Maybrick Diary - Fake or Genuine

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  • caz
    Premium Member
    • Feb 2008
    • 10586

    #46
    Originally posted by Lombro2 View Post
    But they were able to find trace evidence of Chloroacetamide. So the test was good enough.

    But they then concluded the traces came from the control. The machine was apparently cleaned and voila! No traces of Chloroacetamide.

    Game over. Set and match. A long time ago.
    Call me thick, Lombro2 [why not? Most posters around these parts think so], but Leeds University tested samples of the ink scraped directly from various parts of the diary, so if this was Diamine, where did the expected amount of chloroacetamide disappear to when the test, which was repeated specifically to eliminate the possibility of a false positive first time round, indicated that none was present? How does that happen on an earth that isn't flat?

    Palmer calls the Leeds tests 'muddled', but I prefer the term 'belt and braces'. If only one test was conducted by AFI, on ink dots sent over from the US if memory serves, how was it possible for anyone to be 100% positive that it could not have produced a false positive?

    One can just imagine the howls of protest if Robert Smith had got a more favourable result from Baxendale and stopped there. Robert wasn't happy that Baxendale considered it 'likely' that the ink had originated since 1945, based on the supposed presence of a synthetic dye, which turned out to have been in general use in writing inks by the 1870s, and who could really have blamed him under those circumstances?

    If AFI and Leeds had both returned repeated negative results for chloroacetamide, we can be 100% positive that Voller's warning about the difficulty of detecting it would have come into play to keep the Barrett hoax dream alive.

    Love,

    Caz
    X
    "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


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    • Lombro2
      Detective
      • Jun 2023
      • 488

      #47
      Wow, Caz. The Barrett Hoax Theorists’ earth is flatter than I thought.
      A Northern Italian invented Criminology but Thomas Harris surpassed us all. Except for Michael Barrett and his Diary of Jack the Ripper.

      Comment

      • rjpalmer
        Commissioner
        • Mar 2008
        • 4289

        #48
        Originally posted by Lombro2 View Post
        Wow, Caz. The Barrett Hoax Theorists’ earth is flatter than I thought.
        No, she's just blowing smoke up your backside. Why she dangles imaginary carrots for the True Believers is anyone's guess.

        The idea that the samples tested by Dr. Simpson were accidentally contaminated with the exact chemical that she was looking for while in transit from America is as laughable as it is desperate. There is utterly no reason to grab hold of this fantasy.

        Dr. Robert Kuranz, the chemist who had carefully gathered these ink samples from the diary when part of Kenneth Rendell's team, had preserved them from the possibility of contamination by placing them in pristine laboratory grade gelatin capsules. Caroline seems to be harkening back the crazy theories of Paul Feldman who fantasized that Melvin Harris had somehow gotten hold of these samples and contaminated them at the nano level. Harris was in the UK; Kuranz sent them directly to AFI himself. It's a silly suggestion, if that is indeed what she is suggesting.

        Notice the word "If" in her final, meaningless line. IF Dr. Simpson didn't find chloroacetamide, those dirty skeptics would have said X, Y, and Z, etc. etc. How is this a fact? This is mere mischief making by Caroline and is hardly one of the "facts" that she claims she is going to adhere to moving forward. I guess old habits die hard.

        In truth, her statement is meaningless. Dr. Simpson DID find chloroacetamide but she did not set out to determine the percentage of that chemical in the paper/ink samples, which were diluted. Caroline has long been under the misapprehension that this disproves the ink is Diamine, but it does not. Far from it.

        As for Leeds, if I recall Mr. Voller himself admitted there were deep concerns about their findings (or non-findings) due to their haphazard protocol, while in contrast Voller praised the work of Dr. Simpson. Why would any objective, non-partisan person favor the findings of someone who admitted they had allowed contamination over one whose protocol was proven to be expertly conducted? This is the sort of willful self-deception that is so typical of those who champion the Maybrick Hoax.

        Of course, the matter could be revisited by Robert Smith if he wanted. There are now non-destructive means of analyzing the diary's ink as I mentioned on another thread. If the scientists in Russia can detect that George Orwell was on morphine when he wrote a letter from Spain in the 1930s, they can tell us the exact composition of the ink. But let's face it. The world has moved on, and no one is willing to fund further tests on this proven fake. If Smith ever tries to sell his relic at auction, perhaps it will happen then.

        RP
        Last edited by rjpalmer; 06-25-2025, 06:34 PM.

        Comment

        • Lombro2
          Detective
          • Jun 2023
          • 488

          #49
          I just did some more research. I was already ready to dismiss the Rendell/Harris/AGI and Eastaugh teams based on one negative test. Now I find out there were three negatives in the Leeds test.

          Not only was there no trace of Cloroacetimide. There was no Nigrosine and no sodium. All three were found by Eastaugh and his SEM test (same as Leeds). I doubt all three are difficult to trace.

          I go by rule of three so fuggetabuddit! Otherwise I'd go looking for the ivory-billed woodpecker.


          The subsequent AFI report of 19.10 1994, concluded:-...chloroacetamide was indicated to be present in the ink used."

          (At this point let me emphasize that these ink tests organized by surgeon Nick Warren and myself were not meant to prove that the Diary was a fake. We had already established the fact that it was a modern forgery. There were no doubts on that score. Our tests were simply aimed at seeing whether Barrett's claims would stand up to investigation.)
          Melvin Harris. The Feldy of Barrett Forgery supporters.
          A Northern Italian invented Criminology but Thomas Harris surpassed us all. Except for Michael Barrett and his Diary of Jack the Ripper.

          Comment

          • rjpalmer
            Commissioner
            • Mar 2008
            • 4289

            #50
            Here are two relevant quotes from Diamine's chief chemist, Alec Voller, in letter he sent jointly to Shirley Harrison and Nick Warren on 27th December 1994:

            His comment on the Leeds analysis:

            "The Leeds report is profoundly disturbing. That any possibility of cross contamination should have been allowed to arise in Gas Chromatography is unforgivable but even worse, calibration of the instrument appears to have been very cursory and its ability to detect tiny traces of chloracetamide assumed rather than properly established".

            On Dr. Simpson and AFI:

            "By contrast with the above, the report by Analysis For Industry presents us with almost a model picture of how an analysis should be conducted and reported...The methodology employed seems faultless and there is therefore no reason to question the results obtained".

            And yet, bizarrely, you put great faith in the Leeds results and look on the AFI results with suspicion or indifference.

            Why does this not surprise me?

            Agenda, anyone?

            Comment

            • Lombro2
              Detective
              • Jun 2023
              • 488

              #51

              Here's the relevant quote from the Diamine's chief chemist on "20 October 1995" ("A very inky question" right before the subject was conveniently changed.)

              'Certainly the ink did not go on to the paper within recent years ... you are looking at a document which in my opinion is at least 90 years old and may be older ... I came with an open mind and if I thought it was a modern ink I would have said so.'



              That's the same guy who said the ink looks nothing like his.

              But then changed his mind when someone did an experiment with his ink on a similar type of paper and he was nice enough to say it wasn't bad.

              Seems like a nice guy and very accommodating. But the answer is no. It's not Diamine.
              A Northern Italian invented Criminology but Thomas Harris surpassed us all. Except for Michael Barrett and his Diary of Jack the Ripper.

              Comment

              • rjpalmer
                Commissioner
                • Mar 2008
                • 4289

                #52
                Yup. As expected....the old "goalpost shuffle."

                Now that your earlier claim about chloroacetamide has died on the vine, you retreat to Voller's strictly visual examination.

                Same old argument, different year.

                Of course, as you admit, Voller later told Nick Warren that his samples of writing using 'old style' Diamine ink DID resemble the diary.

                So, we have a contradiction. An enigma.

                You attribute this to Voller being a 'nice guy' and 'accommodating.'

                If such was the case, how do you know Voller wasn't being 'accommodating' when he told Shirley back in 1995 that he didn't think the Diary was written with Diamine?

                In conclusion....

                Putting it all together we have an iron gall ink in a text written in the second half of the 20th Century, almost certainly after 1988. Nigrosine as a sighting agent. Traces of chloroacetamide.

                By George, that sounds a lot like Diamine!

                I guess we'll know if it ever goes up for auction.

                Comment

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