Originally posted by Iconoclast
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What you might do, in your conversations with Keith Skinner, is to enquire if Dr. Eastaugh made any notes about this paper before it went missing or has any clear recollection of it. As I say, I tried twice to contact him (using two different email addresses) and was ignored. Maybe he was too busy; maybe the emails were lost; or maybe he is simply embarrassed by the whole Diary fiasco and has put it in his rearview mirror like Anne Graham has apparently done. I have no idea, but I am in your debt.
The thing is, if Dr. E recalls plain white photograph paper like Baxendale seems to have been describing, your friend FDC has a major problem because carte de visit photographs were on exceedingly thin paper that was then mounted to card stock, and this would give their photographic outlines a bigger dimension that what was seen and measured in the diary.
And this, in turn, would mean that the photographs were almost certainly 20th Century, and thus what Michael John Barrett described has not been debunked.
I look forward to reading any progress you might be able to make on this important point.
Originally posted by Iconoclast
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Barrett, knowing that he now had a Victorian diary, would cut out the inappropriate pages (just as he did with the Edwardian photo album) confident that the paper would pass any forensic testing. The name 'Jack the Ripper' and the date '3 May 1889' would signal to the gullible that the diary was Victorian, and no forensic examination of the paper would give the game away as it did in the Hitler Diary fiasco.
You might recall that your good friend Lord Orsam found an article on the Hitler Diaries in Celebrity (a magazine that the freelance writer Michael Barrett frequently wrote for in the 1980s). If you go back and read that article--and who knows? Is it unlikely that Bongo Barrett wouldn't have read Celebrity since he was such a frequent contributor?--you will see it directly refers to the modern paper fibers giving the game away.
What you are doing here is the same thing that the early Diary researchers did--finding it to your advantage to portray Barrett as a 'mental vegetable' (the phrase someone evidently used when describing Barrett to the chemist Alex Voller)--in order to quickly brush aside any chance that he hoaxed the diary.
Methinks that any intellectually honest detective would balk at a such methods, but here we are.
If you and your comrades continually see fit to portray Barrett and/or Graham as mental vegetables (or some other strange personality type) then it is little wonder that you have "eliminated them from your inquiries."
But have you done so using legitimate arguments and analysis, or merely out of desire and self-deception?
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