Originally posted by rjpalmer
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- Baxendale's dramatic 'findings' regarding ink solubility should have killed the scrpabook stone dead the moment it became common knowledge to the wider public - whenever that was and by whatever means it reached us. And yet it only ever seems to be you who mentions it?
- The provenance supplied by Mike 'Williams' was just a lie - why should it kill the scrapbook stone dead?
- The text was written by someone who never expected it to be read by anyone else. It is in his private hand. Please show us your copy of Maybrick's private hand (i.e., where there is no intended audience), and let's compare that with the scrapbook.
Time Warner pulled out because of Kenneth Rendell's woefully inept report not because the scrapbook was a proven hoax.
Correct me if I misunderstand, but all you seem to be saying is that if a flimsy and wildly suspicious documents is published, it can't be flimsy and wildly suspicious, because someone published it! For whom on earth would do such a thing, if his forensic examiners were warning him in a series of reports and letters?
Is that what you are suggesting? If so, isn't that a question for the publisher?
Is that what you are suggesting? If so, isn't that a question for the publisher?
"Here's you report, Mr Smith", he basically said. Like his omission of the word 'oxidised', are we to understand that he also omitted the word 'preliminary' too?
How many other words did he omit, I wonder?
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