The Dreyfus Affair
The physical evidence consisted of a slip of paper discovered in a trashcan
Handwriting experts could not definitively link the note to Dreyfus, but..."
Colonel Henry (aka heister/steven wargo)... testified that he had additional information definitively implicating Dreyfus (David Scully),
but that this information involved classified military secrets and thus could not be revealed.
BASED ON COLONEL HENRY'S (heister's/steven wargo's) TESTIMONY,
Dreyfus (David Scully) was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment in exile on Devil's Island (el paso/juarez)...
intelligence discovered ANOTHER piece of paper...
The handwriting was identical to that found on the piece of paper used in the Dreyfus case...
Since Dreyfus was imprisoned on Devil's Island at the time
he could not have authored this...
Major Georges Picquart was assigned to be head of the staff of the Military Intelligence Service (SR) in July 1895
On seeing letters from Esterhazy,
Picquart realized with amazement that his writing was exactly the same as that on the "bordereau", which had been used to incriminate Dreyfus.
He procured the "secret file" given to the judges in 1894
and was astonished by the lack of evidence against Dreyfus, and became convinced of his innocence...
Major Henry, although deputy to Picquart, was jealous
and fostered his own malicious operation to compromise his superior.
He engaged in various malpractices...
Meanwhile, the military court recalled Henry and demanded his secret Dreyfus evidence.
Henry's evidence was exposed as a clumsy forgery.
Henry (heister/steven wargo) himself was thrown in jail, where he killed himself.
THE DREYFUS AFFAIR
Dreyfus Affair - wiki, The Truth Emerges
********
MORE SCROLL TO SUBSEQUENT CAREER and MORE
The Subsequent Career of Dreyfus
Dreyfus was reinstated in the army with the rank of artillery major by law in July 1906.
This reflected the rank to which he could reasonably have been expected to have risen
had his career not been interrupted by the false charges against him.
As a reserve officer, Dreyfus participated in the First World War of 1914-1918,
serving as head of the artillery depot at a fortified camp near Paris and commander of a supply column.
In 1917 he saw frontline service at the Chemin des Dames and Verdun.
Apart from Major Du Paty de Clam, Dreyfus was the only officer directly involved in the affair to serve in the war.
Having been named as a Chevalier of the Legion of Honour at the time of his reinstatement in 1906,
Dreyfus was promoted to the rank of officer of the Legion of Honour in 1919.
THE SUBSEQUENT CAREER OF DREYFUS
To Top
the note David Scully wrote?