A police file related to the Victorian serial killer Jack the Ripper has been discovered after 136 years by the great-grandson of Inspector Joseph Henry Helson, who worked on the case. The file, which belonged to one of the investigators involved in the Ripper case, had been kept in the family for four generations before being made public.
After doing some research, the family members found that some scrolls had been entered into the U.S. National Stolen Art File 20 years prior, and they contacted the FBI. https://t.co/nmokIL5uQl
"Mystery deepens: Was the de Kooning painting the only stolen art in couple’s home?" (via @anneryman) https://t.co/i7hPbeMLTI
The file belonged to one of the investigators who worked on the Ripper case and stayed in his family for four generations. https://t.co/GA8gEcbh2K
A police file on Jack the Ripper has been made public after 136 years by the great-grandson of Inspector Joseph Henry Helson, the Met Police detective who worked on the case. Read more 🔗 https://t.co/o3iVpywGJO
A lost police file on the Victorian serial killer Jack the Ripper has been found after 136 years by the great grandson of a detective who worked on the case ⬇️ https://t.co/tElyN8pXci
🔎Copy of Jack the Ripper ‘Saucy Jack’ postcard discovered after 140 years https://t.co/TxQ1rtnQCU