Originally posted by R. J. Palmer
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And if he convinced his partner in crime of this, then she wouldn't need to give a second thought to "having to trust Mike not to leave an incriminating record of the book he was trying to obtain for their funny little joint enterprise," etc., etc., because he had convinced her that his name (and hers) would never make the papers.
But fair enough, if you need Anne to be as naive as Mike, for your argument to work, so be it. But didn't you once argue that she had somehow set Mike up with the red diary purchase, so if the paper trail was ever revealed [as it eventually was], it wouldn't involve her beyond signing the cheque? Not so naive in that case? Of course, I realise that was before you decided they had both made 'little effort to disguise their purchase', and had to change your argument accordingly, to one of a joint naivety. Was Anne still naive enough in 1995 to imagine Mike's advert would never see the light of day? Or did she not know how it was worded, but couldn't have cared less?
Of course, both you and I know this was delusional thinking. Robert Smith could hardly have marketed the Maybrick Diary as "a recently discovered document by a man who wishes to remain anonymous." There would have been howls of protest. Smith would have to provide SOME sort of provenance...even if it was a lame one. Thus, a reluctant Mike eventually stepped out of the shadows.
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