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  • Lombro2
    replied
    You believe that Mike asked if someone wanted a Ripper Diary and then got a Victorian journal and made it in a month. With no evidence at all. Just a liar with his lies.

    And you believe that makes much more sense than someone gave him the Diary first.

    Leave a comment:


  • John Wheat
    replied
    Originally posted by Lombro2 View Post
    Then why do you believe it?
    I don't.

    Leave a comment:


  • Lombro2
    replied
    Originally posted by John Wheat View Post
    I think this post is totally wrong.
    Then why do you believe it?

    Leave a comment:


  • rjpalmer
    replied
    Originally posted by Lombro2 View Post
    It's better to believe he would ask someone if they wanted some swampland in Florida and only then would go out and buy some!
    Careful now. Isn't that Caroline Ann Brown's theory that you're kicking to the curb?

    Haven't we been told more than once that Barrett was shown 'the old book' down the boozer and immediately ran home and called the literary agent in London and asked her if she was interested in Jack the Ripper's diary--that is, before Barrett had even obtained ownership of it from Ed Lyons?

    It's only a hop, skip, and a jump from Mike not owning the diary to the diary not even existing.

    The way I see it, the penniless Barrett was a scammer on a budget.

    There's no point in investing in a boat and tackle until you know there's fish in the lake.
    Last edited by rjpalmer; 03-08-2025, 02:44 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • John Wheat
    replied
    Originally posted by Lombro2 View Post
    I think the idea of a scrap metal dealer and a purse thief also being a fence, and getting a stolen item and then pretending it wasn't stolen is preposterous.

    It's better to believe he would ask someone if they wanted some swampland in Florida and only then would go out and buy some!
    I think this post is totally wrong.

    Leave a comment:


  • Lombro2
    replied
    I think the idea of a scrap metal dealer and a purse thief also being a fence, and getting a stolen item and then pretending it wasn't stolen is preposterous.

    It's better to believe he would ask someone if they wanted some swampland in Florida and only then would go out and buy some!

    Leave a comment:


  • John Wheat
    replied
    I think the very idea of a conman, published writer and his wife purchasing and then writing out a diary purportedly by Jack the Ripper is preposterous.

    Leave a comment:


  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by Lombro2 View Post
    Why would you call for a rep and say you got an artifact before you get it?

    And why is that scenario much more likely than actually having an artifact, real or fake?

    BTW That was a nice maraschino cherry pie. You had to maraschino the cherries to make the pie palatable. But some people will buy it. And eat it while rejecting such pies anywhere else in Ripperology.
    I've run this through an English online translator and what you seem to be asking me is why Mike Barrett, as the forger, would have telephoned a literary agent to say he had Jack the Ripper's diary before he'd physically created it.

    The answer is, I think, very simple. There is a financial cost to creating a fake Victorian diary. You need to purchase a blank diary, or similar, ink and nibs. Why spend that money if you end up with a diary no-one's interested in publishing?

    So step one is to establish there is interest in the product. Step two is to create the product.

    That's probably the most efficient way of doing it.​

    Leave a comment:


  • Lombro2
    replied
    Why would you call for a rep and say you got an artifact before you get it?

    And why is that scenario much more likely than actually having an artifact, real or fake?

    BTW That was a nice maraschino cherry pie. You had to maraschino the cherries to make the pie palatable. But some people will buy it. And eat it while rejecting such pies anywhere else in Ripperology.

    Leave a comment:


  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by Lombro2 View Post
    Well we know Anne’s a Jekkle and Hyde serial killer type.

    You’d need blank pages if you want to make a reasonable facsimile. Like a blank watch face where you can write “Rolex” in crayon to match your real Rolex.

    Maybe it was 11 days from when he won the “photo album” in a raffle. Who cares? It’s still all done in only a month from scratch (no pun intended).

    Scott’s theory is infinitely better.
    The forgers didn't need to "start from scratch" on 9th March. The diary's text could have been written in draft long before that. But, if they did start from scratch, 34 days was plenty of time to read a small number of books, come up with the story and write it out in longhand​

    Leave a comment:


  • rjpalmer
    replied
    Originally posted by Lombro2 View Post
    Scott’s theory is infinitely better.
    Yes, it's a no-brainer. Billy and Tony were both freelance writers in the 1980s, profited from the scam, changed their stories multiple times, tried to buy a blank Victorian diary, knew where the Crashaw quote came from, and went on to co-write a biography of Florence Maybrick.

    I don't know how I missed it.

    Leave a comment:


  • Lombro2
    replied
    Well we know Anne’s a Jekkle and Hyde serial killer type.

    You’d need blank pages if you want to make a reasonable facsimile. Like a blank watch face where you can write “Rolex” in crayon to match your real Rolex.

    Maybe it was 11 days from when he won the “photo album” in a raffle. Who cares? It’s still all done in only a month from scratch (no pun intended).

    Scott’s theory is infinitely better.

    Leave a comment:


  • rjpalmer
    replied
    Originally posted by C. F. Leon View Post
    We have been talking about the diary's use of words or phrases, but what about punctuation?
    The diarist seldom used apostrophes.

    Below is from a letter by Anne Graham.

    Click image for larger version

Name:	fathers.jpg
Views:	99
Size:	15.0 KB
ID:	849927

    Adding unnecessary apostrophes is common enough but leaving them out is less common. The apostrophe key couldn't have been on the fritz; Anne typed "I don't know" immediately afterward.

    Just something for your consideration.

    Leave a comment:


  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by Lombro2 View Post
    Now allow me to assess the three theories:

    1. Absolutely ridiculous theory.

    Just like everything else related to the Barrett Hoax Theory that puts everything into 11 days after calling the literary agent when you have nothing in hand.

    2. A very simple and believable theory. Not ridiculous.

    3. This theory which fits into Scott’s theory is also not ridiculous. It’s at least believable as a possibility.
    You think there are only 11 days between 9th March 1992, when Mike called a literary agent, and 13th April 1992, when he brought the diary to London?

    Leave a comment:


  • Herlock Sholmes
    replied
    Originally posted by Lombro2 View Post
    Allow me to explain the positions here. It’s like this:

    A guy has a Rolex and wants to sell it. Then they find out he bought a fake Rolex that said Rolax.

    We are supposed to believe:

    1. That that proves the first Rolex was another fake.

    2. The first Rolex was real but it was stolen and the Rolax was just to get a smoke screen and/or a favourable price from the thief who doesn’t know if it’s real.

    3. They’re both fake but they got the Rolax so he can pawn that one off as the Rolex and keep the first one.
    This confused and incoherent analogy seems to reference the red 1891 diary which was offered to Barrett after no diary from his preferred period was available. I'm not talking about that. I'm talking about the fact that Mike was seeing a genuine Victorian diary with blank pages, the blank pages apparently being the most important part of the request. I can't think why he needed those blank pages other than to write on, which suggests he was planning to create a fake Victorian diary. We know that he wanted blank pages because we have a copy of the advertisement which Martin Earl placed on his behalf. That is hard evidence in the case. What I was asking Scott was why he was ignoring that hard evidence which points towards Michael Barrett's involvement in the forgery in favour of another more speculative theory.​

    Leave a comment:

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