In Feedback's true crime exclusive, we look into calls for a fresh inquest into the murder of Catherine Eddowes in the 19th ...
We might finally know the identity of the notorious killer, Jack the Ripper, and we might even have a DNA result for ...
‘Jack The Ripper’ revelations come back from the dead and the media keep forgetting.
The infamous letter written by Jack the Ripper in which he mocked police in London trying to identify him has resurfaced ...
Watch the full special episode of “Banfield” where historian Russell Edwards discusses his claim of identifying Jack the Ripper as Aaron Kosminski through DNA evidence linked to a shawl found at one ...
It's a mystery that has remained in public discourse for 130 years, and it seems we may finally have a breakthrough.
“For the first time in history, Jack the Ripper can be identified as Hyam Hyams, using distinctive physical characteristics,” Horton told “Banfield.” Horton is a descendant of one of the police ...
With this breakthrough, they then sought out a descendant of the Kosminski family to determine whether Aaron Kosminski was, indeed, Jack the Ripper, whose DNA material was also found on the shawl.
The killings we attribute to Jack The Ripper were actually part of a larger context of casual slaughter within London’s East End in 1888. Together, these crimes are known as the Whitechapel Murders, ...