The problem with all this, we now
know, is that it is completely made up. Someone else did the poem
transcription. Captain Raines, whose credibility was brought into question by
many of his other statements, as we saw in Part 2, was simply wrong when he said
that the handwriting on the poem written on brown paper looked like
Forrestal’s. It doesn’t look the least bit like Forrestal’s handwriting.
One hardly needs an expert to tell
him that the person who transcribed the poem is not the same person who wrote
the various letters there that are known to have been written by Forrestal. The
most obvious difference is that Forrestal writes his words and letters almost
straight up and down, while the poem transcriber writes with a more conventional
consistent lean to the right. Forrestal, on the other hand, is more
conventional in how he writes his small r’s, making either a single hump or an
almost imperceptible double peak, while the transcriber has a very distinctive
exaggerated first peak in almost every one he makes. The transcriber is a very
conventional “archer” in the manner in which he makes his small m’s and n’s.
Forrestal, on the other hand, is a typical "swagger," sagging down between
peaks, as opposed to rounding over arches.
What’s most amazing is the complete
brazenness on display. One can truly say that the transcription of “Chorus from
Ajax” is not a forgery. Not the slightest effort was made to mimic James
Forrestal’s handwriting. The perpetrators must have been completely confident
that no attempt would be made by the Navy to authenticate the note, and, in
fact, that no question would even be raised either by the press or by anyone
with a public forum as to the authenticity of the handwriting in the
transcription.
Now that the cat is so thoroughly and
obviously out of the bag, one can anticipate that there will be one last,
desperate effort to put it back in. It would not be at all surprising for
someone to claim that what was sent to me in response to the Freedom of
Information Act request was not the actual transcription written by Forrestal,
but a facsimile, obviously written by someone else. But it was right there in
Exhibit 3 along with the nurse’s notes, just as it was when Dr. Raines examined
it and volunteered to the Willcutts Review Board that it looked like Forrestal’s
handwriting. Just as Raines was the only person at Bethesda Naval Hospital to
testify that Forrestal was suicidal at any time, he was also the only one there,
or anywhere else, to say that the handwriting in the transcription looked like
Forrestal’s.