DECADES OF MYSTERY

Jack the Ripper’s identity ‘revealed’ as £240 note on eBay gives hope Britain’s most famous cold case is finally solved

A scientist used a cutting-edge gadget to prove the authenticity of the note

JACK the Ripper's identity may have been revealed by a £240 note on eBay - giving hope of finally solving Britain's most famous cold case.

A letter found in an old book in Australia talks about Aaron Kosminski, one of the prime suspects in the east London murders.

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Jack the Ripper's identity may have been revealed by a £240 note on eBayCredit: Getty
Mementos from a police officer who worked on the infamous case are being soldCredit: Whitton & Laing/BNPS
A photograph of an early suspect, Michael OstrogCredit: Whitton & Laing/BNPS
Inspector Joseph Henry Helson kept the snaps of OstrogCredit: Whitton & Laing/BNPS

The 14-line letter from 1889 appears to claim Kosminski had attacked a woman with scissors less than a year after the killings.

Reverend William Patrick Dott said Kosminski had ran screaming at a woman named Mary in the East End.

Dott added: "It's a wonder he hasn't hung for what he did to those poor girls."

The letter also mentions a "Tilly", who could be Kosminski's sister Matila.

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Dott was a priest at All Hallows church in Barking, east London when he wrote the letter.

It comes as mementos from a police officer who worked on the infamous case are being sold by his great grandson for £10,000.

Inspector Joseph Henry Helson was at the Metropolitan Police when the serial killer murdered five women in Whitechapel in 1888.

He kept hold of two photos of an early suspect, Michael Ostrog, and an image of the first victim, Mary Ann Nichols, in the mortuary.

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Bradford man Tim Atkinson, 58, bought Dott's letter about Kosminski on eBay after it was reportedly found in an old book.

The book is said to have been auctioned off by the University of Melbourne's theology department.

Tim asked a scientist at the University of Liverpool to examine the note for him.

The boffin used a light-sensitive gadget to check the authenticity of the note.

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