Post by Rita Witt on Jul 18, 2010 14:43:21 GMT -5
That is the same covclusion I got back a few years. There is another set of problems with the ransom note in which the dear sir matches Anne's hanwriting nearly perfectly. Figure also why did Lindbergh play a mind game with Anne if she originaly wrote the note to explan an accident, There can be seen on the orignal note ink erasure and overwritten words which I enhanced photographicly a few years back that indicate the letter was totaly written by Anne and ink eraseed by Lindy. Lindy put psychological pressure on Anne for two hours holding the closed note with Anne thinking it had her explanation of an accident while the police searched the house. When the not was finaly opened the stress created by Lindy tanting her with her note made her realize she should play along with Lindy's game wrather tha sweat out police questioning.
I have added the three photo enhancements I did in 1977 to Facebook and if the other site doesn't connect the Facebook will be available. I think it is the single most important find ever done that contradicts the kidnap case story from day one.
www.facebook.com/editaccount.php?networks#!/rita.witt1
In letter To Amelia Erhardt, and is getting hard to find the same information that I foud three years ago. The problem internet has expanded, and something you might have found on the tenth search page may now be on page thirty.
However the photo enhancement stand alone on contradicting Hauptmann writing them.
Here is part of the trail I followed when I found the actual letters written by Ann to Amelia. There is a letter From Elizabetth to Amelia also. This is still not the correspondence set that had only handwritten letters that I may be able to find. They had written many letters to each other. In both letters both Elizabeth and Ann write the d in lower case, but in the hand written notes that were many I previously saw they had written the d as a capital letter.
earchives.lib.purdue.edu/cdm4/results.php?CISOOP1=any&CISOFIELD1=CISOSEARCHALL&CISOROOT=/earhart&CISOBOX1=Lindbergh
The evidence presnted by these photographic enhancements changes the entire direction that the case can take from day one in the nursery itself. We were told by Wilentz and Judge Trenchard that the most evil person that ever existed wrote the nursery note pointing to Richard Haptmann, and later heard tetimony from some paid for the moment handwriting expert that found two or three letters per page that matched Hauptmann. They seemed to have missed the faint markings that can be seen by the naked eye that look like erased handwriting and numbers in between the lines.
The Dear Sir looks exactly as Anne's handwriting, but lets look at what happened to the claimed nursery note from the time Ann and Bette Gow claimed not to have seen the note where Lindergh said he found it? Anne was noted to have said it was an accident, but what did she mean? Since the Dear Sir is her writing the note appears to have had carefully applied ink eraser then either place in a photograpic dryer, or hung in an oven to dry, and while drying in a vertical position the ink eraser in suspension settled to the bottom leaving the blue ink concetration at the bottom seen in my enhancement photos.
Why did the person who did this leave only Anne's Dear Sir as the salutation and erase everthing else? I think Anne wrote the note to explain the accident, and Lindbergh erased it leaving her salutation so that he could show her he was putting her note in the envelop for the police. Another possibility is an employee or family enemy Perhap even Elizabeth erased one of her notes leaving her Dear Sir as some sort symbolic gesture only Anne would know?
By the way the underwriting is English completly exhonorating Hauptmann
Nursery Note.
www.network54.com/Forum/503282/thread/1155183848/last-1155183848/Nursery+Note+Secret+Writing-
I have added the three photo enhancements I did in 1977 to Facebook and if the other site doesn't connect the Facebook will be available. I think it is the single most important find ever done that contradicts the kidnap case story from day one.
www.facebook.com/editaccount.php?networks#!/rita.witt1
In letter To Amelia Erhardt, and is getting hard to find the same information that I foud three years ago. The problem internet has expanded, and something you might have found on the tenth search page may now be on page thirty.
However the photo enhancement stand alone on contradicting Hauptmann writing them.
Here is part of the trail I followed when I found the actual letters written by Ann to Amelia. There is a letter From Elizabetth to Amelia also. This is still not the correspondence set that had only handwritten letters that I may be able to find. They had written many letters to each other. In both letters both Elizabeth and Ann write the d in lower case, but in the hand written notes that were many I previously saw they had written the d as a capital letter.
earchives.lib.purdue.edu/cdm4/results.php?CISOOP1=any&CISOFIELD1=CISOSEARCHALL&CISOROOT=/earhart&CISOBOX1=Lindbergh
The evidence presnted by these photographic enhancements changes the entire direction that the case can take from day one in the nursery itself. We were told by Wilentz and Judge Trenchard that the most evil person that ever existed wrote the nursery note pointing to Richard Haptmann, and later heard tetimony from some paid for the moment handwriting expert that found two or three letters per page that matched Hauptmann. They seemed to have missed the faint markings that can be seen by the naked eye that look like erased handwriting and numbers in between the lines.
The Dear Sir looks exactly as Anne's handwriting, but lets look at what happened to the claimed nursery note from the time Ann and Bette Gow claimed not to have seen the note where Lindergh said he found it? Anne was noted to have said it was an accident, but what did she mean? Since the Dear Sir is her writing the note appears to have had carefully applied ink eraser then either place in a photograpic dryer, or hung in an oven to dry, and while drying in a vertical position the ink eraser in suspension settled to the bottom leaving the blue ink concetration at the bottom seen in my enhancement photos.
Why did the person who did this leave only Anne's Dear Sir as the salutation and erase everthing else? I think Anne wrote the note to explain the accident, and Lindbergh erased it leaving her salutation so that he could show her he was putting her note in the envelop for the police. Another possibility is an employee or family enemy Perhap even Elizabeth erased one of her notes leaving her Dear Sir as some sort symbolic gesture only Anne would know?
By the way the underwriting is English completly exhonorating Hauptmann
Nursery Note.
www.network54.com/Forum/503282/thread/1155183848/last-1155183848/Nursery+Note+Secret+Writing-