Murders". ''{{Wiki|Journal of Forensic Sciences}}''. '''65''' (1): 295–303. {{Wiki|Digital object identifier|DOI}}: https://doi.org/10.1111/1556-4029.14038. Retrieved on 15 January 2024</ref> The recovered DNA was then compared to that of one of the suspects, taken from a distant descendant. This analysis purportedly revealed that Jack the Ripper was none other than {{Wiki|Aaron Kosminski}}, a young [[Poland|Polish]]-[[Judaism|Jewish]] barber who lived in Whitechapel. The news caused a huge commotion, until {{Wiki|Alec Jeffreys|famous}} {{Wiki|Innsbruck Medical University|genetic researchers}} lambasted the method used by their colleague.<ref name="ScienceBlog"/><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/has-jack-the-rippers-identity-really-been-revealed-using-dna-evidence-9717036.html|title=Has Jack the Ripper's identity really been revealed using DNA evidence?|author=Connor, Steve|date=7 September 2014|publisher=''{{Wiki|The Independent}}''|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140907202144/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/has-jack-the-rippers-identity-really-been-revealed-using-dna-evidence-9717036.html|archivedate=7 September 2014|accessdate=15 January 2024}}</ref> Jack the Ripper specialists, known as "Ripperologists" since the 1970s, have also been debating another point: the killer's confession letter. The most serious of them claim that it was fake, invented by one Fredrick Best, a journalist at ''The Star''. This would make Jack the Ripper a pure fabrication, the best ever created to boost newspaper sales. Whether true or false, ''The Star'' saw its sales ''multiply'', ten-fold to reach 200,000 issues daily thanks to this series of crimes. Even today, Jack the Ripper is good for business. As a true modern legend, the serial killer has been a source of inspiration for literature and cinema, musicals, and of course, Halloween costumes; each new piece offers its own interpretation of his legend. In the game ''[[Assassin's Creed: Syndicate]]'', Jack the Ripper is reinvented as a prince of crime in London. The game's [[Evie Frye|heroine]] stalks him tirelessly, ultimately [[Live by the Creed, Die by the Creed|killing him]]. Whether as part of a game or a wild theory, the quest to determine Jack the Ripper's identity continues to fascinate the masses. It's as if we absolutely ''need'' to put a name to these crimes in order to lay his ghost to rest. Do we really want to solve the case? Because in order for the legend to persist, we need to believe that Jack the Ripper could've been anyone. Thanks for listening to ''Echoes of History: Behind the Legends'', a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media.'' | | *'''Danny Wallace:''' ''London, the 1st of September 1888. A woman's body is laid out on a slab at the Old Montague Street mortuary. A young man has come to identify the body through his tears. It is his mother, who was found lying dead in the middle of the night two days earlier on the cobbled streets of {{Wiki|Durward Street|Buck's Row}}, one of the seedy, reeking passages around Whitechapel. Her killer strangled her, then, in a fit of striking brutality, slit her throat right down to her vertebrae, before slicing deeply into her stomach. At any other time, the murdered woman, a homeless [[Courtesan|prostitute]], would have had no more than half a column in the tabloids before decomposing away to general indifference. The case would have been quickly closed. [[Mary Ann Nichols]], though, would not be soon forgotten. She will be forever remembered as the first victim of Jack the Ripper. The murderer, a nightmare for Victorian England, remains the most famous serial killer in history, more than 130 years after his crimes. Jack the Ripper, though, is a faceless killer. Despite the ''countless'' legends he's inspired, the mystery of his identity has never been solved.<br><br>You're listening to ''Echoes of History: Behind the Legends'', the podcast that tells you the true stories of some of history's most legendary heroes. As the ''Assassin's Creed'' franchise turns 15, travel back through 2,500 years of history to meet the men and women whose destiny lead them to greatness. Uncover their stories and bring their legends back to life. Episode three, Jack the Ripper.<br><br>At the end of the 19th century, London was leading the world. The capital city of the [[British Empire|empire]] on which the sun never sets dominated the global economy. Its 4 million inhabitants made it the most populous city on the planet. To the west, in affluent neighborhoods like [[Piccadilly Circus]], the ruling classes flaunted their wealth. The east end, however, was at the opposite end of the spectrum, where slums were rife with those the prosperous Empire refused to touch. Unemployed, prostitutes, young criminals, and penniless immigrants, all of whom survived amid the utter indifference of high society. Their misery blended into the thick, polluted London fog. It took a series of sordid murders, including that of poor Mary Ann Nichols, for the light to shine all the way down here.<br><br>From Buck's Row, where the first body was found, {{Wiki|Hanbury Street}} is just a few minute's walk away. [[Annie Chapman]], 48, was one of the regular faces wandering this poorly-lit street as soon as night fell. For a few {{Wiki|Penny (British pre-decimal coin)|pence}}, the price of a {{Wiki|Client (prostitution)|trick}}, she could treat herself to a warm potato or spend the night in a pauper's shelter. On the 8th of September 1888, her lifeless body was found at dawn by a local resident at Number 29 Hanbury Street, lying in the backyard of a shabby back of flats. Like the first victim, her throat had been cut and she'd been viciously mutilated. The killer took his sadism further, this time, though. Not satisfied with taking her intestines, he also removed her vagina, uterus, and bladder. [[Metropolitan Police Service|Scotland Yard]] assigned several of its [[Police|officers]] to the area, but the investigation led nowhere. Thousands of women, each in the same state of destitution, continued to sell their bodies in the streets of Whitechapel without a care in the world. Their nonchalance was fostered by the fact that the killer disappeared for almost three weeks...until night fell on the 29th of September, when he resurfaced. Twice. The first body, belonging to 45-year-old [[Elizabeth Stride]], was found in Berner Street a little after midnight. As a poor working girl, she was often seen in and around that street. Her throat was slit, but she was not mutilated; the killer must have been interrupted during his merciless ritual. Another body was then found less than an hour later, but this time, the killer seems to have taken his time to complete his frenzied attack. The face of [[Catherine Eddowes]], a 45-year-old, drunkard, had been entirely slashed open. Her throat was cut, she was disemboweled, and her intestines were placed next to her body. The pathologist even reported that a kidney was missing. This time, Scotland Yard was on the warpath. Hundreds of police officers swarmed over the two crime scenes and patrolled tirelessly around Whitechapel, looking for even the slightest clue. Catherine Eddowes' murder was particularly intriguing: it took place in [[Mitre Square]], a little open area just a few streets away from [[City of London|the City]]. How could the killer have committed such an atrocity in such a highly-frequented area with nobody noticing a thing?<br><br>The police chief, Sir {{Wiki|Charles Warren}}, was determined to arrest the bloodthirsty madman who had evaded capture for almost a month. He was further irritate by the fact that the killer was openly mocking the police. In {{Wiki|Dear Boss letter|a letter}} sent on the 25th of September 1888, the murderer boasted the following in red ink: ''"I am down on whores and I shant quit ripping them till I do get buckled."''<br><br>He signed it "Jack the Ripper". The {{Wiki|Central News Agency (London)|daily news}} decided to publish the letter in its first October issue, and Scotland Yard stuck up hundreds of copies around London, in the hope that someone would recognize the killer's handwriting. But, rather than helping the investigation, the posters created mass hysteria. Anxiety spread, fueled by questions that were left without answers. Who was this uncatchable criminal, flitting around with ghostly silence? Was he a [[doctor]]? A butcher? Or a vengeful spirit, come to punish women for walking the wrong path? When would he strike again? At least now, the mystery had a name: Jack the Ripper. The legend was born.<br><br>All available police resources were put on the case to unmask the serial killer. [[Raid]]s were organized in hovels and shelters, thousands of people were interrogated, with their whereabouts and alibis double-checked whenever there was the ''slightest'' doubt. But the investigation made no headway. Sir Charles Warren resigned on the 10th of November, his hand forced by {{Wiki|Henry Matthews, 1st Viscount Llandaff|his Minister}}. The night before, a fifth body had been found. After more than a month of inaction, Jack the Ripper had struck again at the very heart of Whitechapel. The tortured body of [[Mary Jane Kelly]], a 23-year-old prostitute, was found at her home, a cramped room at 13 {{Wiki|Dorset Street (Spitalfields)|Miller's Court}}. The autopsy report was not for the faint-hearted. Deep lacerations had disfigured her, she'd been disemboweled, and her breasts had been cut off. Worse still, her organs had been scattered around the room. The police and the forensic pathologists were more determined than ever. More than 80 suspects were arrested, but they were all released again due to lack of evidence. As the investigation ground to a halt, the general public expressed a pressing desire to help "solve" the mystery; every {{Wiki|Tom, Dick and Harry}} had their own theory. For those living in affluent neighborhoods, the Ripper must've come from the slums he was torturing, as depravity leads to depravity! Jack was therefore thought to be a travelling seaman, an [[alcohol]]ic laborer, a butcher, or a {{Wiki|knacker}}. A ''fine'' example of the hypocritical nature of [[Puritans|Puritanism]] in Victorian high society was the fact that most of these prostitutes' customers were known to come over from the well-to-do neighborhoods in the west end. For the poor, Jack bore the face of an aristocrat. A bipolar ''bourgeois'', he'd bleed his prim and proper during the day, and satisfy his murderous impulses at night, just like {{Wiki|Robert Louis Stevenson|Stevenson}}'s {{Wiki|Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (character)|Dr. Jekyll}}, who'd {{Wiki|Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde|emerged}} just two years before the murders. This hypothesis was supported by descriptions of the killer, albeit approximate, given by some witnesses. The fleeting figure they described was one of an elegant man from a ''chique'' area, wearing a top hat and a [[leather]] jacket, and finished off with a [[cape]].<br><br>Despite the description, time continued to pass in London, and the mystery deepened. In 1892, Scotland Yard admitted defeat. Four years of investigations had led nowhere useful, and no further victims had been found. Had Jack the Ripper committed suicide? Was he a foreigner who moved on? With the case closed, these questions would never be answered. But the legend lived on. Although Scotland Yard's case would remain forever unsolved, self-proclaimed investigators—some rather dishonest—regularly claimed to have "finally" solved the mystery. The end result is ''long'' list of suspects covering no less than 333 names, including celebrities such as ''{{Wiki|Alice's Adventures in Wonderland|Alice in Wonderland}}'' author [[Lewis Carroll]] and even {{Wiki|Richard Mansfield}}, the actor who played Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde at the theater.<br><br>One of the ''wildest'' theories was that put forward by Dr. {{Wiki|Thomas E. A. Stowell|Thomas Stowell}} in 1970. Despite having ''zero'' evidence, he claimed that the Whitechapel murderer was a member of the upper echelons of English aristocracy, suffering with {{Wiki|syphilis}} and madness. He claimed that the killer was committed to an asylum by his family in an attempt to protect him from the police after the first four murders, before he escaped to kill Mary Jane Kelly, the final victim. Although he did not give a name, Stowell insinuated that it was the {{Wiki|Prince Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence and Avondale|Duke of Clarence}}, an heir to the throne who died young in 1892, aged just 28 and for whom the rumor mill had already been running unfounded for a while. But this accusation was quickly refuted, as the young Duke was not in London at the time of the murders. Stowell agreed to withdraw his accusation and publicly apologized in a letter to ''{{Wiki|The Times}}'' on the 5th of November 1970. The paper published his letter four days later, but, in an incredible twist of fate, Stowell died the night before. This coincidence ensured that his speculation lived on in the minds of conspiracy theorists; some even openly claimed he was silenced.<br><br>More recently, on the 6th of September 2014,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2746321/Jack-Ripper-unmasked-How-amateur-sleuth-used-DNA-breakthrough-identify-Britains-notorious-criminal-126-years-string-terrible-murders.html|title=Jack the Ripper identified by amateur sleuth as Aaron Kosminski|author=Edwards, Russell|date=6 September 2014|publisher=''Daily Mail''|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140907010815/https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2746321/Jack-Ripper-unmasked-How-amateur-sleuth-used-DNA-breakthrough-identify-Britains-notorious-criminal-126-years-string-terrible-murders.html|archivedate=7 September 2014|accessdate=15 January 2024}}</ref> the ''{{Wiki|Daily Mail}}'' stated it had a world exclusive to reveal Jack the Ripper's true identity. It all started with Russell Edwards, a rich property developer who acquired a shawl said to have belonged to Catherine Eddowes, the fourth victim, at an auction.<ref name="ScienceBlog">{{Cite web|url=https://www.science.org/content/article/does-new-genetic-analysis-finally-reveal-identity-jack-ripper|title=Does a new genetic analysis finally reveal the identity of Jack the Ripper?|author=Adam, David|date=15 March 2019|publisher=''{{Wiki|Science (journal)|Science}}''|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20211020161554/https://www.science.org/content/article/does-new-genetic-analysis-finally-reveal-identity-jack-ripper|archivedate=20 October 2021|accessdate=15 January 2024}}</ref> Edwards had it examined by a molecular biology expert, who found traces of semen on the fabric.<ref>Louhelainen, Jari; Miller, David (12 March 2019). "Forensic Investigation of a Shawl Linked to the "Jack the Ripper" Murders". ''{{Wiki|Journal of Forensic Sciences}}''. '''65''' (1): 295–303. {{Wiki|Digital object identifier|DOI}}: https://doi.org/10.1111/1556-4029.14038. Retrieved on 15 January 2024</ref> The recovered DNA was then compared to that of one of the suspects, taken from a distant descendant. This analysis purportedly revealed that Jack the Ripper was none other than {{Wiki|Aaron Kosminski}}, a young [[Poland|Polish]]-[[Judaism|Jewish]] barber who lived in Whitechapel. The news caused a huge commotion, until {{Wiki|Alec Jeffreys|famous}} {{Wiki|Innsbruck Medical University|genetic researchers}} lambasted the method used by their colleague.<ref name="ScienceBlog"/><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/has-jack-the-rippers-identity-really-been-revealed-using-dna-evidence-9717036.html|title=Has Jack the Ripper's identity really been revealed using DNA evidence?|author=Connor, Steve|date=7 September 2014|publisher=''{{Wiki|The Independent}}''|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140907202144/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/has-jack-the-rippers-identity-really-been-revealed-using-dna-evidence-9717036.html|archivedate=7 September 2014|accessdate=15 January 2024}}</ref> Jack the Ripper specialists, known as "Ripperologists" since the 1970s, have also been debating another point: the killer's confession letter. The most serious of them claim that it was fake, invented by one Fredrick Best, a journalist at ''The Star''. This would make Jack the Ripper a pure fabrication, the best ever created to boost newspaper sales. Whether true or false, ''The Star'' saw its sales ''multiply'', ten-fold to reach 200,000 issues daily thanks to this series of crimes. Even today, Jack the Ripper is good for business. As a true modern legend, the serial killer has been a source of inspiration for literature and cinema, musicals, and of course, Halloween costumes; each new piece offers its own interpretation of his legend. In the game ''[[Assassin's Creed: Syndicate]]'', Jack the Ripper is reinvented as a prince of crime in London. The game's [[Evie Frye|heroine]] stalks him tirelessly, ultimately [[Live by the Creed, Die by the Creed|killing him]]. Whether as part of a game or a wild theory, the quest to determine Jack the Ripper's identity continues to fascinate the masses. It's as if we absolutely ''need'' to put a name to these crimes in order to lay his ghost to rest. Do we really want to solve the case? Because in order for the legend to persist, we need to believe that Jack the Ripper could've been anyone. Thanks for listening to ''Echoes of History: Behind the Legends'', a Ubisoft podcast produced by Paradiso Media.'' |