Originally posted by Iconoclast
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Caz first posted Keith's full and detailed description of this diary on 4th August 2020 in #5701 of the "One Incontrovertible" thread, again on 7 September 2020 (#6108) and then for a third time on 24 June 2021 (#6295) which was actually the first time she revealed that it was Keith's description of the diary as opposed to the one Martin Earl gave Barrett.
I think you already knew this, Ike.
And of course when Keith wrote this description, unlike the supplier, he knew of the significance of the 1891 diary and that, according to Mike, it was originally intended to be used to create the fake Maybrick diary.
Please do check this with Keith. Knock yourself out.
As for your question asking me if Mike had "nothing to do with Martin Earl", I've never claimed this to be the case, so its baffling that you ask me.
I've always assumed that Martin Earl confirmed that he dealt with Mike Barrett rather than his wife and that this is what he told Keith Skinner. If that's not the case and Earl said he dealt with Anne, and sold her the diary, please do let me know because that would be important. But whether it was Mike or Anne doesn't matter for this purpose. The point is that when he wrote the description of the diary, Keith fully understood why it was significant to Barrett's forgery claim, not least because he was aware from as early as July 20th 1995, before he'd even seen the 1891 diary, that Mike was claiming that the receipt for that diary "proved Anne wrote the diary", yet he still didn't write "dates printed on every page" when he wrote his description of it.
And that itself is only illustrative of the fact that "dates printed on every page" cannot be assumed to be part of any full and detailed description of the diary.
As for the size, I've already explained what I think happened. As soon as the red diary arrived, and he took it out of the envelope, Mike saw that it was far too small to be of use. So, although when subsequently looking through the diary, he would have seen the printed dates, that was only a secondary factor. He'd already decided he couldn't use it. Speaking to Alan Gray more than 2 years later, and without the benefit of seeing the 1891 diary to refresh his memory, the thing that might easily have stood out in his memory was the size. That is understandable. I mean, there can't be any doubt that he saw the 1891 diary in March 1992, so he would definitely have known about the dates printed on every page. The only reason for him not mentioning the dates in 1995, whether he was lying or being truthful, can surely only be that he'd forgotten and that it was the small size that stood out in his memory.
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