Hamblin's statement:
"I am writing to apologize for my private practical joke. Whenever I write a paper Dan Petersen [Daniel C. Peterson] will be editing, I always include a joke or two for his enjoyment — fake footnotes, comments about space aliens and the golden plates, etc. The acrostic was simply a light-hearted joke for Dan's amusement...."
Dan's statement:
I haven't seen Bill's statement.
I don't remember seeing any such "little jokes."
I don't know what he's allegedly talking about.
Dan,
Going by these comments, one of you either has a remarkably bad memory, near Alzheimer's level, or one of you is lying.
However, now you have made a slight change:
Bill has a great sense of humor, very ironic, and we trade jokes (and barbs) most days of the week -- on everything from national politics to the Near East to university politics to movies to Church callings to, yes, critics of the Church. He's great at puns and word plays and parodies, and I see many of them.
Does or does not Hamblin always include little jokes in his pieces that you will be editing for your amusement? You made one clear statement - no, you've never seen such jokes - which means Hamblin was lying when he said he always includes little jokes for your amusement. Or you were lying when you said you've never seen them and have no idea what he's talking about. Now you've changed and say you "see many of them" (omitting whether or not you see them in the articles he's submitted to you for editing).
But, of course, the problem is we're malicious people who like to unjustly accuse you of lying. The problem couldn't possibly be you can't keep your own story straight.