Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes
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Anne was going to leave getting a divorce until they had been separated for two years, but changed her mind due to Mike's increasingly erratic behaviour during 1994.
Assuming the decree nisi came through on 7th December 1994, that is when the writing was truly on the wall for their marriage, and within the next five days Mike showed his anger and distress by going round to where Anne was living and only succeeding in cutting his hand badly on the glass entrance, which required hospital treatment. That's just a small snapshot of a man in the throes of misery and resentment.
It's not only the decree absolute point It's that none of the dates work. Anne left Mike in January 1994, I believe, yet Mike didn't mention Anne in his confession of June 1994. Ike has pointed out to me in the "Hoax" thread that the reason behind the January 1995 affidavit was that Melvin Harris had suggested to Alan Gray in December 1994 that Mike put his story down in a written statement. I'm pretty sure that suggestion by Harris could have had nothing to do with the Barretts' divorce proceedings. As I've previously discussed with Ike, Mike had already told Gray multiple times in November 1994, long before the decree nisi, that Anne had written the manuscript. This was merely repeated in the January 1995 affidavit. Furthermore, Mike repeated this claim in 1999, five years after his divorce.
What is it that makes you say the known dates don't work - apart from the gap of two years between Harris getting his statement and its arrival on the internet?
And I hope this post explains why I thought it was important earlier to mention that the November 1994 and April 1999 instances of Mike stating that his wife assisted him in the forgery weren't included in your brief chronology.
I still haven't been given anything like a believable motive for Mike to have volunteered a true confession to forgery at any time from January 1994. When did he ever express any credible remorse for his behaviour? When would he have been in 'the right place' to do 'the right thing' and apologise for his own role in the events? A true confession doesn't typically involve the guilty party blaming everyone but himself for his own misdeeds and misfortunes, and trying new ways to make that confession believable. It's usually a one off instance of coming to terms with one's own guilt and accepting it. But multiple false confessions could represent Mike's failed attempts to take his own misery out on others.
Love,
Caz
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