Originally posted by rjpalmer
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New Ideas and New Research on the Diary
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Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
Why do I need to disprove your imagination?
The watch did not 'mysteriously appear' at the same time as the diary, as you claimed.
Suzanne and Ron Murphy informed Shirley Harrison that the watch had belonged to Suzanne's father, as part of the bits & bobs left over when he retired. It had been in the family's possession for years.
There wasn't a peep about Ron and Suzanne being anything other than honest British shopkeepers until the Battlecrease caper was invented, and then it was necessary to retroactively paint them as dishonest members of a gang of thieves and fencers.
Not very nice, Lombro.
Riddle: who in Palmer's world uses jeweller's rouge to minimise non-existent scratch marks?
Nothing new, nothing real.
Just the same old, same old.
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Originally posted by Lombro2 View PostOh so you proved it saw the light of day in the previous 103 years! Wow.
Something new! Something real!............................................. .................................................. .................................................. ......................
If RJ Palmer thinks there was no mystery about it, that the watch went on sale in Wallasey, at the same time as the rights to publish the diary were being sold in London, perhaps he has a new theory that the Barretts and the Murphys were in cahoots.
Love,
Caz
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View Post
Hi Caz,
I’m sorry that my post has annoyed you but as someone who spent his own money, out of his own personal finances, to purchase Robert Smith's book, I was expecting better from someone who was trying to sell me the claim that the diary was written in the 19th century than the woefully inaccurate information about "one off" that I read in that book. So I do think it's my business, having paid good money for that book just like anyone else that bought it.
You must have bought an awful lot of books over the years, judging by your posting history. Have you never heard of the two-word catchphrase: caveat emptor?
Love,
Caz
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Originally posted by Scott Nelson View PostThe Battlecrease provenance isn't clearly written in the diary. Mike probably couldn't figure where it came from until Eddie suggested it based on discussions Lyons had with colleagues who worked in the house years before. The way subsequent events unfolded, Mike didn't have to worry about using a "Battlecrease Provenance."
You'd need some evidence that Eddie Lyons had any 'colleagues', or indeed knew anyone who had worked at that address previously. We know he was only taken on by Portus & Rhodes in late November 1991, along with Jim Bowling, for a lengthy contract in a different area.
This would have been a major reason for Feldman dismissing his Battlecrease contacts as liars, because he believed Tony Devereux had to be somewhere in the chain, but he was dead by August 1991. Feldman never knew about the double event of 9th March 1992, or he may not have been so hasty.
Love,
Caz
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Originally posted by caz View Post
Is this a 'new idea' or 'new research' I see before me?
Or just another dagger, aimed at someone who doesn't post here, whose personal finances, and what he may or may not currently be doing about the diary, are none of anyone's damned business?
Harrumph.
Love,
Caz
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Hi Caz,
I’m sorry that my post has annoyed you but as someone who spent his own money, out of his own personal finances, to purchase Robert Smith's book, I was expecting better from someone who was trying to sell me the claim that the diary was written in the 19th century than the woefully inaccurate information about "one off" that I read in that book. So I do think it's my business, having paid good money for that book just like anyone else that bought it.
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Originally posted by Lombro2 View PostCaz came up with a new idea about the "alleged" Saddle pub transaction:
So Eddy had the Diary and immediately went to a pub at a time when Mike Barrett was known to regularly stop in. Why? Was it just because he was a published author? Mike was already a dealer in scrap metal and we know he was a thief. So dealer and thief equals fence or, at least, it strongly suggests the possibility. Mike claimed it and ran with it, apparently knowing that Eddy couldn't call the cops on him.
So now it looks to me like there's a good possibility that Mike was a regular fence and dealer in stolen property, and he and Eddy already had some sort of association. Otherwise why would Eddy give him the book? Eddy must have trusted him because of previous dealings and got "conned".
I think it more likely that this was a one off instance of two local men, with different reasons for being in the same pub on that Monday lunchtime in March. Eddie was living within a stone's throw at the time, and the long-term contract he had been working on with Jim Bowling right up until the Saturday, had been put on hold for a few days, resulting in their boss sending the pair to Battlecrease to help Arthur Rigby and his apprentice on an unofficial basis. Mike was known to frequent the Saddle anyway, on weekdays in term time, before collecting his young daughter from school, but Eddie had previously been tied up elsewhere all day, Mondays to Saturdays, with no opportunity to pop in when Mike was there. There is no evidence that they already knew each other, or that either man knew the other would be there that day.
Seeing the diary, unwrapped from its brown paper, was all Mike would have needed to spot an opportunity he couldn't resist, and then brag about his celebrity contacts and what have you, just as he used to do when bending the late Tony Devereux's ear over a pint in the same hostelry [if I am allowed to use an archaic word in good humour, without the language police clapping the darbies on me]. Promising not to "split on his new mate", when Eddie wasn't exactly forthcoming about where he'd got the old book from, except to say that "no effing bugger alive" knew about it, Mike then offered to take it off his hands and find a buyer.
It's really quite simple and fits in well enough with the evidence from witness testimony, in combination with the chronology and context of known events. Nothing has to be forced backwards or forwards in time, or adapted to comply with any of the claims made about the diary's origins by the serial liar at centre stage. The mere fact that he studiously avoided making Battlecrease the provenance, while working his way through pretty much any other way he could think of to explain how he came to own it, is suggestive of a liar who would say anything but the truth.
Every time Mike made a 'confession', the story changed and included at least one eye-wateringly childish claim that you won't find anyone falling for today.
In June 1994 he said he forged the diary all by himself.
In January 1995 he said he had forged it with his ex-wife, then they waited for Tony Devereux to recover before deciding what to do with the finished forgery, but instead he died and gave them the provenance they needed.
Another time he said Anne had dropped a real kidney on the diary, causing the kidney-shaped stain.
Then he claimed he had faked the watch too, by putting the scratches in it himself.
In 1999, he said he had added sugar to the diary ink to do something or other to the molecules.
Molecules, bollecules.
Now there's a two-word phrase you won't see very often.
Love,
Caz
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Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes View PostMy one and only contribution to this thread is this….’one off instance’ is 100%, categorically an anachronism which proves, conclusively proves, that the diary is a modern forgery. Robert Smith isn’t short of a few quid is he? So why doesn’t he try and knock down the main argument against the diary being a fake? He could invest a few quid, hire an Etymologist to research the subject, and then he could crow until his heart was content that ‘one off instance’ could have been used by Maybrick after all. Simples. Job done. But in all these years neither he nor anyone else has taken that step. Why? Because they know what the answer would be. FAKE.
Or just another dagger, aimed at someone who doesn't post here, whose personal finances, and what he may or may not currently be doing about the diary, are none of anyone's damned business?
Harrumph.
Love,
Caz
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Originally posted by rjpalmer View Post
Hi Mike.
That's interesting. The article states that the Liverpool Horse's Rest moved to that site in 1937. The photograph is also listed as being taken in 1937.
According to an advertisement in the Post of the R.S.P.C.A., the previous site of the Horse's Rest was in Broadgreen.
The date on the headstone shows that 'Chubby' died in 1929, so instead of this being a 'pet cemetery,' I wonder if this is at the Horse's Rest at Broadgreen, Liverpool?
Mrs. Mary Pennell, who apparently erected the headstone was also associated with the R.S.P.C.A. who ran cat shelters as well as the horse's rest.
It would certainly fit.
I was wondering the same thing, although this article states that there was a pet cemetery in Halewood as far back as at least 1922, which is apparently the oldest date on one of the headstones. This is the same area where Blackie was buried.
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I'm just highlighting the main points of the Barrett Theory that everyone who swears by it needs to be aware of.... Including the Donkey.... Why are you not interested?
You should be glad there's a Noah in the desert covering the outside possibility. You never know if you might need to jump on the ship of fools.
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The diary is a categorically proven forgery. All the silly comments in the world won’t change that. We have explained the ‘one off’ refutation to you numerous times and all that you’ve done is displayed in post after post that you simply don’t understand the point. You can’t do or you wouldn’t have made the posts that you have made. It can’t be explained in simpler terms so I have to wonder whether your actually do understand that it’s a forgery but keep the ‘argument’ going just for the sake of it.
It’s a forgery. That should be an end of it.Last edited by Herlock Sholmes; 02-24-2025, 09:51 PM.
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Originally posted by Lombro2 View PostYes, and it would also be a good place to put your horse in this race to rest.
In Loving Memory of
-- Barrett Hoax Theory --
The dear and affectionate little friend of
R & J Palmer
Died February 23, 2025
"In Hopelessness"
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Yes, and it would also be a good place to put your horse in this race to rest.
In Loving Memory of
-- Barrett Hoax Theory --
The dear and affectionate little friend of
R & J Palmer
Died February 23, 2025
"In Hopelessness"
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