"I found his grave by finding out where his other family members were buried, thinking maybe they were buried in the same place. He is buried in Nunhead Cemetery - formerly named All Saints - which was known as the Dead Cemetery because it was one of the Magnificent Seven cemeteries created to bury the dead in London, and it was left to become overgrown and woodland."
"When you look at the criteria of what makes a viable suspect, there are five or six boxes you need to tick. Cutbush ticks them all. He worked in Whitechapel at the time and knew the area like the back of his hand; he had a hatred towards prostitutes; and his family and friends believed he was linked to this because he had an obsession with medicine, surgery and anatomy.
"He studied medical books and drew pictures of mutilation, and would tell people he was a doctor when he wasn't.
"He associated with prostitutes - this has been confirmed by his family - and he believes he contracted a disease from one of them, and because he thought he was a doctor, he self-medicated and over self-medicated, and ended up with a disfigurement.
"He was arrested in 1891 for attacking two women, and the series of murders stopped."