Whatever else may be right or wrong about this, the mail headers are perfect. I run my company's mail system, and have been reading real and spam mail headers for 15 years, so I know something about this.
The mail was sent at 8:43:39 PT/11:43:39 ET. This is the 'one second' mentioned; it took one second to get to the final destination at 15:43:40 GMT/UTC which is 7 and 4 hours ahead of PT and ET.
Nothing to see there, move along.
As for who wrote it, do we know who wrote *any* of the SJ emails? Really?
The email went from/to machines wave1 and then earhart then to a mail relay16 and then to mail-out3. wave1 could be SJ's or the admin person's Mac, since, as was noted it used Apple Mail.
I need to send an email from my iPad and see what it says for the 'client' machine....
The mail was sent at 8:43:39 PT/11:43:39 ET. This is the 'one second' mentioned; it took one second to get to the final destination at 15:43:40 GMT/UTC which is 7 and 4 hours ahead of PT and ET.
Nothing to see there, move along.
As for who wrote it, do we know who wrote *any* of the SJ emails? Really?
The email went from/to machines wave1 and then earhart then to a mail relay16 and then to mail-out3. wave1 could be SJ's or the admin person's Mac, since, as was noted it used Apple Mail.
I need to send an email from my iPad and see what it says for the 'client' machine....