For many years it was believed the Mary Kelly's murder on November 9, 1888, was Jack The Ripper's last murder. This simply is not true. A prostitute named Francis Coles was murdered in Whitechapel in 1891 who is now also thought to be killed by JTR. It is also most likely that Mary Ann 'Polly' Nichols was not the Ripper's first victim. At the very least Martha Tabram, who was found murdered several weeks before Nichols, was the Ripper's also. If this is true than Kelly would have been the Ripper's sixth victim, not the fifth.
jack the ripper made his crimes in whitechapel London
He didn't. Jack The Ripper's crimes continued long after the murder of Mary Jane Kelly on November 9, 1888. Many believe the Ripper was still killing as late as 1891, and possibly after the turn of the 20th century.
In the back alleys.
Jack the Ripper and O.J. Simpson.
He got away with murder. That't it.
Mary Jane Kelly.
She was the 5th believed to have been killed by Jack the ripper. She turned to prostitution when her husband died in an explosion.
Mary Ann Kelly, also known as Mary Jane Kelly, was a victim of the Jack the Ripper murders in 1888. She was found brutally murdered in her room on 9 November 1888 in Whitechapel, London. Her injuries were severe, and her body was extensively mutilated, indicating a violent and gruesome murder. The case remains unsolved, and the identity of Jack the Ripper remains unknown.
James Kelly has recently surfaced as a Ripper suspect. Unfortuneatly, when suspects are investigated for these crimes the person investigating relies on previous inaccuracies which in turn makes for faulty conclusions. James Kelly is one such suspect. Jack The Ripper's crimes did not stop after the murder of Mary Kelly in November 1888, and in all likelyhood Mary Ann Nichols was not the first victim. The detectives that worked the case were well aware of these facts. As time goes on many of these inaccuracies are taken as fact making the truth that much harder to discern.
Answer Jack the Ripper is a nickname for a notorious serial killer who murdered at least five women in London, England in 1888.
McNaughten was Chief Constable of the CID at Scotland Yard. Although he did not hire on until after the murder of Mary Kelly, he felt he knew enough about the case to write a book and how he worked the case. He had some 'interesting' theories on the identity of the killer. He was positive that the Ripper must have killed himself after the Kelly murder, based on what evidence nobody could tell.
31st of August, 1888. It was a Friday.