That "theory" sounds like hogwash.I definitely agree JR had plenty to do with the note, with PR being the actual writer. I've read a theory somewhere (where, I unfortunately don't remember) that said JR and PR could've typed the ransom note together on their computer as they did while writing their book The Death of Innocence, with PR later penning the note. I'll take this theory one step further: I think JR could've typed a "rough draft" of the ransom note on his computer (to be erased by JR later) for PR to copy by hand while he finished the cover-up in the basement. PR proceeded to add a lot more to the rough draft than what JR felt was appropriate. This could also explain why there was tension between them by the time police arrived.
Infoseek was a popular search engine at the time.OliviaG1996,
From memory there were no search engines, as such, way back in 1996. What was on offer was Yahoo Search, which was simply favorite topics linked by keywords, similarly another search engine, quite popular, was Alta-Vista, again just topics linked by keyword. Google arrived a few years later using its PageRank algorithm which was so efficient it more or less killed off the competition.
Also if the R's had access to the internet it would have been via dialup, i.e. through a modem, anyone remember that stuff, so they would have been on something like CompuServe (CompuServe Information Service)?
Most peculiar clue involving White and Ramsey IMO is how both men apparently went down there at separate times and didn't see anything yet hours later find her. I'm still waiting for an explanation about this.At the house, another peculiar scene unfolded that left police bewildered. Burke Ramsey was awakened by his father and Fleet White, dressed, and was being taken from the house. Burke was one of only three people in the house at the time of the crime and therefore a witness who needed to be closely questioned about the disappearance of his sister. Perhaps he had heard or seen something during the night that could help investigators find JonBenét. So when Officer Rick French saw him being taken away, he went over to talk to the boy. But John Ramsey intervened. Pages 22-23
That "theory" sounds like hogwash.
Do you seriously imagine those two surfing the net while their murdered daughter is lying downstairs and also brainstorming various pop culture references to place in a ransom note knowing the cops could possibly seize their computer literally hours after they call 911?
If you believe they were smart enough pull off this crime then how can you possibly believe they were that stupid?
Let me get this straight...you think John Ramsey of all people in 1996 was computer illiterate? That's funny. You act like he's some pc noob who has just got their first computer and is blown away when seeing the Windows 95 screen for the first time.
That dog wont hunt.
Since some of you think some of these family, friends,etc. at the house had some involvement, even if he is illiterate he would have had one of the geeks go take a swipe but that geek would inform him it doesn't matter. Encryption at today's level did not exist then and if they wrote that note on their pc they would have immediately been in what George Bush likes to call "deep doo doo".
They didn't write anything on that pc that night.
With today's culture, it's weird to me that someone local or GJ member (or a family member of one) hasn't posted some detail they claim to have heard. I think the grand jury transcripts will come to light eventually, and anything else sealed, but I wonder if they will really reveal anything more than what we know. As much as people say no one would be willing to speak out, it is so common for intelligent adults to make a comment about a secret/scandal to a teenage child after making them swear not to tell. And then the teen goes and posts it on some social media, not realizing the magnitude of it or that it will get back to the parent. The parent never considers such a possibility. I would have expected that to have happened in some way by now. There was a case where a guy got a a big age discrimination settlement and the terms prohibited publicizing it. His daughter, a freshman at a relatively prestigious college, immediately wrote on Facebook about how her father had been vindicated. Idk - I feel like we'll get more info eventually, but I still wonder how much anyone actually knows about what happened.
I find this hard to believe too. People talk and information gets leaked. I have no idea what evidence was exposed, but i don't believe there was an earth shattering revelation. It would just be too tempting for someone to leak a really interesting secret.
Off topic (and I don't want the discussion to go there), but this is the same argument I use for Michael Jackson. You can't bind minors to secrecy contracts. No adults have come forward with details. All these years later, I use the silence as evidence that MJ didn't commit the crimes.
BoldBear,
BBM: and I use the fact that MJ paid large sums of money for the allegations to go away, to arrive at the opposite conclusion.
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I doubt that there is a group of 16 such virtuous people unless we're talking about some organization that especially vets for such things. I just think the media wasn't quite as crazy, there was no social media, and they cared enough that whatever they did say was very limited during this time. I also think they did not have anything particularly juicy, so there wasn't anything that would become a crazy rumor immediately. I didn't realize they talked to the press in 2013, but if they did without hinting at much more, I don't think they have much.
I wouldn't expect a grandchild to be having an in depth chat about the case or even knowing much about it, but I would expect at least one of the members to have made a couple of comments that slowly spread around as the case gets an occasional news mention - "oh, so and so told me that she thought this...or that we don't know everything..." and someone would post that somewhere. It would actually be more likely to be an adult than a teen, because the case isn't recognizable to most of them. I can so see someone posting on a news article that their husband's aunt was on the jury and she said X...it may not be correct, and would probably be embellished, but I just think someone with a connection who knew the tiniest thing would mention it at some point, and in today's media it would go viral. Not necessarily through the mainstream media, but around these sites. the littlest, most overhyped stuff gets passed around nowadays, especially on niche sites. That nothing all that interesting has leaked strongly suggests to me that there was nothing that interesting, although of course does not prove it. The jury could have had the same info we had, mostly, and still indicted - the circumstances are suspicious even just with the confusing information we have.
Agree regarding MJ - I've never done as much research into the case as I want to, and I was a child during the trial. There's definitely some suspicious stuff, but I read about the Jacksons all the time and everything leaks eventually - the craziest stuff. They have the craziest fans/stalkers every and people go to unprecedented lengths to get secret recordings etc., especially from pre-Internet times. And when someone is dead it is even easier to expose stuff. Then add in a few trials centered around the person. The fact that nothing more damning has come out says a lot IMO.
But why did it take 13 years before we found out the Ramsey's were indicted? Why didn't it leak earlier? The indictment sounds like the grand jury thinks Burke was responsible, so it does seem like they saw info that we are not privy to. I can't agree with the idea that because nothing has leaked from the grand jury, it means nothing interesting or new was revealed. Didn't we just find out through Beckner's AMA that there was 2 hours between the head blow and the strangulation? I would assume that was mentioned during the grand jury, and that was never leaked. Or the feces on the candy..we just learned that with Kolar's book. They worked on the case for months, maybe over a year, and heard interviews with so many people. Who knows...maybe family members don't remember much from what they were told years ago or don't realize they know info that is not already public knowledge.
Agree regarding MJ - I've never done as much research into the case as I want to, and I was a child during the trial. There's definitely some suspicious stuff, but I read about the Jacksons all the time and everything leaks eventually - the craziest stuff. They have the craziest fans/stalkers every and people go to unprecedented lengths to get secret recordings etc., especially from pre-Internet times. And when someone is dead it is even easier to expose stuff. Then add in a few trials centered around the person. The fact that nothing more damning has come out says a lot IMO.