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  1. Jack the Ripper suspect. Aaron Kosminski (born Aron Mordke Kozmiński; 11 September 1865 – 24 March 1919) was a Polish barber, hairdresser, and suspect in the Jack the Ripper case. Kosminski was a Polish Jew who emigrated from Congress Poland to England in the 1880s. He worked as a hairdresser in Whitechapel in the East End of London, where a ...

    • They Almost Caught Him. Aaron Kosminski was taken to “The Seaside Home,” which is now believed to be a police convalescent home in Brighton used to interrogate suspects.
    • A Jewish Witness Saw His Face. Sir Robert Anderson was the second Assistant Commander of the London Metropolitan Police who helped to investigate the Jack the Ripper case.
    • Kosminski Was Put Into an Insane Asylum. In 1891, Aaron Kosminski was confined to the Colney Hatch Asylum. The five “canonical murders,” officially credited to Jack the Ripper, stopped soon after.
    • Jack the Ripper Had a Foreign Accent. On September 8, 1888, a woman named Elizabeth Long described witnessing one of Jack the Ripper’s victims, Annie Chapman, speaking to a mysterious man shortly before she was murdered.
  2. Apr 26, 2024 · It is now known that the suspect in question was a man named Aaron Mordke Kosminski (1865 - 1919), a Polish-born immigrant, whose father Abram Josef Kozminski was a tailor, an occupation that Aaron's brother, Isaac, would also take up. As far as can be ascertained, Isaac arrived in London at some stage between 1871 and 1873, where he became a ...

  3. Jan 30, 2024 · Aaron Kosminski was born on September 11, 1865, in Kłodawa in Congress Poland, which was at the time a part of the Russian Empire. He was the son of Golda and Abram Józef Kozmiński. Much of his early life is unknown, of course, but records indicate that around 1880 he emigrated from Poland and lived for some time in Germany.

  4. Mar 15, 2019 · Forensic scientists say they have finally fingered the identity of Jack the Ripper, the notorious serial killer who terrorized the streets of London more than a century ago. Genetic tests published this week point to Aaron Kosminski, a 23-year-old Polish barber and a prime police suspect at the time. But critics say the evidence isn't strong ...

  5. Mar 19, 2019 · A stained silk shawl allegedly found near one of the killer's victims was used to link Kosminski, a Polish barber and a prime suspect, to the murders. The DNA evidence was published in a journal, but critics question its reliability and authenticity.

  6. Apr 29, 2022 · He wound up committed to the Leavesden Asylum for the last 25 years of his life, where he died of gangrene, emaciated and alone, in 1919. Almost 150 years later, we still aren't sure who Jack the Ripper was. A prominent suspect with contemporary investigators is Aaron Kosminski.

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