I acknowledged my not knowing her exact height which I had estimated as
4.5. In fact, if you google jonbenet height (
jonbenet height - Google Search), the first link on the page shows
Height 4 7 (1.40 m). Ive since re-read the AR and found where it shows her height to be
47, so apparently Im not the only one confused about it. Nevertheless, I stand corrected on that, and in the calculation would have to add 14 to it.
I wouldnt want you to be disappointed in me, but while that would indeed be the easiest way out, it wouldnt preclude it from being a possibility. However, rather than continue to belabor the point, Ill say this. I tried to go through the calculations to get an idea just how much cord would indeed be needed based on the best information we have. Im not trying to hedge here, but as I said there is a lot we dont know.
A few of the variables that might affect the outcome:
- Exactly how high the ceiling is. Is it the same height as a normal room? Higher? Lower? (If the ceiling is not a standard height, the doors can be adjusted or ordered different. I simply used them as a reference point in the picture.)
- Where exactly did it happen, and what was overhead at that spot? If one pipe had to cross another, it would have to go over or under, making one of them lower at the crossover point. I had suggested that one of the many pipes weve seen pictured would be convenient for this, but for all we know, there might be something else hanging down from the ceiling somewhere convenient (bike rack, etc.).
- Could she have been standing on something? A suitcase standing sideways, the chair weve seen in the pictures, a stepstool? As I pointed out, I felt it was less likely, but nevertheless it is still a possibility.
Im afraid it probably sounds like, and Im sure youll say, Im trying to hedge. But as I said from the start, there is too much not known to be able to explain the exact mechanics of how it happened. The evidence (cord, knots, autopsy photos) speaks to what happened. The how and who is only theory. If you choose not to consider it, nothing I can say will convince you (but Ill still continue to discuss it with you, or any theory you come up with that addresses the evidence).
Ive read your theory on the markings on her back. I tend to think that they are instead the irregular pooling of blood and marks from the folds in the blanket. While they
are shaped like the edge of a shoe, for that to have been the cause, they would have to have been done during the blanching phase of livor mortis. Why would your IDI continue pulling on the ligature after she had been dead for that long? If he/she had killed her by accident or intent, would not a quick exit be the best thing to do at that point (after dropping off the RN, of course, on the spiral staircase one floor up)? And it still bothers me about the entangled hair on the paintbrush. While I dont believe for a second that it was used that way, the length of the cord was more than the length of her hair. Had it actually been pulled, it would have pulled her hair out from the root. So was her hair cut after tying the knot to the paintbrush? And if so, by whom? Assailant? Coroner?
"Although almost always homicidal, ligature strangulations are not always intended by the assailant[7]. The ligature may be thrown around the victim's neck perhaps only to subdue or to silence. The onset of unconsciousness is only 10 to 15 seconds. The victim's death can come very suddenly after. If it can be demonstrated that the ligature was drawn relatively tight in a short period of time, this might tend to be more directly supportive of intentional homicide." Brent Turvey,
http://www.corpus-delicti.com/ligature.html
True that.
.