"Richard Goodwin's scene with Dan Enright when he presents the evidence that Mr. Snodgrass mailed the questions and answers to be used on the show to himself."
The glaring problem with that scene is that in reality the envelope was proof of nothing except that Snodgrass had certified mailed himself something, and I suspect that Goodwin and Enright would have realized that. So what? Without proof of what was actually in the envelope when it was mailed, it proves nothing. Snodgrass could have sent himself an empty envelope by registered mail ahead of time then, after the show aired, put the questions in the envelope, sealed it, and kept it for possible use. Why would he do that? Maybe he was planning on blackmailing Enright later, who knows? You don't have to know the motive to realize his claim to have sent himself the answers ahead of time, without witnesses or further proof of what was actually in the envelope when it was mailed, would prove nothing.
In reality it was not one but a series of letters that Snodgrass had mailed himself, and they weren't the final, case-proving evidence the movie portrays it (them) to be. The letters were just one piece of a much larger puzzle that eventually brought Enright down.
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