After 137 years, Jack the Ripper has FINALLY been caught… Probably.

After 137 years, Jack the Ripper has FINALLY been caught… Probably.

In 1888, London awoke to a darkness that never slumbered again. The damp streets of Whitechapel became a labyrinth of fear, where an invisible killer stalked through the squalor, choosing his victims with a precision that took the city decades to comprehend. For over a century, Jack the Ripper was a myth, a phantom, a name that concealed more than it revealed. But now, 137 years later, new research challenges the official narratives and points to a real face, a man made of flesh, poverty, and mental breakdown: Aaron Kosminski. This video does not glorify the killer. It does not turn him into a legend. It strips him of his mystery to return the story to those forgotten beneath his knife. Immerse yourself in a raw and rigorous reconstruction, where modern science confronts archives corroded by time, where an entire neighborhood reveals more clues than any macabre letter, and where every alleyway is a witness that still breathes. Bibliographic References Begg, Paul. Jack the Ripper: The Definitive History. Pearson Education, 2005. Evans, Stewart P., and Keith Skinner. The Ultimate Jack the Ripper Sourcebook. Constable & Robinson, 2000. Marriott, Trevor. Jack the Ripper: The 21st Century Investigation. John Blake Publishing, 2007. Wilson, David. A History of British Serial Killing. Sphere, 2023. Rumbelow, Donald. The Complete Jack the Ripper. Penguin Books, 2013. Fido, Martin. The Crimes, Detection and Death of Jack the Ripper. Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1987. Edwards, Russell. Naming Jack the Ripper. Blue Door Publishing, 2014. Sugden, Philip. The Complete History of Jack the Ripper. Carroll & Graf Publishers, 2002. Walks, John. Casebook: Jack the Ripper Archives. (Collection of Victorian Police Records). Metropolitan Police Service Reports, National Archives, UK (MEPO 3/140; MEPO 3/141). Lahelma, Jari, et al. “Genetic Analysis of Historical Crime Scene Evidence.” Journal of Forensic Sciences, 2014. Whitechapel Workhouse Records, 1880–1895. London Metropolitan Archives.