These pictures are VERY graphic, so keep that in mind please.
http://zyberzoom.com/ComparisonPhotos.html
I also find it very interesting that John placed a scarf around JonBenet in her coffin. It wasn't a sentimental item, but a new one, he had recently purchased. Whom had he bought it for?
SunnieRN, I'm so sorry, I have seen this photo before. I do appreciate having the link handy though. Thanks for posting it! I should have specified one other one, besides this one. Yes, the one photo here is kind of similar but to me the one on JB is much brighter, significantly larger, especially in proportion to her size, and more clearly a triangular or cone-looking shape. I looked at a LOT of photos and I did find marks on some, but not many, of the victims but the ones I did find are more IRREGULAR and usually quite a bit smaller. I'm not sure they'd be described as "prominent." I did not see one as bright, big, or clearly PATTERNED as on JB.
If this PATTERNED mark is such a common mark on strangulation victims, why hasn't anyone found the technical term for it? If it is so common, why wouldn't the coroner have used that term and listed it under the evidence of his findings for strangulation? The coroner describes this mark as prominent, patterned ("roughly triangular"), parchment-like, and rust colored. I would believe the coroner used "abrasion" where he could have used "lesion" but I don't believe he didn't know a technical term for a common mark which is indicative of strangulation. I don't think that mark is as common as people seem to think.
While the coroner notes the prominent mark is a "roughly triangular" PATTERN he goes on to describe the"remainder of the abrasions and petechial hemorrhages of the skin above and below the anterior projection of the ligature furrow are NONPATTERNED..." He doesn't state the others are parchment-like like the PATTERNED mark. How would the ligature cause the surface to be patterned, "parchment-like", and "dried" on this triangular mark below the neck when the ligature furrow (which is patterned after the shape of the cord) isn't parchment-like and dried and the other neck marks aren't patterned, parchment-like, and dried?
The coroner states the triangular neck mark was a "prominent dried abrasion" during his first quick look at the body in the home. He describes the back marks (some call stun gun marks) "two dried rust colored to slightly purple abrasions."
The mark on the neck is dried, patterned and rust colored. The marks on the back are dried, patterned, and rust colored. Hmmmmmm:waitasec: They sound similar to me.
In addition, the coroner notes regarding the back marks that "no surrounding contusion identified." Was this lack of contusion (bruising) one of the things that led to the stun gun theory? (another was the injury looks to some like a burn) Stun guns essentially cause electrical burns but they don't generally cause bruising in surrounding tissues, do they? They wouldn't cause bruising like a blunt object rammed into the skin, right? Curling irons cause thermal injuries and can cause injury without a contusion (bruising of surrounding tissue.) Yes, a cold curling iron could be rammed into the skin but that would likely cause bruising of surrounding tissue. A hot curling iron could be rammed into the skin causing bruising and a burn but a hot curling iron would erode away (burn) the outer layer of tissues without needing to be physically compressed very hard into the skin. "Abrasion" is an eroding away by friction.
BTW, one cause of corneal abrasions is...curling irons. http://www.vanderbilthealth.com/williamson/healthtopics?topic=Corneal_Abrasion
Autopsy info from:
http://hosted.ap.org/specials/interactives/_national/jonbenet_ramsey/jonbenet_ramsey_autopsy.pdf
I admit I could be wrong about the curling iron! I don't know if PR had a safety-tip free iron and, if she did, if they'd make these marks. But I'm curious...is it possible? Darn...I don't have a pig to test my theory!:crazy:
Just think... if the perpetrator of the injuries used a weapon or an object with a shape which could be forensically shown to have possibly made the PATTERNED injuries on JB and the perpetrator (and/or others) wanted to divert attention from the patterned injuries because it was incriminating then the garotte staging would fulfill two purposes: 1) take attention away from the triangular neck injury (and possible previous strangulation attempt) and 2) implicate a sexual predator. If it was RDI (and I'm still not 100% sure of that)...then, SNAP!, that was a brilliant move on their part, wasn't it? Because it appears, the coroner did focus his time and attention on the ligature strangulation at the expense of the patterned injuries. If he hadn't, he might have gotten tissue for histological examinations of those PATTERNED "unknown abrasions" and differential diagnoses of those injuries might have been made. Had that been done, LE could have been informed about the possible shapes and types of weapons/objects to look for in the R's home. (However, IF RDI, the weapon/object might have been gone by that time, of course. If IDI, the weapon might have been removed from the scene.) At any rate, I believe the coroner's failure to get tissue samples from the patterned injuries really hampered this case. I'm sure those that theorize a stun gun feel the same way.