David/NGB1066:
I'm not condoning his behaviour, but I think if you take a step back from this, you'd have to acknowledge that there is a responsibility on people to perform their own due diligences and think for themselves. I don't personally believe everything people tell me, whether it is mainstream news or somebody claiming credentials or expertise. I check people out. I look into things. Then I form a view. If you tell me you're a barrister or an architect, and you are asking me to rely on this in some business we are doing, I will ring up the relevant body and check that you indeed hold the relevant qualification and are in good standing. I'm that type of person.
When I first heard about Mr Harrison while finding his book and reading it, I was immediately suspicious. His biographical claims didn't add up. If you say you were an Essex police officer who worked in specialist units and was a criminal profiler with the FBI, and you're Britain's real-life 'Cracker', or whatever else he was saying about himself (crackers more like), yet you aren't with a major publisher, you don't have a university degree, and I have never heard of you before, something there doesn't quite add up, and I am going to be contacting the FBI in the United States and the relevant police forces in Britain, and various other sources, to verify your claims. It's probably just as well for Paul Harrison that I wasn't around at the time, as I would have exposed him quite quickly. But why didn't other people check up on him?
Obviously, I appreciate that if you're just somebody buying a ticket for an event, you'll rely on the due diligence of the organisers. That's quite reasonable. If it turns out the person you went to hear speak was a charlatan, all you've lost is a few pounds, i.e. the ticket price and your travel to and from the venue. I'm not saying it's OK for people to behave like that, but it's not a big deal. You can have a good laugh about it and forget it. I would maintain that most of the people he entertained at these events came away satisfied and won't have given it a second thought. If they have any complaint, it should be against the organisers of the event and anybody else who enabled him without verifying his claims.
Similar with the book. I realised he was a pure charlatan, but at the same time, I don't begrudge him because I realise he's not the full shilling and it is what it is. Life is short. He's exposed. He's not going to be conning anybody else.