Originally posted by MissMisty
To all of you who came here for the reason I asked, thank you! I figured it would turn into a free for all, when all I wanted to know was who else supports the intruder theory. Please, if you want to debate, go somewhere else...that's not what this thread is for. Thank you, I appreciate it.
(By the way...I see no resemblance whatsoever between Patsy's writing and the author of the ransom note's. Nor is there any tangible evidence against either parent. Sorry, I couldn't resist.) Please keep this on topic...please?
Misty
RN:You can't see No Resemblance...why not? Are you "focused?" or just "I figured(ing)"? FYI(RN info):
http://www.peekaboo.net/archives/cat18/198.html
The ransom note, signed "Victory, SBTC," and claiming to come from a "small foreign faction," said the men holding JonBenet captive would only release her in return for $118,000.
The menacing note and the opening salutation of a second, practice note were later found to have come from a legal pad belonging to the Ramseys. The note cautioned the Ramseys not to contact police, with threats such as, "If you talk to a stray dog, you die."
And, ordering the Ramseys to obey instructions, the note taunted, "Don't try to grow a brain, John."
The Ramseys' latest statement announces that their advertisement and fliers of last week will be followed by a new flier and advertisement campaign featuring "some critical handwriting samples showing how the killer wrote certain letters in the ransom note." Their advertisements and fliers contained their experts' profile of JonBenet's likely killer.
In addition to the "M"s, the Ramseys will show the public how the capital letters "D" and "W" appear, as well as the "distinctive" lower-case letters "k," "w," "u," "r," and "f." Also, they will reveal some "unusual connecting letters, such as 'Th.'"
Police handwriting analysts have excluded John Ramsey as a possible author of the note. They could not conclusively exclude Patsy Ramsey.
OH BUT PLEASE READ THIS: "PROBABILITY(OH YES?)"...ANOTHER INTERESTING RN fact(read) FYI:
http://gemart.8m.com/ramsey/note/index.html
Heads or Tails?
Not very many people are familiar with statistical mathematics, or the mathematical ratio of odds. You can witness this any day of the year by the hundreds of thousands of people who throw money away in Las Vegas, making bets on game tables where the odds virtually guarantee you will lose The following is a simple lesson which will give you the basics you need to know.
Every coin has two sides. The odds that a coin toss will land on "heads" is a simple ratio of 1 in 2 possibilities, which is normally represented as 2:1 odds. The odds of two consecutive tosses resulting in heads is 2:1 x 2:1 = 4:1. The odds of three consecutive tosses resulting in heads is 2:1 x 2:1 x 2:1 = 8:1. And...If you're foolish to bet that heads will come up five times in a row, the odds are:
2:1 x 2:1 x 2:1 x 2:1 x 2:1 = 32:1.
Powerball Anyone?
In the midwestern United States, several states have joined together to run a multi-state "Powerball" lottery with huge jackpots. Since so many people can play, they need a game with large odds against winning. In the Powerball lottery game, the winner has to pick the correct five numbers from a set of 50 numbered balls, and they have to pick the correct "Powerball" number from a separate set of 36 balls. The Powerball multiplies the odds of the regular 50-ball lottery by the number of "power balls"--in this case 36. If we were to apply a Powerball lottery to our five coin toss example above the resulting odds would be:
36:1 x (2:1 x 2:1 x 2:1 x 2:1 x 2:1) = 1152:1
Obviously, the smart person who wouldn't bet on five coin tosses resulting in heads at 32:1 odds
...OK MAYBE YOU CAN DO THE MATH ABOVE...??? Hopefully you're not BLIND--and if you ARE BLIND--please FILE FOR DISABILITY IMMEDIATELY ok!...; here's another FYI read:
http://www.clickondetroit.com/sh/news/stories/nat-news-20000410-151114.html
NewsNet5 reports that 73 potential suspects' handwriting samples were ruled out during the investigation.
Again, only one person -- Patsy -- could not be ruled out as the author because the way the As in the letter match Patsy's As.
"In Patsy's pre-homicide writings she consistently used what we called the lower-case manuscript. In the ransom note, almost exclusively the lower--case manuscript A was used -- I think -- 98 percent of the time was used," he said.
After the Ramseys were given a copy of the note, Thomas said that Patsy changed her As to the lower-case cursive As.