Originally posted by Trevor Marriott
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I have never claimed that our book contained 'conclusive proof' that any of Mike's known affidavits, whether sworn on oath or not, was totally false.
We gave the information and left the reader to make up their own mind what was likely to be true and what wasn't.
As the affidavits from April 1993 and January 1995 are mutually exclusive, one or both must have been false.
To date, none of them has proved to be factual in every detail that would need to be, before we could be anything like confident that Mike did indeed order the 1891 diary, with the intention of turning it into Maybrick's confession, which ended up in a scrapbook he finally obtained in an auction sale on 31st March 1992. Mike himself made no such claim about the auction date, while knowing full well that the scrapbook was seen in London just 13 days later, on 13th April 1992. He claimed the auction took place in early 1990, and there is still no satisfactory explanation for why he did so. He did tell Alan Gray, who typed up the statement for him, that he got dates wrong on purpose. Make of that what you will.
If the 1891 diary had been sufficient proof of anyone's guilt, Orsam would not have bothered looking for the only possible auction that Mike could have attended, between the 1891 diary arriving in the post and the Maybrick diary making its debut in London. It was a tight corner to squeeze himself into, but that was Orsam's Hobson's choice. I expect it's all the cosier now, with RJ hanging his stocking in one corner and you leaving mince pies and sherry for Santa in the other.
Love,
Caz
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