Miz Adventure
New Member
- Joined
- Nov 9, 2016
- Messages
- 542
- Reaction score
- 20
Is it really important whether she drew a heart or a smiley face?
My opinion: smiley face. No relevance at all.
Gesendet von meinem SM-G920F mit Tapatalk
trym - your attachments are broken. Try again?Seems clear.
BBMI don't see a heart, a smiley, or a stick figure. To me it just looks like a nothing. A something on her hand from home or school that means nothing toward this case. Dad didn't see it before because he didn't have much to do with her daily life.
Hi. I post very little and I've never posted here.
Upon reading Listen Carefully, I learned that Patsy would often draw hearts on JonBenet's palm before she went to bed as a way of saying her heart would be with her while she slept. Perhaps someone here knows the source they used for this -- it might have been info from Judith Philips, Patsy's former friend.
I recently read Hodges' book A Mother Gone Bad and he never says who the friend was, which was one of the things I found frustrating about the book even though I understand why he did it - he rarely reveals his sources. I think your guess about Judith Phillips is correct, that's what I assumed reading the book. She took the photo of JonBenet on the cover of his book and talked to him. LHP is the only other one I know for sure that he talked to, but I guess it could have been any other friend who was willing to anonymously cross the Ramseys.While doing research for a book, forensic psychiatrist Dr. Andrew Hodges interviewed some of the Ramseys associates who were willing to speak to him. One of Patsys friends revealed that Patsy often drew a heart in JonBenéts palm and told her, While youre asleep you have my heart in your hand, and you dont have to be scared.
Upon reading Listen Carefully, I learned that Patsy would often draw hearts on JonBenet's palm before she went to bed as a way of saying her heart would be with her while she slept. Perhaps someone here knows the source they used for this -- it might have been info from Judith Philips, Patsy's former friend.
Here's the quote from Listen Carefully:
I recently read Hodges' book A Mother Gone Bad and he never says who the friend was, which was one of the things I found frustrating about the book even though I understand why he did it - he rarely reveals his sources. I think your guess about Judith Phillips is correct, that's what I assumed reading the book. She took the photo of JonBenet on the cover of his book and talked to him. LHP is the only other one I know for sure that he talked to, but I guess it could have been any other friend who was willing to anonymously cross the Ramseys.While doing research for a book, forensic psychiatrist Dr. Andrew Hodges interviewed some of the Ramseys’ associates who were willing to speak to him. One of Patsy’s friends revealed that Patsy often drew a heart in JonBenét’s palm and told her, “While you’re asleep you have my heart in your hand, and you don’t have to be scared.”
I don't see a heart, but I defer to the judgment of those who saw it up close, I guess. It looks more like a wonky smily face to me but even that doesn't seem right.
BTW - I agree with you DFF. Looks like a wonky smiley face to me, too.According to John and Patsy’s “We’re Christians” defense, the very depravity of staging this scene of torture and molestation must be seen as proof of their innocence. Christians could not do such things. Ergo, some non-Christian must have worn the sweater to the murder, broken Patsy’s paintbrush to probe JonBenet’s tiny vagina and then used it for a garrote. Somebody who didn’t live at that house fed pineapple to JonBenet, although that was not an unchristian thing to do. Somebody other than Patsy drew the tiny heart on the palm of the dead girl’s hand in red ink, just as Patsy used to do before bed when the child was alive. This is not an unchristian act. Somebody else. Somebody else. And, this “somebody else” wants to convince the police that all they really wanted was not the child’s death, but $118,000. To demand only $118,000 for the life of a millionaire’s child, would a real Christian bid so low?