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61 However, in order to determine if the briefing paper fit Hillenkoetter's style, it was presented to world-famous lin- guistics expert Dr. Roger W Wescott, of Drew University in New Jersey, along with more than twenty examples of notes and memos known to have been written by Hillenkoetter. After studying them, Wescott wrote: "In my opinion, there is no compelling reason to regard any of these communications as fraudulent or to believe that any of them were written by anyone other than Hillenkoetter himself. This statement holds for the controversial presidential briefing memorandum of November 18, 1952, as well as for the letters, both official and personal." This, of course, does not prove that the Eisenhower briefing paper was written by Admiral Hillenkoetter. It only means that an expert found no evidence of fraud. Even if there were evidence that it was not written by Hillenkoetter, this would not necessarily mean it was a fake, only that the text was not prepared directly by him. It is certainly possible that an inspec- tion of the original document would produce evidence of the use of modern paper or ink ... or that it would produce evi- dence of the use of paper and ink appropriate to 1952. These matters remain unsettled. It has been suggested that listing Admiral Hillenkoetter as Roscoe rather than by his initials, R. H., is strong evidence (some actually insist it is proof) the paper is a fake because he is said to have hated that name and always used his initials. Testimony by his widow and by close friends agrees that he frequently used "Roscoe" and in fact was generally known by that name. The content of the briefing paper offers the greatest oppor- tunity for checking, and that is where most of the effort has gone, starting with the members of the Majestic-12 group. If they were the sort of men who had the knowledge and abilities, the experience and connections needed for such a novel, sensi- tive, and important assignment, then one can assume that either the document is real or was written by someone with suspiciously complete access to the needed information. MAJESTIC-12