(Login rwitty) Forum Owner Posted Dec 16, 2007 2:47 PM
These connections to family seemed trivial at first compared to the court casses I was faceing with family thieves. The spy connection is, and the advance stories I read from National Police Gazzette were posting pictures from my fathers photo album, and for which foreign agents came calling at my fathers business while I was present. I need to write a book about it as no one else seems to want to disclose that information. One of the most interesting is a photo on Lindbergh site captioned wrong, but being escorted in Berlin by cemetary John a connection or partner agent. They played out the kidnap story to it's fullest to gain Lindbergh access into Hitler's Trust.
I think the way Hauptmann got mixed in through off shore investments and money laudering. The Mersman Salesman looked like CJ and he sold the table to the New Jersey Furniture dealer who owed gambling debt paid to Hauptmann to be laundered off shore by his racketeer client. This was route of simple miss direction by CJ who siply gave furniture dealer gold certificates to pay off gambling debt to Hauptmann's client, but got stuck with them thinking he could safely pass them of a little at a time.
Mersman Salesman was my aunts husband,and remember when the FBI came to us searching for things he might have left with us. When they questioned my father they didn't realize he was a top agent and very adept at miss leading, he just forgot to tell them there was another house that might have the items they were looking for. The gold certificates were still behind the wall panel in the old house.
The nursery note was ersed very hastily, and the reson for the many remaining visible ink marks. There is large pools of erased ink that migrated from erased lines. He must have put the nursery not into the oven to quick dry it, but this is probably why parts of some nearly erased words left faint traces. I think this also explains the broad pen stokes in some places not yet completly dry the ink spread out as if written by a broad pen nib.