![]() ![]() ![]() In that report, the investigators describe their interview with Ginger (and several others) at Graceland later that afternoon. In Grob’s book synopsis/proposal, the author lays out an account of Ginger’s actions that day, and he bases some of the details of this account on the Memphis Police Department investigative report. How else to explain two people, who were admittedly friends, coming up with the same charges and scenarios that paint Ginger in such a negative light? Safe bet that Grob’s work informed Nichopoulos’s work, the notion of which I have addressed elsewhere, but let’s take a look at a few more questionable claims by both. Nichopoulos, MD.” In both works, there are suspicions and allegations introduced pertaining to the actions and behavior of Ginger Alden on August 16, 1977, and both authors were obviously pulling from the same bag of tricks. Nichopoulos wrote a “notice of intent to publish” regarding a book tentatively titled, “The Memoirs of George C. In 1979, Grob threw together the skeleton version of 1995’s “The Elvis Conspiracy?” In 1990, Dr. We are nearly 44 years down the line and fans are still falling for this Grob “conspiracy” nonsense. And thus began the broad, never-ending attack on Ginger. Who said it? Well, Dick Grob said it, of course, referring to a Ginger Alden story/interview for The National Enquirer. ![]() “Good, we’ll start blasting her and change it around so it doesn’t look too good, you know…” ![]()
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