Jack The Ripper Letter ‘could be worth £ 125,000’ after Bombshell DNA Finding ‘Unmasks’ Killer – True Crime

A letter allegedly written about the most important suspect behind the infamous Jack The Ripper murder could now be worth a huge £ 125,000.

Dating Back to 1888, Jack The Ripper is one of the most famous criminal cases in Britain’s history after the killer caused destruction around the slum at the eastern end of London.

With an identity that has been unknown for more than 130 years, the ripper graphically murdered young women who worked as prostitutes.

The suspicion of who the criminal was seen several people thinking of being the man behind the crimes, including a famous French painter and even grandson of Queen Victoria.

Now the identity of Jack The Ripper may have finally been resolved due to progress in DNA and a letter approved by researchers.

Identification of Jack The Ripper

We finally know who Jack The Ripper is? (Getty Stock Images)

We finally know who Jack The Ripper is? (Getty Stock Images)

It all comes from Ripper’s fourth victim: A young woman named Catherine Eddowes, whose body was found dead the same evening as colleague -victim Elizabeth Stride.

Police who investigated Eddowes’ murder scene on September 30 came across a shawl. Taken home by one of the police officers on the spot, it would later be auctioned and purchased by Russell Edwards.

Edwards put the clothes through DNA tests that found blood and sperm stains on the shawl, with the blood matching a descendant of Eddowes.

And according to to The mirror, Edwards says the sperm stains were a DNA fight for a distant relative of one of the most prominent ripper -suspect, a Polish hairdresser and hairdresser called Aaron Kosminski.

The £ 125 letter allegedly by Jack The Ripper

Was Ripper a hairdresser named Aaron Kosminski? (Getty Stock Images)

Was Ripper a hairdresser named Aaron Kosminski? (Getty Stock Images)

Reportedly found in an ancient book in Australia during a stock of the University of Melbourne’s Ministry of theology, it potentially points the 14-line letter’s identity.

To suggest that Ripper is actually Kosminski, the letter refers to the Polish native who attacks a woman with scissors less than a year after the murders in the Whitechapel area in London.

Sent by a Pastor William Patrick Dott in 1889, a line in the letter is what convinces people that Ripper is Kosminski.

“It is a wonder that he has not hung after what he did with the poor,” the letter writes in a apparent reference to the murders.

Tim Atkinson has since purchased the letter at the auction site, and worked with experts at Liverpool University examined the forensic letter using a video spectral comparator or VSC.

This type of technology uses digital imaging, light sources and filters to examine documents to spot details that the human eye cannot see, or even changes in the original text. In the case of the letter from Dott, it was the right thing without changes.

A computer -generated image of Aaron Kosminski (Russell Edwards)

A computer -generated image of Aaron Kosminski (Russell Edwards)

Atkinson has since said that his letter has a six figure assessment, but that he has no interest in paying.

“I saw it on eBay and thought I would take a point on it, and now I got it approved and it came back as positive,” said Atkinson.

“That’s the most important letter that emerges. It proves that cosminksi were around and could be the killer.

“It may be worth up to £ 125,000, but I’m not a money man.”

Jeff Leahy, a documentary manufacturer in the Ripper cases, added: “For the first time we have a connection to Aaron Kosminski being mad and violent, and to the Jack The Ripper murder.”

So is Aaron Kosminski really jack the ripper?

The author of the latter, Pastor Dott, sent the letter a year after the ripper murder.

At that time he was attached to All Hallows Church in the Barking area of ​​eastern London.

Obviously, it remains incredibly difficult to directly pin this on Kosminski. The man died a long time ago after dying in an asylum in 1919. Right now, however, it is the closest we have to solve the famous cold case.