
As promised, I’m back with the seventh and final “goodie” from my last post.
Let’s look back to the halcyon days of 2020 when, during lockdown, I discovered a photo I’d taken of a summary of an interview that had been conducted with a woman who’d been Carl Knox’s secretary at the time of Ron Tammen’s disappearance. The summary is undated and unsigned and lives in a box stored at Miami’s University Archives.

As you probably know by now, I think the interview with Carl Knox’s former secretary had been conducted relatively recently, within the last 20 years, and I also think that she may have disclosed some pertinent information about Carl Knox’s investigation, particularly the forbidden words described in bullet 3. Needless to say, I really, really want to find the person who conducted the interview.
Recently, I had the opportunity to speak with the one person who I was totally convinced could have shone a big bright light on the whole mystery. I thought that if anyone knows anything about that interview, this person would. But guess what? The person with whom I spoke didn’t know anything about the interview with Carl Knox’s former secretary. In fact, they had no idea that the person who was interviewed had been Carl Knox’s secretary in 1953. In addition, this person didn’t really know the woman who’d been Carl Knox’s secretary very well—definitely not well enough to know that she’d been Carl Knox’s secretary in 1953.
I believe this person. This person is very credible.
While this was surprising news to me, it should in no way be mistaken for bad news. This new info has caused my search to take an abrupt turn which could lead us closer to finding the person who conducted the interview.
I’m going to turn off comments for this one, since I don’t want to speculate further. I’ll keep you posted if I have updates.
P.S. If the author of the interview summary happens to be reading this post, I’d be so grateful if you’d reach out to me through the contact link on this blog. If you’d like me to protect your anonymity, I promise to do so into perpetuity.