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I think that on finding JBs body, it would be very difficult for the parents not to react in away that didn't give away to BR that something catastrophic happened. He was almost 10 years old. I think even if they tried, he was old enough to understand the consequences of his actions. If he was the perpetrator, he knew better than anyone how hard he hit her.I agree. Evidence points to the parents. But that does not mean that there is no way that Burke could have hit her on the head and starting the whole thing.
There are many ways in witch a parent could be responsible in this crime. I see that both parents were responsible for all the elements involving the cover up. But I can not see any evidence that proves in any way that Burke was not responsible for the head blow. There is no one who has stated as a fact that Burke could not have done it, and proven that statement. Again, there are only opinions and no opinion should be regarded as less important than other, when there is no factual evidence to support one way or the other. If we want to eliminate someone, we have to have facts to support it on. All three were in the house, so all three could play part in this crime. IMO
I also think that Burke did not know anything about the cover up part.
And at 9-years-old (and I think that years later too) he did not connect the head-blow to the kidnapping of his sister.
I believe he was there and caused the head blow. Not meaning it to be so severe and in any way thinking that it killed JB. It was not intentional, he just was angry and acted in the moment with what probably was in his reach or in his hands (flashlight). Just like a child would.
I believe that after he tried to wake JB up and couldn't do so, he called for his parents to come and explained in shock what had happened. He then was sent to his room/bed because he was in shock and crying/panicking about what happened (JB falling down and not waking up) and his parents did not have the time to deal with that or console him, so he was sent away to his room. He stayed there the whole night and was woken in the morning by the screaming when Patsy called 911. That's when he came down. He heard her mother say " .. just found a note" and asked his father "What did you find?" because he really did not know about the note and what was going on. The question was genuine. John replied to him "We are not speaking to you" and probably told him to go back to his room so that he would not be in the way and ask questions.
In some point later they must have talked to him and and when he asked how JB was after the accident - did she wake up and what happened after he had gone to bed, they explained to him that JB was OK - she woke up a little later and everything was fine. That they all went to bed too and a kidnapper came to their house and took her in the middle of the night. Why would he not believe that? He was a 9-year-old child and would have believed his parents told the truth. He would not think of any reason why they would lie about it.
They told him to stay in his room and later sent him away so he would not talk about the head blow in the presence of the police. And that is all he knew at that time and maybe for years later.
You have to see this version as a possibility too. I see no reason why it could not have happened that way.
And they too have the right for their opinion. Again, I see no factual evidence to conclude that their theories and ideas should be diminished or taken as a joke. They should be taken with the same credibility as any other theory out there that could not be proven as impossible.
Unless we know exactly what grand jury had decided, it too is only an opinion.
I agree. There is no evidence around to support this. There are only stories and observations. In my understanding, neither the pants or the candy box were taken in as evidence or have been tested, so the right thing to conclude would not be that it must have been JB who got poop on the box, but rather - we do not know if there in fact were feces and who did those feces belong to.
I agree. Again, we only have stories and observations but no factual evidence. But it could be one of both - rumor or a fact - we do not know witch is correct so it should not be presented as neither. All the stories/observations in this case (and there are many) should still be considered as possibilities. They just should not be taken as facts.
I agree again - there is no evidence to suggest neither way. All we have here again are opinions. We should consider both as possibilities.
All we know is that there was SA happening to JB at least 10 days prior to her murder. We also have evidence of SA happening to her in some time period shortly before her murder. "Shortly" is a quite broad concept. All we know as a fact (all though, even this could still be disputed) is that she was sexually assaulted sometime between her last bath and the time she was strangled, as we have forensic evidence to support that. But, that time period, although referred as "short", could still be 24 hours. IMO it should be considered a possibility that no SA happened during the staging and that the SA is apart from the crime itself.
There is also no forensic or factual evidence, that proves without a doubt, that the paint brush was used as an object for SA.
I agree. I believe that the pineapple is just a pineapple in this case. We know who's prints are on the bowl and there are many ways how they could have gotten there. We do not know who besides JB ate or didn't eat the pineapple or who was/wasn't present at the time. Only thing the pineapple gives to us is the timing - we know pineapple was eaten by JB after they arrived home frim the Whites. Witch means she was up and alive after arriving home. We do not know more and really, it IMO does not even matter in solving this case.
I also think on discovering her, they would have had to suppress any emotion that would have given away the gravity of the situation. If the scream the neighbor heard wasn't JB, then it had to be PR. I'm trying to put myself in their place and I just discovered that my child had been killed, there's to much happening in this moment to jump immediately into mind games with Burke and no matter what mind games he was fed, he still hit her and was intelligent enough to know how hard, with what object, and how she succumbed to the blow. She was lifeless, she may have had a visible reaction like a death rattle and she urinated. Burke would still need to not admit these things to police even if the parents convinced him she was kidnapped. He would have needed to be coached all the same and deny everything just the same if he was to believe she was kidnapped or not Because every part of the night was going to be put under the scope of the investigation. IMHO.