Okay, I'll concede that point. What Posner actually said was: "Lewis had threatened to commit suicide in a 'river' or a 'rock pit'."None of that counters the statements that I made. Posner did not "assert that Norman Lewis committed suicide",
On the contrary, according to Williston Police Chief Slaughter, Renier provided the critical information that Slaughter and Detective Hewitt used to locate Lewis' body:and Reiner didn't provide any evidence the police weren't already in possession of.
"Renier slipped into a trance with Hewitt present, recording what she said on tape. 'As I held Lewis's shoe,' said Renier, 'I began seeing a series of images flashing through my mind. I could see Lewis falling off of a cliff; encapsulated inside his truck and surrounded by vegetation; that a pile of bricks, a bridge and an old railroad bed were nearby. And then I saw a series of numbers. First came 45, which I knew was connected to a road, then 21 and later the number 22. But the last two sets of numbers had no meaning to me.' Renier then drew a map on plain notebook paper, penciling in the location of Lewis' home, with a line leading away from it, in the direction Lewis could be found. Renier had never been to Williston before.
"Hewitt returned to Williston. Over the next couple of months, he sorted through the clues, driving the dirt roads around Williston, looking for the landmarks Renier had provided.
"'I will admit,' said Slaughter, 'that after a couple of months, I was about ready to call it quits. Even though we were a small department, with 16 full time officers, we had other cases to work. But Brian really believed that Renier's clues would bear out, so I told him, 'I'll stick with you.'
"Several months passed, and Hewitt was still on the hunt for Norman Lewis. By now, though, Hewitt had zeroed in on an old phosphate pit with cliffs, a couple of miles from Lewis's home. He found a steel rail in a heavily wooded area near the pit, but no railroad bed. The pit was located in the general direction from Lewis's house that Renier's hand-drawn map had shown.
"'One day, Brian's roaming around up there in the woods,' said Slaughter, 'and he finds a pile of red bricks. He went back to the rail he discovered earlier, started digging and found an old railroad bed underneath it. I called Levy County Sheriff's Department divers to come over and work the pit. But they came up empty. The pit had water in it 30 to 40 feet deep and was covered in vegetation.
"'So I'm up there at the pit with Brian after this, wondering where we go next, and I happen to look just right through the woods and see an old Fairbanks Morris Scale. It was a wooden truck scale that could be confused for a bridge.'
"Slaughter's confidence grew, and he got some Navy demolition divers to dive the pit on their off time. On their second day, they got a hit while using a magnetometer.
"'By that afternoon Norman's truck was winched out of the pit,' said Slaughter, 'and there was Norman, inside the cab, mummified from the limestone and encrusted'." See http://www.lawofficer.com/article/magazine-feature/psychic-detectives
Yes it is, because its unclear that Lewis committed suicide or that the police put any stock in the handyman's belated and contradictory statement. However, in Posner's fantasy world, the handyman's statement was a "smoking gun" that somehow led the police to search the pit where Lewis' body was found.How reliable a witness the handyman was or was not is entirely irrelevant to either of those statements.