Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Who were they?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • erobitha
    replied
    Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post

    And still the dance.

    Why does it matter who challenged him? Can't you simply answer the question? Why did Mike need blank pages for the 'doppelganger' no matter who might come knocking?

    Let me put it another way, Jay, as you continue to struggle with the simplest concepts.

    At least Caroline Brown, in her own attempt to explain-away Martin Earl's deeply damaging advertisement, has tried to accommodate why Barrett asked for blank pages.

    It's because, in her version of events, the blank pages are for Eddie Lyons' benefit. In other words, to show him an 'invoice' for a partially blank diary, in which case, Mike needed a diary with blank pages.

    Frankly, I find this ludicrous, as well as a misreading of Earl's advertisement, but at least she's trying to account for Mike's request for a minimum of twenty blank pages.

    By contrast, you have nothing. In every post, you reveal you haven't thought it through.

    Meanwhile, Tom has been changing his theory by the day, and I have received a humorous response via email from Lord Orsom about this.

    Unfortunately, since I can't share it, you'll simply have to imagine it.

    Good luck with your theories and good luck in convincing the public.
    No RJ. It is you who fails to understand.

    I do not need to provide you with the exact reason why Mike wanted 20 blank pages. Neither does Caz, and neither does Ike. I doubt Mike could even answer it coherently. But no, you and Orsam have cracked the case!

    It is the same point I make with the so-called PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR. You are starting from a flawed position. Your argument is not as strong as you believe it to be, yet you persist in trying to convince the world it is the only position. It is not.

    All I or anyone else has to do is provide a plausible alternative to your so-called deeply damaging advertisement theory that, without a doubt, implicates Mike as a forger with intent to forge. It comes with much doubt, my old pedigree chum. Much doubt.

    I trust readers smarter than you will understand this point.

    Bon voyage!

    Leave a comment:


  • rjpalmer
    replied
    Originally posted by erobitha View Post

    No RJ. You muddy the waters. It is what you do.

    Why is Paul Dodd the ONLY way Mike would get challenged?
    And still the dance.

    Why does it matter who challenged him? Can't you simply answer the question? Why did Mike need blank pages for the 'doppelganger' no matter who might come knocking?

    Let me put it another way, Jay, as you continue to struggle with the simplest concepts.

    At least Caroline Brown, in her own attempt to explain-away Martin Earl's deeply damaging advertisement, has tried to accommodate why Barrett asked for blank pages.

    It's because, in her version of events, the blank pages are for Eddie Lyons' benefit. In other words, to show him an 'invoice' for a partially blank diary, in which case, Mike needed a diary with blank pages.

    Frankly, I find this ludicrous, as well as a misreading of Earl's advertisement, but at least she's trying to account for Mike's request for a minimum of twenty blank pages.

    By contrast, you have nothing. In every post, you reveal you haven't thought it through.

    Meanwhile, Tom has been changing his theory by the day, and I have received a humorous response via email from Lord Orsom about this.

    Unfortunately, since I can't share it, you'll simply have to imagine it.

    Good luck with your theories and good luck in convincing the public.

    Leave a comment:


  • erobitha
    replied
    Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post

    A perfect example why it is best to leave the self-deluders to themselves.

    You shirk the issue being discussed and swerve off into some emotional response.

    The issue is that Dodd didn't know anything was stolen, and thus wouldn't know what 'surrogate' would be credible if, according to Tom's theory or your own, one was produced by Barrett or Lyons.

    The issue is that the electricians didn't see the diary firsthand, either.

    Thus, it makes zero sense that the 'surrogate' or 'doppelganger' would need to be blank or partially blank.

    If, for the first time, you actually think it through, perhaps this will eventually dawn on you.

    But all we get is the dance...

    And feel free to dance alone.
    No RJ. You muddy the waters. It is what you do.

    Why is Paul Dodd the ONLY way Mike would get challenged?

    It wasn't Paul Dodd who instigated the Scotland Yard investigation, was it?

    The reality is anyone, or anything (as it did) could have instigated a police investigation into fraud or theft.

    Two plausible reasons why a doppelganger could be quite handy in Mike's strange mind. Used or partly used shows it did not matter to him.

    Leave a comment:


  • rjpalmer
    replied
    Originally posted by erobitha View Post
    Suspiciously mud-like response there RJ.
    A perfect example why it is best to leave the self-deluders to themselves.

    You shirk the issue being discussed and swerve off into some emotional response.

    The issue is that Dodd didn't know anything was stolen, and thus wouldn't know what 'surrogate' would be credible if, according to Tom's theory or your own, one was produced by Barrett or Lyons.

    The issue is that the electricians didn't see the diary firsthand, either.

    Thus, it makes zero sense that the 'surrogate' or 'doppelganger' would need to be blank or partially blank.

    If, for the first time, you actually think it through, perhaps this will eventually dawn on you.

    But all we get is the dance...

    And feel free to dance alone.

    Leave a comment:


  • erobitha
    replied
    Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
    I suppose, on a human level, my own presence here is misguided, and even a little foolish.

    Does it really matter than a tiny and diminishing group of people have convinced themselves that the Maybrick Hoax is old and important document?

    I don't think so.

    There is so much 'dirt' on the diary, so many problems with it, that the public is in no danger of being deluded or deceived. That battle was fought and won 25 years ago. Only a small number of believers or semi-believers remain, and they are (in my opinion) deluding themselves, because on some level, it is emotionally satisfying.

    You can't convince someone who doesn't want to be convinced, so it is futile to try. Team Diary, of course, will have concluded that I am the one who refuses to be convinced. Either way, the only thing really happening now is an endless battle of wills between stubborn people who know they will never convince their opponent, so Tom is correct in suggesting that it is "unhealthy." I'll even go as far as saying that is probably more fitting and reasonable that Tom's ideas should be left unopposed by the larger army of skeptics.

    This will be my last barb, but from my point of view, if a person can convince themselves that the handwriting is Maybrick's--despite all evidence to the contrary and the best expert opinion on either side of the Atlantic--or that 'bumbling buffoon' is a reference to Mr. Bumble from Oliver Twist--or that 'tin match box empty' is an accident of poetry--or that 'one off instance' is a reference to a horse--or a dozen other absurdities--or that Anne Graham's actions don't raise suspicions---they are going to convince themselves that their logic and instincts are impeccable on every other point, too. In which case anything I say going forward will come across a ragged, dirty diaper on a clothes' line, flapping in the wind.

    Often promised, but never achieved, it's a good day to really pull the plug.


    I'm welling up over here, RJ. Such an outpouring of raw emotion. So strong and brave.

    RJ and Orsam keep threatening to walk away from this debate, often citing some bizarre argument that their intellect should not be stooping to such low levels. Yet, they keep coming back. Why is that?

    Most people have done exactly what RJ suggests. They do not engage in the debate. They drew their lines in the sand a long time ago. They don't engage.

    I will let you into a little secret, readers. Somewhere deep within both RJ and Orsam is a niggling voice, A voice they can't quite kill. They almost beg for us "deluded nutters" to provide that perfect answer, killing it stone dead. But try as we might, we just can't kill the beast.

    The voice whispers in the dead of night, waking them from their restless slumber, "But what if?"

    That voice is what keeps them coming back to the table. Like so many others, if they truly believed that there could be no truth in Maybrick being JtR in the slightest, they would be having endless nights of glorious sleep. That voice would be no more.

    Last edited by erobitha; 07-02-2023, 06:38 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • erobitha
    replied
    Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
    According to Jay, and I certainly think he's right from everything I've read, Dodd had no proof anything was stolen. None of the electricians Robert Smith describes in his 2017 book admitted to actually seeing the Diary firsthand, let alone studying it.
    Suspiciously mud-like response there RJ.

    Paul Dodd, even now, remains open to evidence it came from under his floorboards. To my knowledge, he thinks it is more unlikely than likely based on his own experience of working on the house, but he admits he cannot 100% rule out the possibility.

    Nor has he ever sought to reclaim anything from anyone. I also understand that if he were presented with the diary today and told it was rightfully his, he most likely rather donate it than keep it.

    I have the utmost respect for Keith because, as both Ike and I have said all along, Keith is his own man with his own opinions and views, but he is always fastidious.

    Leave a comment:


  • rjpalmer
    replied
    I suppose, on a human level, my own presence here is misguided, and even a little foolish.

    Does it really matter than a tiny and diminishing group of people have convinced themselves that the Maybrick Hoax is old and important document?

    I don't think so.

    There is so much 'dirt' on the diary, so many problems with it, that the public is in no danger of being deluded or deceived. That battle was fought and won 25 years ago. Only a small number of believers or semi-believers remain, and they are (in my opinion) deluding themselves, because on some level, it is emotionally satisfying.

    You can't convince someone who doesn't want to be convinced, so it is futile to try. Team Diary, of course, will have concluded that I am the one who refuses to be convinced. Either way, the only thing really happening now is an endless battle of wills between stubborn people who know they will never convince their opponent, so Tom is correct in suggesting that it is "unhealthy." I'll even go as far as saying that is probably more fitting and reasonable that Tom's ideas should be left unopposed by the larger army of skeptics.

    This will be my last barb, but from my point of view, if a person can convince themselves that the handwriting is Maybrick's--despite all evidence to the contrary and the best expert opinion on either side of the Atlantic--or that 'bumbling buffoon' is a reference to Mr. Bumble from Oliver Twist--or that 'tin match box empty' is an accident of poetry--or that 'one off instance' is a reference to a horse--or a dozen other absurdities--or that Anne Graham's actions don't raise suspicions---they are going to convince themselves that their logic and instincts are impeccable on every other point, too. In which case anything I say going forward will come across a ragged, dirty diaper on a clothes' line, flapping in the wind.

    Often promised, but never achieved, it's a good day to really pull the plug.



    Leave a comment:


  • rjpalmer
    replied
    Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post
    I'm going to try to make this my last comment for a week or so because I just can't stand RJ's screaming any longer. It can't be healthy for him nor for us having to read it.
    I'm not screaming in the least, Tom. I'm as a calm as a drowsy kitten.

    What sounds to you as 'screaming' is probably just your own brain rattling around when it realizes your theory doesn't "hold up to scrutiny."

    And those were Al Bundy's words, not mine. And Bundy doesn't strike me as 'partisan,' so don't blame the messenger.

    Let's see if Keith is willing to help you.

    All I am doing is asking the same question David Barrett asked back in 2018.

    Why did Mike need a blank or partially blank diary?

    Why is that so hard for you to explain it? Saying it is a surrogate or a doppelganger doesn't explain why it needed to be blank or partially blank.

    According to Jay, and I certainly think he's right from everything I've read, Dodd had no proof anything was stolen. None of the electricians Robert Smith describes in his 2017 book admitted to actually seeing the Diary firsthand, let alone studying it.

    With this in mind, I ask--for the final time--as you seem to be distressed---why couldn't Mike have ordered an entirely used diary? Wouldn't that make more sense? Why couldn't he have ordered an old photo album, as any normal person would do (if we pretend his actions make any sense and really happened)? Why couldn't he have ordered an old copy of Gulliver's Travels for Eddie to hand to Dodd?

    Those are the questions you need to answer.

    Have a good rest, Old Man. A warm water bottle might help, too.

    Meanwhile, let's see if Keith is willing to help you out with an explanation, but from his latest email it seems as if he's not as convinced that you are that the Battlecrease provenance is as conclusive as we've been led to believe, and he is still "assessing" Anne Graham's story after all these years.

    Let calmness reign over you. ​
    Last edited by rjpalmer; 07-02-2023, 05:58 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Iconoclast
    replied
    An unused diary from 1880-1890 would give Barrett something to use as a surrogate if anyone came for his newly acquired scrapbook. He might intend to attempt to simulate the actual scrapbook (so that he got to keep the real one) but that would only have been possible if he received an 1880-1889 diary. Still, an 1890 one could still be used for surrogacy only without Barrett attempting to copy any of the scrapbook into it.

    A partially-used diary would serve the same purpose assuming there were a sufficient number of blank pages in it. Now, I have argued before that at least twenty blank pages would not be adequate, but RJ himself has argued that Barrett asked for 'at least' and - even if he only got twenty - apparently that was enough if they were A4. I think that was RJ's argument, but I'm willing to be corrected (ideally without the screaming).

    On the other hand, if Barrett had received a diary with just the twenty blank pages and it was smaller than he'd hoped for, he could always write parts of the scrapbook into it (whilst keeping the real one for himself).

    If anyone had enquired before he went to London, and he panicked, he could have cancelled his trip and put it back many weeks or months.

    I'm trying to fill in the gaps which - honestly - I think a five year old could work out for themselves. Of course, that five year-old would have to be sans agenda.

    I think I've said this a few times now - we cannot possibly know what Mike Barrett's state of mind was on March 9, 1992, but what I know for certain is that the notions expressed above are a country mile away from ridiculous or insanity or whatever other epithets RJ has been throwing at them to try to make them sound crazy.

    They aren't crazy. They are perfectly plausible. Don't listen to him, dear readers. He is not sans agenda.

    I think I've made my point on a thread which has drifted off Trevor's original point terribly. I'm going to try to make this my last comment for a week or so because I just can't stand RJ's screaming any longer. It can't be healthy for him nor for us having to read it.

    Leave a comment:


  • erobitha
    replied
    Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post

    More poor reading comprehension and illogic from Jay Hartley. Who would have thought?

    Who will deny, based on Martin Earl's ad, that Mike Barrett wouldn't have been completely happy with receiving an entirely UNUSED diary?

    It's undeniable.

    That's the point that Hartley is dancing around.

    Mike's request allowed for an unused diary to be sent to him, and indeed, an almost entirely blank diary was sent to him (we've been told), so I ask Keith again, how does Martin Earl's advertisement in Bookfinder do anything other than mock Tom's bizarre theory?

    Based on Earl's ad, an entirely blank diary would have been peachy.

    And what criminal on earth (outside of Tom's imagination), having received stolen goods, would go out and buy an item in case he had to ADMIT to having received stolen (or suspected stolen) goods?

    It's barking madness. The admission alone would have sent alarm bells ringing. To use Keith's terminology, Tom must 'mould' Mike into a panicked mental vegetable.

    But not only that, Mike went out and bought a BLANK diary for his surrogate, which would have immediately signaled to any investigator that Mike was in the market for something consistent with the raw materials needed for a hoax, which in turn would raise grave suspicions about the scrapbook that Mike was already planning to bring to London, per his phone call to Doreen.

    Indeed, in his recent email, Keith fully admits that had Mike's request to Martin Earl been known, the Diary might not have been published.

    Yet, as I already noted, Mike producing this red diary and waving it in the air would have been akin to dialing up Martin Earl and handing the phone to Dodd, Feldman, or whomever came inquiring about the Battlecrease Caper.

    Maybe Keith can explain it better than Tom or Jay (but I doubt it) but whatever the case, it is still a dog's breakfast.
    Nothing wrong with my reading and comprehension, old chap.

    I am not a very good dancer, which might surprise you.

    I am not arguing on the side of anyone but myself RJ. Other people are perfectly capable of arguing their own corners. Your banding groups of people together as one single sentient "Diary Defender" being has become rather tiresome. I do not speak for them. They do not speak for me.

    Let me break it down for you and others to digest:

    1) The advert states "Unused" or "Partly Used". I will class this as a BROAD request. Why not just unused?
    2) "Diary dating from 1880-1890." BROAD request. A whole ten years of broadness, in fact. Not only by date range but it also throws in the possibility of appointment diaries too as a potential option. It does not rule it out
    3) The oddly specific "Must have at least 20 blank pages". SPECIFIC request. This is the only real specific request and why so much debate has been had around this point. This is the button RJ and Orsam love pushing as if it is some kind of absolute proof of an intent to hoax.

    Master forger Mike Barrett, with no history of ever forging anything before in his entire life, sets broad parameters for the diary type and date range. Surely, a forger would know this is the most important thing to focus on if the hoax is to get passed the sniff test. These are the elements he needed to be really specific about. He wasn't.

    Twenty blank pages is an odd request. Mike did odd things. Mike thought odd things. Mike said odd things. For all we know, Mike thought he could write gibberish on those pages and pass it off as being the very thing he had witnessed.

    Lastly, I re-raise this point. Why, oh why, oh why wait until around the 9th of March to look for a diary at all? The only reason is that Eddie was at Battlecrease House. So why suddenly jump into action over a provenance he never even mentioned or alluded to? Why not place the ad a month before or a year before? Why that week? Because Eddie was at Battlecrease. I know it. You know it. What you haven't shown is why that even matters to Mike at that stage.



    Leave a comment:


  • rjpalmer
    replied
    Originally posted by erobitha View Post

    The ad says used or partly used RJ. You made a long-winded statement about the desire for an unused diary only for the evidence to undermine you. It says nothing about unused being preferred. You have applied that judgement.
    More poor reading comprehension and illogic from Jay Hartley. Who would have thought?

    Who will deny, based on Martin Earl's ad, that Mike Barrett wouldn't have been completely happy with receiving an entirely UNUSED diary?

    It's undeniable.

    That's the point that Hartley is dancing around.

    Mike's request allowed for an unused diary to be sent to him, and indeed, an almost entirely blank diary was sent to him (we've been told), so I ask Keith again, how does Martin Earl's advertisement in Bookfinder do anything other than mock Tom's bizarre theory?

    Based on Earl's ad, an entirely blank diary would have been peachy.

    And what criminal on earth (outside of Tom's imagination), having received stolen goods, would go out and buy an item in case he had to ADMIT to having received stolen (or suspected stolen) goods?

    It's barking madness. The admission alone would have sent alarm bells ringing. To use Keith's terminology, Tom must 'mould' Mike into a panicked mental vegetable.

    But not only that, Mike went out and bought a BLANK diary for his surrogate, which would have immediately signaled to any investigator that Mike was in the market for something consistent with the raw materials needed for a hoax, which in turn would raise grave suspicions about the scrapbook that Mike was already planning to bring to London, per his phone call to Doreen.

    Indeed, in his recent email, Keith fully admits that had Mike's request to Martin Earl been known, the Diary might not have been published.

    Yet, as I already noted, Mike producing this red diary and waving it in the air would have been akin to dialing up Martin Earl and handing the phone to Dodd, Feldman, or whomever came inquiring about the Battlecrease Caper.

    Maybe Keith can explain it better than Tom or Jay (but I doubt it) but whatever the case, it is still a dog's breakfast.
    Last edited by rjpalmer; 07-02-2023, 04:03 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • erobitha
    replied
    Originally posted by Abby Normal View Post

    OMG. what part of "unused" dont you understand ?
    OMG. what part of partly used, don't you understand?

    Leave a comment:


  • Abby Normal
    replied
    Originally posted by erobitha View Post

    The ad says used or partly used RJ. You made a long-winded statement about the desire for an unused diary only for the evidence to undermine you. It says nothing about unused being preferred. You have applied that judgement.

    If anything, it supports the idea of him not being that fussy about what he got. Which, for a hoaxer, is a little haphazard.
    OMG. what part of "unused" dont you understand ?

    Leave a comment:


  • erobitha
    replied
    Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
    Well, I feel a little thin-skinned this morning.



    Damn, Keith.

    If the writing in black is yours, which it apparently is (but there is always some slight uncertainty, because, unlike other contributors to this forum, you don't simply log-on, preferring to trickle encouragement to Tom Mitchell from behind the scenes) then I can only say that it is also an example of intellectual dishonesty.

    In your email, you talk all around the issue, referring to events of 30 years ago, but you don't really offer any explanations for what we are currently discussing.

    But, I think it is fair to say, you passively support Tom Mitchell's barmy theory by implying that it is I, and not Tom, who is 'moulding.'

    Let's look at this.

    Let me quote your own words.

    "We don't know if Mike panicked."

    Absolutely! And who wrote that Mike DID panic?

    Tom Mitchell in his preceding four or five posts.

    So why are you warning Al Bundy and misrepresenting me instead of chiding Tom?

    Isn't it Tom who is moulding Mike into the "panicked" pub crawler that he needs for his theory to work (not that it does work) ?

    So why aim your barbs in my direction? I'm looking at the facts.

    Let's cut to the chase.

    If, as I believe, you are lending your support to Tom Mitchell's illogical theory, then can you answer the following question?

    Why did Mike Barrett want this 'surrogate' diary to be unused?

    Note that Tom Mitchell entirely avoids this question. He can't explain it.

    The same is true of Caroline, who likes to pretend or to insinuate that Mike wanted a diary with twenty blank pages so he could waive an invoice under Eddie's nose.

    But Mike didn't want that.

    That's not what Martin Earl's advertisement in Bookfinder tells us.

    First and foremost, Mike requested an UNUSED DIARY.

    Click image for larger version  Name:	Bookfinder.jpg Views:	0 Size:	49.6 KB ID:	812282


    Let me put the following in bold, for it is important.

    To anyone who is being fair-minded and analytical, Mike would have been happy if Martin Earl supplied him with an entirely unused (ie., blank) diary.

    Bear that in mind, because people here (not me) like to muddy that fact.

    If Earl couldn't find one, Mike would settle for a partially blank one, or at worst, twenty blank pages, which was the absolute minimum.

    That's what the advertisement is telling us.

    Make it work, Keith.

    Please explain why Mike Barrett would have believed that an entirely blank diary would be an appropriate "surrogate" if the inquisitive owner of stolen goods came knocking?

    Or expressed differently, why would Mike have assumed that the owner would expect to find the stolen diary to be unused?

    It makes no sense. Moulding Mike into a panicked pub crawler or mental vegetable (as someone told Alec Voller) doesn't make it work, either.

    Before this order to Martin Earl was placed (and David Barrat has proved that the order must have been phoned-in almost immediately after Mike talked to Doreen) Mike already knew that the alleged diary (I say alleged, because there is no compelling evidence that it even existed yet) was to be The Diary of Jack the Ripper, because he said so in his phone call to Doreen.

    Thus, no matter how Tom talks around the issue, it makes no sense that Barrett wanted this 'surrogate' to be unused.

    Perhaps you can offer an explanation?
    The ad says used or partly used RJ. You made a long-winded statement about the desire for an unused diary only for the evidence to undermine you. It says nothing about unused being preferred. You have applied that judgement.

    If anything, it supports the idea of him not being that fussy about what he got. Which, for a hoaxer, is a little haphazard.
    Last edited by erobitha; 07-02-2023, 03:20 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • rjpalmer
    replied
    Well, I feel a little thin-skinned this morning.

    Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post
    Now Al B might, like RJ, have no interest in the people involved beyond seeing them as one dimensional figures who only exist to be moulded into whatever personalities RJ wants them to be in order to make his theories work?

    We don't know if Mike panicked.
    Damn, Keith.

    If the writing in black is yours, which it apparently is (but there is always some slight uncertainty, because, unlike other contributors to this forum, you don't simply log-on, preferring to trickle encouragement to Tom Mitchell from behind the scenes) then I can only say that it is also an example of intellectual dishonesty.

    In your email, you talk all around the issue, referring to events of 30 years ago, but you don't really offer any explanations for what we are currently discussing.

    But, I think it is fair to say, you passively support Tom Mitchell's barmy theory by implying that it is I, and not Tom, who is 'moulding.'

    Let's look at this.

    Let me quote your own words.

    "We don't know if Mike panicked."

    Absolutely! And who wrote that Mike DID panic?

    Tom Mitchell in his preceding four or five posts.

    So why are you warning Al Bundy and misrepresenting me instead of chiding Tom?

    Isn't it Tom who is moulding Mike into the "panicked" pub crawler that he needs for his theory to work (not that it does work) ?

    So why aim your barbs in my direction? I'm looking at the facts.

    Let's cut to the chase.

    If, as I believe, you are lending your support to Tom Mitchell's illogical theory, then can you answer the following question?

    Why did Mike Barrett want this 'surrogate' diary to be unused?

    Note that Tom Mitchell entirely avoids this question. He can't explain it.

    The same is true of Caroline, who likes to pretend or to insinuate that Mike wanted a diary with twenty blank pages so he could waive an invoice under Eddie's nose.

    But Mike didn't want that.

    That's not what Martin Earl's advertisement in Bookfinder tells us.

    First and foremost, Mike requested an UNUSED DIARY.

    Click image for larger version

Name:	Bookfinder.jpg
Views:	204
Size:	49.6 KB
ID:	812282


    Let me put the following in bold, for it is important.

    To anyone who is being fair-minded and analytical, Mike would have been happy if Martin Earl supplied him with an entirely unused (ie., blank) diary.

    Bear that in mind, because people here (not me) like to muddy that fact.

    If Earl couldn't find one, Mike would settle for a partially blank one, or at worst, twenty blank pages, which was the absolute minimum.

    That's what the advertisement is telling us.

    Make it work, Keith.

    Please explain why Mike Barrett would have believed that an entirely blank diary would be an appropriate "surrogate" if the inquisitive owner of stolen goods came knocking?

    Or expressed differently, why would Mike have assumed that the owner would expect to find the stolen diary to be unused?

    It makes no sense. Moulding Mike into a panicked pub crawler or mental vegetable (as someone told Alec Voller) doesn't make it work, either.

    Before this order to Martin Earl was placed (and David Barrat has proved that the order must have been phoned-in almost immediately after Mike talked to Doreen) Mike already knew that the alleged diary (I say alleged, because there is no compelling evidence that it even existed yet) was to be The Diary of Jack the Ripper, because he said so in his phone call to Doreen.

    Thus, no matter how Tom talks around the issue, it makes no sense that Barrett wanted this 'surrogate' to be unused.

    Perhaps you can offer an explanation?

    Leave a comment:

Working...
X