Originally posted by rjpalmer
View Post
There was nothing in Baxendale's report which was damaging in the slightest regarding the solubility of the ink in the scrapbook because he didn't test for it. At least, if he tested for it, he singularly failed to mention this in his report. You know, the bit where he found that the scrapbook was definitely a hoax.
Smith and Harrison rejected Baxendale's report because it was inaccurate. For example, his claim regarding the use of nigrosine was patently incorrect. If he could be incorrect on this point, what other points could he be incorrect on (whether he bothered to mention them in his report or not)?
I think our dear readers are entitled to infer from all this that Baxendale misremembered his reference to 'free flowing', and then supplemented that newly-formed memory with elements form some other report he was writing for another client.
How else could you explain his remarkable omission in his original report. (Unless he often kept stuff back in case he got into protracted debates with clients and could then win the day with information he hadn't previously provided them with).
Comment