Reminds me of the elusive "Dr. David Groves"...
Several people in the U.K. attempted diligently to locate "David Groves, PhD." The best we could manage is mention of his name as a principal in a company that advertised digital 3D contour extraction from photographs. The company has been defunct for well over a decade, and -- to anyone's best research -- never existed beyond a listing in a directory.
As with many of the claimants purporting to have advanced academic degrees, by their fruits we know them. The experiments attributed to Groves in Bennett and Percy's work display an appalling ignorance of even basic physics or experimental method. And Percy himself flip-flops over the faux doctor's claims. For his own purposes, for example, Percy claims you can't discern contour on the lunar surface from photographs, so the explanation that surface variation causes "improper" shadow casting can't possibly be correct. But then in the appendix, his "expert" Groves not only maintains that contour
can be discerned from photographs, he even proposes a (simplistic) method for quantifying it and uses it in "analyzing" -5903 to conclude artificial light must have been used.
...and the outright fraud, "Dr." Ken Johnston.
And the equally fraudulent Maurice Chatelain. Chatelain claimed to be "Chief of NASA Communications Systems." In fact he was a low-level electronics technician who may have briefly worked as an installation contractor at one of the NASA centers.
Johnston was outed by James Oberg as little more than a shipping clerk. As I recall, Hoagland and company had to rewrite Johnston's bio on the subsequent editions of their various books to downplay the earlier claim that he was a "Director" of the Apollo mission photography archives.
What puzzles me is how these people think they can get away for very long with making such easily-checked and clearly exaggerated claims? Do they not understand that, at least in the case of NASA, what people were "directors" of this or that throughout the agency's entire history is a matter of very easily verified fact?
Then there's the guy who was custodian of Ralph Rene's work ... I should look into that, since my home base is in that area.
Yes, you probably should. Chances are he was a graduate teaching assistant or some such thing during his own doctoral work. Doctoral candidates are presumed to want to continue in academia. That means it's valuable to have practical teaching experience.
Then there's the mysterious "Bill Wood". I'm not sure that's even his name and that maybe he just stole the name of a couple of important people at NASA.
I really think that's what happened. Bennett and Percy rely on a cast of characters, some easily verified like Jan Lundberg of Hasselblad, and others simply names they throw out there without providing enough information to verify the foundation of the alleged expertise. "Una Ronald" is alleged to be an eyewitness, but Bennett and Percy say that's not her real name. They have given her a false name, allegedly to protect her identity. But then Percy shows her face on his video! Great way to protect her identity there, Percy.
Ditto "Bill Wood." They give him a name that would survive perhaps a cursory web search -- "Oh, look, there's someone with that name legitimately associated with NASA" -- but again his story is suspicious. After "Bill" spilled the beans to Bennett and Percy, he was allegedly taken so ill that he was unable to participate in any more evidentiary discussions. There's the insinuation that he was "silenced," but then again he really wasn't. The only thing that's silenced is his critics' ability to test his expertise and claims for validity. But then again, his face appears on Percy's film. So is Percy responsible for the "silencing" of the witness by exposing his face?
I doubt that anybody with only a bachelor's degree is considered a "highly qualified scientist".
Correct. In fact, given the clearly bogus claims of Percy's on-screen witnesses and his flagrant fabrications elsewhere in his work, I wouldn't be surprised if those people are just actors Percy hired to portray his fictional "witnesses," claiming expertise or other standing, but simply reciting the script Percy wrote for them.