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Stephenson’s innocence and complete absolvement in the matter of his suspectworthiness was finally settled once and for all in 2006…and in 2008. This unusual statement above refers to the first London Hospital discharge paper ( see thread) which Spiro Dimolianis(Aus.) provided for the community back in 2006. The Currie Ward was a facility within the London Hospital that had a security protocol which prevented patients from leaving the ward after a certain time of night. Furthermore, Stephenson wrote a letter ( October 16th, 1888) from this very ward, demonstrating that he had been in that particular ward from at least July 26th,1888 up until that date,at least,and perhaps beyond. Mr. Dimolianis could not or would not provide the final link to the proof of this, the most important document in all Stephensonia, which was the proof of the document’s origin. In 2008, as mentioned on the London Hospital Discharge # 1 thread, Mike Covell traveled to London, saw the curator of the Hospital archives, learned about the protocol of the ward as well as seeing the actual document which is precisely what Mr. Dimolianis provided in the first place, but without that all important proof of origin. Stephenson’s possible complicity of anything to do with any murders committed in 1888’s Autumn of Terror, is officially terminated at this point. Further comments to follow. |
Apr 15
April 15th, 2008 at 5:50 am
It is noteworthy at this time to mention that despite the fact that what Mr. Dimolianis provided and Mr. Covell verified, the two pro-D’Onston authors were oblivious to the mentioning of the Currie Ward when THEY perused the document. One goes so far as to deny that the Currie Ward is even on the discharge paper !
The author, Melvin Harris, does not comment on the Currie Ward, even though this information was provided to him by British researcher extraordinaire, Andrew Aliffe. His omission of the Currie Ward,referentially, in either of the two books he authored on D’Onston’s suspectworthiness is the ONLY thing that is suspect in this case.