bettybaby00
Active Member
- Joined
- Apr 24, 2013
- Messages
- 3,981
- Reaction score
- 12
I'm not ruling out molestation. I can see other causes of the injuries that I think have been dismissed without real investigation, and I believe that if she was indeed molested it does not mean it was a person in her family. It could have been someone close to her and not someone who lived with her.
I have not said that anyone's conclusion was wrong, just that I do not agree with it. I have an issue with people making money off books about this case. Especially people in law enforcement. It bothers me.
I see a lot of judgments on the parents because they did not follow rules that others think they should. But again unless your child is missing you just do not know what it feels like.
As far as DNA, I just find it odd that people just discount it. Maybe it does not mean everything but that does not mean it does not mean something, That it does not indeed point to the killer.
http://www.websleuths.com/forums/showthread.php?t=157870&highlight=peggy+hettrick
This case comes to mind. A case where after Touch DNA was tested and used to clear the convicted.
"The new evidence surfaced after the Colorado Bureau of Investigation conducted new tests on DNA found on Hettrick's clothing, finding partial profiles that did not match Masters.
Masters' defense team pursued further testing with a laboratory in the Netherlands that ultimately provided a match with another man who had once been considered a suspect."
http://www.cnn.com/2008/CRIME/01/18/masters/index.html
That was touch DNA. I remember watching the 48 hours show on this and it was touch DNA found just in her waist band. Where someone would have either pulled her pants down or up.
I just don't understand how it can be so discounted in this case. I have never seen a case before where DNA is just thrown in the trash as meaningless. It bothers me a lot.
Interesting case based on the CNN link you provided, and it is obviously an example of touch DNA being critical to a crime scene. I think it's not completely fair to say that the DNA in this case has been thrown in the trash, and completely discounted. For me, there seems to be several major differences in the Ramsey case and the one you linked to: the DNA in the Master's case was linked to someone, while in the Ramsey case it has not. Also, in the Ramsey case you have touch DNA from 6 different people, therefore, based on the DNA evidence we would have to believe there were 6 perpetrators of the crime.
Also, why haven't the Ramsey defense team and their investigators looked to have the DNA further analyzed like what was done in the Master's case. In addition, it appears Master's case had some issues with regard to withholding of evidence, and misconduct with regard to failure to investigate other viable leads/suspects. given that evidenced was suppressed / withheld, what other evidence was there? Everything needs to be considered. There are many aspects of the Ramsey case in many people's minds that point to family involvement. You can't discount ALL of that either. Yes, there can be reasonable explanations for things--as I'm assuming may have happened in Master's case--but when you begin to have one thing, a top another, a top another, a top another, and so on, and so on, alarm bells definitely go off.
In the Ramsey case the only withholding of evidence that has gone on has been by the Ramsey's themselves, and to me it seems pretty evident based on the information that is out there, that 100s perhaps 1000s of leads potentially pointing to an intruder(s) were followed up, along with investigating EVERYONE team Ramsey offered up as a possible suspect.
All :moo: of course
