Nope. Not even nearly. I do admire your fundamentalism though :D
Jeff's OBE had veridical elements, was first person, and he saw no other party during the imagery.
According to my ideas, this would require a single third party to be present on the scene, some time between Jeff's crash and the time the rescuers arrived.
But Jeff said there was no one.
Because of the veridical elements, and the isolated nature of the crash site, this one case (taken at face value) had the potential to derail my ideas totally... but I was so confident that my ideas called for a single third party to have been present, that I began my own investigation.
I had to obtain the Canadian air accident reports, some third party stories, and photos of the crash site.... and bit by bit I found anomalies in Jeff's recounting of events.
Air accident reports state that the rescue services initially reported seeing a man on the lakeshore waving to their rescue plane.
This didn't stack up, so I needed to speak with Jeff to get an explanation.
I privately corresponded with Jeff over a few days. He explained that the man the rescuers had seen waving from the shoreline was not him, but a single bush pilot, who had discovered jeff's crash site and notified them to the rescue services. Jeff had been told by the rescue services, that this pilot had made a very dangerous landing near the lakeshore in his float plane, trekked inland through the wild bush to jeff's plane, then made his way back through the bush to the shore to await the rescue services.
A single third party had therefore been present on the scene, before the rescuers had arrived.
This had been an important test of my ideas, I had no prior knowledge that a single third party had been present. But I believed that my ideas were right, and thus it would only be a matter of time before I found evidence that one other single person had been present on the scene, before the rescuers arrived.
...and that's exactly what I found.
Jeff has never spoken to the bush pilot who found him, he was unconsious for a few days in hospital, and was only told about his rescue. Jeff has suffered from some severe injuries, and is crippled by PTSD. He needs to feel he was saved for a reason. Naturally my correspondence with him was a challenge. I tried to handle the questioning as gently as I could. But in the end Jeff told me he didn't want to correspond with me any more.
That's a brief but faithful narrative of my investigation into Jeff's NDE OBE.