no,it's a different one that why_nut posted(he posted that one as well though),it had her pic on it,with an interviewer set to talk to her..I'll see if I can find it.
Thanks JMO.
no,it's a different one that why_nut posted(he posted that one as well though),it had her pic on it,with an interviewer set to talk to her..I'll see if I can find it.
http://youtube.com/watch?v=MhOM5hk_ihE
<cough,cough> on the whole thing,is all I can say...she knew better!
This is the interview with Pam Paugh, but it was interesting too.
Lol, Dave, your mother probably would have no problem with a scenario where the 'fat ugly sister' was wearing Patsy's jacket when fashioning the garrote ("Pam aways wanted to wear expensive clothes like Patsy - so this was a unique opportunity for her!")
I have never known a nine year old boy that liked stuffed animals. Good point about them being cut at the seams...and stuffed with evidence, thats probably where JB's original panties that she wore to the Whites are....along with the rest of the rope, and tape that was used.
Where was it said that BR's stuffed animals were ripped at the seams? Yes, that could very well be where much of the evidence (which was of a small size, after all) could have been hidden. LE was looking in toilet bowls and plumbing and there it could have been in toys and the pockets of the R's coats that they wore out of the house that day. Of course, the crime scene (and JBR's body) were turned back over to the R's WAY too soon. But ther were "victims", weren't they?Makes me sick.
Where was it said that BR's stuffed animals were ripped at the seams? Yes, that could very well be where much of the evidence (which was of a small size, after all) could have been hidden. LE was looking in toilet bowls and plumbing and there it could have been in toys and the pockets of the R's coats that they wore out of the house that day. Of course, the crime scene (and JBR's body) were turned back over to the R's WAY too soon. But ther were "victims", weren't they?Makes me sick.
For myself, I've always been suspicious of that solitary walk JR took the night of the 26th. How easy would it be to get rid of a pair of size six girls' underwear--in a storm drain, in someone else's trash, in a pond, or even buried in a bit of snow--by the time the snow melted the R's expected to be out of the country. That they didn't end up having to do that was just icing on the cake for them.
Dru, What solitary walk did he take. Could you expound. I don't recall this. Thanks.
And dispose of some evidence, ya think? Maybe the size 6 panties, missing paintbrush piece, etc. Small things that could fit in a coat pocket. Or UNDER a coat.
thx !This is from PMPT, supposedly (I don't have a copy of the book) p. 21 of the hardback edition:
"Michael Bynum, John Ramseys close friend and corporate attorney, who had been away snowshoeing, now arrived at the Fernies house. As he walked in, the family was kneeling in the living room praying with Rev. Hoverstock. Around 7:00 P.M. John Ramsey went for a walk with John Fernie and Dr. Francesco Beuf, JonBenets physician, who had brought over some medication for Patsy. When they returned a half hour later, Ramsey asked Bynum to represent him.
Im sorry, Im so sorry, Ramsey told his friends over and over. Then, just after 8:00, he left alone to take a walk in the nearby foothills."
thx !
I have to interject here. According to Steve Thomas, he was not alone, the police walked close by. Neither he nor Patsy were left alone that night. Also, for the record, there are many instances where Lawrence Schiller's facts are exactly the opposite. His book is good, it is, but his research is lacking at times.
me too.I felt the same way about the movie PMPT. Marg Helgenberger was way too nice and seemed miscast. The "dead" JBR looked, well, like a dept. store dummy, which I understand was used to spare the child who played JBR the trauma of having to play a corpse. I also feel, that although the "JR" portrayal was pretty good, he did seem much less snarky. I'd have liked to see more input from the FW character, and possibly interviews with real people connected to the case (like Judith Miller, or LHP).