The dates are not important. The content is what matters. Some of those emails were absolutely atrocious.
I gotta disagree with this.
Why would someone sit on such important emails, if they are indeed legit? It implies that they were either implicit in these alleged wrongdoings or they were hoping to get paid which means they are extortionists.
Or of course - the other possibility, the emails have been altered or totally faked.
There is no doubt XPY has been attacked by someone from day one. Part of it might have been deserved but I've never seen such a concerted attack against a coin or a dev like what has happened against Garza and XPY.
There is more to all of this than meets the eye and the XPY volume and price proves [in part] this possibility.
So I at least entertain the possibility that someone has a lot to gain by seeing XPY fail. If you eliminate any potential possibilities then you will run the chance that you will miss what's really happening.
Many did this with Bitcoin back in November 2013.
DKIM-signed...