Imagine this: in the fog-shrouded alleys of London's Whitechapel, a killer sliced open five prostitutes, ripping out their organs with surgical precision, and vanished into history.
[PAUSE]
Let's step back to 1888, the height of Victorian London. Whitechapel was a grim slum in the East End, packed with the poor, immigrants, and crime—robberies and murders were everyday shadows. There, from August 31 to November 9, a shadowy figure targeted working women, the so-called Canonical Five victims.[1