Originally posted by caz
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Who were they?
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I have seen a clip of Keith Skinner receiving something like 'Outstanding Researcher Award' at one of the Ripper conferences. He's as humble as ever and perhaps genuinely feels he is over-rated and doesn't fully deserve the honour, but his audience clearly disagrees with him - they are fulsome in their applause and appreciation and that rather convinces me that they know the man's character reasonably well. I would put it to all of my dear readers that his audience (of Ripperologists) offer a greater insight into the integrity of Keith Skinner than an obscure poster on the internet who self-evidently has a very rigid agenda to peddle.
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So I'll take it as read that they haven't tried to boost sales by suggesting the perpetrator was Jack himself?Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
A series of axe murders across America. Usually of families. Often followed by a fire. All near to train lines. Most of them weren’t previously linked but when the authors present the evidence it’s obvious that many of them were. What’s good though Ike is that they don’t try any leaps of faith to try and ‘rope in’ murders to the series. The list some as ‘possibles’ or even remotely possibles and some as probables or definite’s. It’s a long list. Cracking book though.
I think I would, but then I am a marketing genius ...
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Well, that's a very good point, RJ, as it happens, but not one which lends itself to the inauthenticity of Anne's tale but - rather - to the authenticity of it. It's not top of my list of provenenaces, but your argument is interesting - no-one (never mind the electricians) could have produced evidence of any other provenance and Anne knew it because the provenance she provided was actually the true one.Originally posted by rjpalmer View PostOr, seen from another angle...
"there was nothing to stop Eddie Lyons - or the other electricians for that matter - from resurfacing and providing proof of how they obtained the scrapbook thus exposing Anne's narrative as entirely false.
Unless you consider the bleedin' obvious: nothing had been sold to Mike down the boozer and Anne knew it, which neatly explains why she felt free to tell the Yapp/Formby porkies."
It's an interesting thought. Not the one you started it but well done on bringing it inadvertently to our attention.
As I say, it's not yet at the top of my provenance list, but you've certainly nudged it up a few degrees!
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How dense can you be, Thom?Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post
Your argument is built entirely upon twin premises - that Anne proactively deceived everyone, and that the researchers knew it.
In the very statement you quote I wrote that "Keith still repeated [the May 1992 date]--apparently believing it to be true"
Which DOES NOT SUGGEST he knew it to be a deception. Good Gawd man, drink more coffee or take some no-doze. The same can be said of Shirley Harrison who also said the red diary had been purchased after Mike had brought the scrapbook to London.
That is not evidence that Shirley 'knew' it to be a deception.
Rather, it is evidence that Anne hadn't told the whole story.
And how in the Devil is it 'proactive' to be forced into coughing-up the check stub after Barrett revealed that he had purchased a red diary and she knew this was true?
One really has to be a masochist to engage with the Diary Crowd.Last edited by rjpalmer; 06-28-2023, 06:17 PM.
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No mention of JM I’m afraid Ike.Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post
So I'll take it as read that they haven't tried to boost sales by suggesting the perpetrator was Jack himself?
I think I would, but then I am a marketing genius ...
Herlock Sholmes
”I don’t know who Jack the Ripper was…and neither do you.”
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Let me say clearly here that I utterly disagree with this proposition. If The Barretts had nothing to hide, what purpose would telling Shirley about the little maroon diary serve? Why would they even think to mention it? For them, it was something which Anne didn't understand and was angry about, and for Mike it was something he worried that he would need but soon realised he didn't. Out of sight, out of mind. No need to explain that something entirely irrelevant had occurred and that Shirley simply must be told about it.Originally posted by rjpalmer View PostRevealing to Shirley the existence of the red diary at any time in 1992 or 1993 would not have been "defending themselves from the claim of having hoaxed the scrapbook." It would have been the most natural thing in the world.
Mike was hardly the most reliable of researchers, RJ, and I think we ALL know that much about him. If he had nothing to hide, what sort of research would he be providing Shirley with. "I've investigated my own actions in March 1992, Shirl, and I've remembered that I bought a tiny 1891 diary?" to which Shirley would obviously reply, "Why the **** did you do that?" to which Barrett would have thought, "Oh, sugar lumps, of course I can't tell Shirl why I did that because I've told her I got the scrapbook from Tony D last year before he died and what have you".Your suggestion is ridiculous and deliberately myopic. They could have revealed the existence of the red diary as part of any normal communication between two collaborators. Mike and Shirley were under contractual agreement to share research.
This is just ifs, buts, and maybes, RJ. Where are you going with this? Why would Mike or Anne feel that mentioning the little 1891 diary would be fruitful for Shirley's research?There were attempts, both by Harrison and later by Skinner, to determine what research Barrett had previously conducted. Mike or Anne could have mentioned the red diary then. There were also attempts, by Shirley and others, to determine if the scrapbook was genuinely Victorian.
Well, whoopy-doo. Man who gets scrapbook off the back of Eddie Lyons' lorry fails to tell wife the truth. Hold the front pages!Anne's own rationale for the purchase of the red diary is that Barrett wanted to know what a genuine Victorian diary looked like.
Rarely have you EVER reached this far down in reaching for an argument, RJ. It is borderline pompous to ask us "what would have been more natural ...?". I cannot fathom for a moment why this irrelevant piece of information would be seen as contributing anything whatsoever to Shirley's research, and you have singularly failed to show that it could have done. You've just kept telling us it could and therefore what a super-duper deception was played by the Barretts and then perpetuated by everyone else connected with the scrapbook, keeping the money rolling in, I guess ...What would have been more natural, then, to have mentioned this red diary there and then to Shirley Harrison, as she pondered these questions, and to show that they, too, had researched this?
Tell us why their silence would mean anything, RJ, before gloating about their silence!Instead: nada. Not a peep.
Exactly! Thank you. It was only ever mentioned by Mike Barrett when he was in full drunken confessional mode and he remembered about it and realised he could spin this as part of his master hoax....they failed to reveal the existence of the red diary and the strange circumstances of its purchase until AFTER Bongo started spilling the beans.
We don't need to look that far into the future, RJ. No-one's 'not liking it' the way you're not liking it.The jury of history won't like that.
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I am not challenging Keith Skinner's integrity, but I suspect you know this and are merely grandstanding.Originally posted by Iconoclast View PostI would put it to all of my dear readers that his audience (of Ripperologists) offer a greater insight into the integrity of Keith Skinner than an obscure poster on the internet who self-evidently has a very rigid agenda to peddle.
Although he thinks very little of me, I have praised some of Keith's research in the past, as well as his habit--not one shared by Maureen or Shirley or Feldman--to keep notes of the saga as it unfolded. We are in his debt.
What I am challenging is Caz Brown's "appeal to authority."
She is arguing that I should accept that the diary came out of Battlecrease because Keith has apparently drawn this conclusion.
Does Kieth himself feel that way? Should I simply take his word for it? Would that be a reasonable thing for me to do, when I see major problems with this idea?
I repeat, the only evidence we've seen for accepting this provenance is what has already been presented in Robert Smith's 2017 book, and Smith's 'evidence' was singularly unimpressive.
Keith himself has not presented his case for believing this, and he has stated on this very forum that the two events that occurred on 9 March 1992 --Barrett successfully calling a literary agent and Paul Dodd having some work done on his house--could have been a 'coincidence.'
As far as I know, the faith that you, Caz, and Hartley put in this provenance could outweigh what Keith himself believes. How would I know otherwise?
RP
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Unfortunately, you set me a high bar in that regard to emulate, RJ.Originally posted by rjpalmer View PostDon't be so dense, Ike.
You did a super job of looking like you had done. I must have misread your subtle references to 'distortions'.I never suggested Keith was deliberately distorting reality at the Cloak and Dagger meeting. Indeed, I said he 'apparently believed the May 1992 date was true.'
What I am suggesting is that Keith's impression of the purchase date was May 1992 because that's when Anne purchased it. To make anything nefarious of any of that, you have to invoke the implication that Anne was proactively lying to Keith and there is absolutely no evidence - just very reaching inference from you - that that was the case.What I am suggesting is that Keith's impression of the purchase date is evidence that Anne had successfully bamboozled him.
And there it is! You 'believe' something to be true and you are - of course - an acknowledged objective observer of all things Barrett, aren't you? So everyone should just hang on your every fantastic stretch of what we know to be true!What I do believe is that Anne herself knew this date was misleading.
Her controlling the purse strings is not the same as her demanding to know from Mike all the ins and outs of his ordering of the useless 1891 tiny diary. She paid for it in the middle of May, as I recall? Could Mike not have been a late payer by the end of April, or the middle of April? Why do you try to make it appear that she knew that he had attempted to acquire the diary in the March? (The answer to that, dear readers, is that she has to 'know' it was March to satisfy Orsam's March 30 auction purchase of the Victorian scrapbook we have today.)She controlled the purse strings. She damn well knew Mike had been dunned as a late payer by Martin Earl.
But if that (that he was looking for what a Victorian diary looked like) was what Mike had told her, how would any other account by Anne be likely or expected?What she didn't know is Martin Earl's methods, so she felt confident to give her bogus explanation for the purchase, not realizing that Martin Earl had placed an advertisement in Bookfinder that would make a mockery of that explanation. No one needs to have a minimum of 20 blank pages to see what a diary looks like.
Ergo, she reported back faithfully what Mike had told her were his reasons for ordering the totally irrelevant diary.Ergo, she lied.
I can only answer for me but I would say that we still don't know with any certainty that Anne lied but - if she did (and it really does look like she did), there were blindingly obvious grounds for her to have done so. Doesn't make her the Aldridge Prior of Anfield. Doesn't mean that everything she ever said was - ipso facto - also lies.The weird thing--the Through the Looking Glass aspect of this discussion---is that at least some of you--particularly Caz--believe that Anne lied and lied through her teeth FOR YEARS to the researchers around her, yet you're still willing to argue that her dodgy behavior was on the up & up.
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Similarly, with nothing to hide, there was no reason for Timoth McVeigh to mention renting a Ryder truck or his purchase of a ton of ammonium nitrate.Originally posted by Iconoclast View PostIf The Barretts had nothing to hide, what purpose would telling Shirley about the little maroon diary serve? .
No one was accusing Tim of being a terrorist, so why bring it up? Must have slipped his mind.
The Barretts had "nothing to hide," folks. You heard it here from Tom Mitchell.
They didn't hide the real purchase date of the word processor, nor the details of Mike's writing career, nor the true nature of the bogus research notes, etc.
They were entirely on the up & up.
Yet two hours from now, Caz will leap in and say they had EVERYTHING to hide--because the diary was bought off Eddie Lyons down the boozer.
It's just the three-shell game, over and over and over.
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As I recall, you wrote to the effect that the 'researchers' perpetuated the 'distortion'? I guess I must have misunderstood, eh?In the very statement you quote I wrote that "Keith still repeated [the May 1992 date]--apparently believing it to be true"
Which DOES NOT SUGGEST he knew it to be a deception. Good Gawd man, drink more coffee or take some no-doze. The same can be said of Shirley Harrison who also said the red diary had been purchased after Mike had brought the scrapbook to London.
That is not evidence that Shirley 'knew' it to be a deception.
Rather, it is evidence that Anne hadn't told the whole story.
How exactly was she 'forced', RJ. You have now doubled-down on this claim and I'm now asking for the second time what causes you to think she was compelled to do anything at all.And how in the Devil is it 'proactive' to be forced into coughing-up the check stub after Barrett revealed that he had purchased a red diary and she knew this was true?
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Well there's a lot to unpack there, RJ, except that we aren't Keith Skinner so unless he emails me with a comment, I can't answer for him. Nevertheless, he has famously stated that if we all knew what he knew (about the timesheets for March 9, 1992) that we would all draw the conclusion that the scrapbook came out of Battlecerease House. I can't see any reason why he would have changed his mind in the intervening years so I suspect (assume) that he does believe it came out of Battlecrease but - for it to have been the Jack the Ripper's authentic confessional - it would have had to miraculously come out of James Maybrick's old home but have been written by Monty Druitt so I take it as read that he thinks it came out of Battlecrease House on the morning of March 9, 1992, but that he doesn't believe it is the authentic work of Jack the Ripper (whoever Jack was).Originally posted by rjpalmer View PostI am not challenging Keith Skinner's integrity, but I suspect you know this and are merely grandstanding.
Although he thinks very little of me, I have praised some of Keith's research in the past, as well as his habit--not one shared by Maureen or Shirley or Feldman--to keep notes of the saga as it unfolded. We are in his debt.
What I am challenging is Caz Brown's "appeal to authority."
She is arguing that I should accept that the diary came out of Battlecrease because Keith has apparently drawn this conclusion.
Does Kieth himself feel that way? Should I simply take his word for it? Would that be a reasonable thing for me to do, when I see major problems with this idea?
I repeat, the only evidence we've seen for accepting this provenance is what has already been presented in Robert Smith's 2017 book, and Smith's 'evidence' was singularly unimpressive.
Keith himself has not presented his case for believing this, and he has stated on this very forum that the two events that occurred on 9 March 1992 --Barrett successfully calling a literary agent and Paul Dodd having some work done on his house--could have been a 'coincidence.'
As far as I know, the faith that you, Caz, and Hartley put in this provenance could outweigh what Keith himself believes. How would I know otherwise?
RP
All of that said, you said:
I cannot concur with this conclusion. I don't ever recall Caz making such a pronouncement. I'm sure that we can all agree that Keith Skinner is not God nor the Son of God nor even a sort of very distant relation on his mother's side and I don't ever recall Caz attempting to imply otherwise. What has she said that would cause you to think she was saying what Keith says goes?What I am challenging is Caz Brown's "appeal to authority."
She is arguing that I should accept that the diary came out of Battlecrease because Keith has apparently drawn this conclusion.
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Sorry, Ike. You're simply too naive and slow-on-the-uptake to deal with any longer. This will have to be my final response for the day, if not the summer.Originally posted by Iconoclast View PostHow exactly was she 'forced', RJ. You have now doubled-down on this claim and I'm now asking for the second time what causes you to think she was compelled to do anything at all.
The existence of the red diary had obviously leaked. We know Barrett would mention it in his 1995 affidavit.
Setting aside your own well-rehearsed naiveté and lack of concern about its existence, others, including Keith, were evidently eager to learn the details of this extraordinary purchase. So somehow, having learned about the maroon memo book's existence (note: isn't that one of the questions your good friend Lord Orsam has addressed to Keith?) he quizzed Anne Graham about it.
So, yes SHE WAS FORCED BY CIRCUMSTANCES TO GIVE AN ACCOUNT OF IT. She hadn't brought up the purchase on her own.
Why was she forced? Well, as already explained at least 1,000 times, the red diary HAD been purchased by Mike and Anne, so if she simply denied it, she would run the risk of its existence being proven by another means--Barrett obviously being able to recall he received it from Martin Earl in Cambridge, as duly reported in his affidavit (which Keith had not yet known about).
All of this should be abundantly obvious, but you instead like to play the three-shell game, over and over and over.
It's old, Ike. It's stale. Your arguments are loopy and unconvincing. I almost miss John Omlor's purple dragon--it seemed less childish by comparison.
From now on, I'm joining John Wheat and the other one-line hecklers. It saves time. "It's all ****."
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And from this you deduce that every 'criminal' will spill every bean on every subject regardless of whether it helps their case or hinders it?Originally posted by rjpalmer View PostSimilarly, with nothing to hide, there was no reason for Timoth McVeigh to mention renting a Ryder truck or his purchase of a ton of ammonium nitrate.
No one was accusing Tim of being a terrorist, so why bring it up? Must have slipped his mind.
Is this honestly the best you've got? "Tim McVeigh did it, therefore someone else might have done it, therefore Mike Barrett did do it". That's your argument, is it?Last edited by Iconoclast; 06-28-2023, 07:34 PM.
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