Another 'Da Vinci' Code Cracked
The code has been cracked.
London lawyer Dan Tench and The Times newspaper on Friday both claimed to have solved the riddle of a code embedded in a judge's ruling in "The Da Vinci Code" copyright lawsuit.
It reads: "Jackie Fisher who are you Dreadnought."
The message was created by Peter Smith, the High Court judge who presided over the copyright infringement suit brought by authors of the nonfiction book "The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail" against the publisher of Dan Brown's mega-selling thriller.
Smith's entry in society bible "Who's Who" lists him as a fan of John "Jackie" Fisher, a 19th-century admiral credited with modernizing the British navy and developing its first modern warship, the Dreadnought.
On April 7, Smith ruled that Brown had not copied from the earlier work for his book, which has sold more than 40 million copies since it was published in 2003.
London's legal world has been in a whirl since it was revealed earlier this week that Smith had encoded a message within the 71-page judgment. A sequence of italicized letters was sprinkled throughout the text, with the first 10 spelling out "Smithy code" — an apparent clue, and a play on the judge's name.
The rest of the letters seemed random: jaeiextostgpsacgreamqwfkadpmqzvz.
Italics are placed in strange spots: The first is found in paragraph one of the 360-paragraph document. The letter "S" in the word claimants is italicized, The Early Show reports.
In the next graph, claimant is spelled "claiMant," and so on.
Tench, who brought the code to the world's attention last week, said the key lay within the pages of Brown's thriller.
View the ruling and take a crack at breaking the code yourself.
At one point Brown's cryptographer hero Robert Langdon explains the Fibonacci sequence — a mathematical progression that involves adding a number to the two numbers before, so that 1 is followed by 1, then 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, etc. That sequence, when repeated and substituted with letters from the alphabet, spells out the cryptic message.
"It's extremely curious that he would reference an obscure military figure," Tench said of the message early Friday. "None of us were guessing that."
Tench said he and two other attorneys in the London media law firm Olswang used the sequence and trial and error to decode the message. He said Smith had confirmed it was correct in an e-mail.
The Times newspaper arrived at the same conclusion. On Friday, it quoted Smith, 53, as saying he had inserted the code "for my own pleasure" and had not expected anyone to notice it.
"The answer has nothing to do with the case," he said.
Tench said he noticed the code when he spotted the striking italicized script in an online copy of the judgment.
"To encrypt a message in this manner, in a High Court judgment no less? It's out there," Tench said. "I think he was getting into the spirit of the thing. It doesn't take away from the validity of the judgment. He was just having a bit of fun."
"I should think it's pretty sophisticated," Andrew Sinclair, Historian of the Knights Templar, remarked to CBS News correspondent Richard Roth. "Any judge with a sense of humor and a very clever man, which Peter Smith is, is going to do pretty well."
"The Da Vinci Code" has sold more than 40 million copies — including 12 million hardcover copies in the United States — since its release in March 2003. It came out in paperback in the United States earlier this year and quickly sold more than a million copies.
An initial print run of 5 million has already been raised to 6 million.