Whoa, SD.
Do you understand that if a relative of JR used the term 'fat cat' to refer to JR, that that simply highlights JR is being seen by others as a 'fat cat'?
Is that why Nedra was so quick to name people who worked for him? Who at least knew him somewhat?
And that fact does not lower, but instead raises, the chances JR would be referred to as a 'fat cat' by a real radical leftist?
I don't know where you get your ideas, Holdon.
Would you like a LIST, sir? Sure
And remember, YOU asked for it! (I'm going to try and do this without printing the WHOLE book)
1) Fibers from the sweater Patsy Ramsey was known to have worn that night were found on the sticky side of the duct tape over JonBenet's mouth. Several people have tried to claim that this proves nothing because the tape had been removed from JonBenet's mouth by her father and handled by others, thus they could have transferred innocently. But those same fibers were found inside the blanket that JonBenet was wrapped up in, and were found inside the little box that Patsy Ramsey kept her art supplies in. Remember, one of her brushes had formed the handle of the ligature that JonBenet was strangled with. But most notably, those fibers were found tied into the knots of the cord itself. No such fibers were found directly on JonBenet's body. What's more, PR made no attempt to answer the question and give a possible innocent explanation. Two years later, she told a CBS reporter that her fibers had transferred to JonBenet that morning because Patsy, who had been wearing the same clothing she had worn at the party, laid on top of her. But this cannot explain it. In their own book, Death of Innocence, John Ramsey writes that by the time Patsy came near the body, JonBenet was already fully covered. This is borne out by the police reports.
2) Patsy claimed that she saw the ransom letter on the spiral staircase and stepped over it before turning to see what it was. The police later conducted an experiment where they tried to recreate her story. None of the police officers could do it without falling. Again, her story makes no sense.
3) Burke Ramsey mentioned that whoever killed JonBenet took out a knife. At the time, that was not a publicly released fact. But a knife was involved. Burke Ramsey had a Swiss army knife, but he had a habit of whittling with it inside the house and leaving wood shavings all over, so Linda Hoffman-Pugh, the family housekeeper, took it away from him and put in a cabinet in the basement where he couldn't get to it. Only Burke, Linda Hoffman-Pugh, and Patsy knew where it was. The knife was not used as a weapon on JonBenet, but it was found near her body.
4) Thomas said the FBI deemed the entire crime "criminally unsophisticated," citing the child being left on the premises, the oddness of the $118,000 demand in relation to the multi-million dollar net worth of the Ramseys, and the concept of a ransom delivery where one would be "scanned for electronic devices." Kidnappers prefer isolated drops for the ransom delivery, not wanting to chance a face-to-face meeting. CASKU profilers also observed that placing JonBenet's body in the basement indicated the involvement of a parent, rather than an intruder. A parent would not want to place the body outside in the frigid night. They pointed out the use of the blanket that was found on her that day.
5) Denver Post columnist Chuck Green wrote in December of 2006 that the investigators, having inspected PR's bedroom, felt "that her side of the Ramsey bed hadn't been slept in."
6) In 1997, a picture of JonBenet in the now-legendary Showgirl outfit turned up and it showed JonBenet with a huge, angry-looking bruise on her arm. At their presentation of evidence in June 1998, a photo of Patsy and JonBenet was shown where Patsy could be seen holding JonBenet's arm so hard that her fingernails were digging into the arm. Is that a coincidence?
7) In his book, Det. Thomas states:
"In mid-September, a panel of pediatric experts from around the country reached one of the major conclusions of the investigation - that JonBenet had suffered vaginal trauma prior to the day she was killed. There were no dissenting opinions among them on the issue, and they firmly rejected any possibility that the trauma to the hymen and chronic vaginal inflammation were caused by urination issues or masturbation. We gathered affidavits stating in clear language that there were injuries 'consistent with prior trauma and sexual abuse' ' There was chronic abuse'. . . 'Past violation of the vagina'. . .'Evidence of both acute and injury and chronic sexual abuse.' In other words, the doctors were saying it had happened before."
Thomas does not name these experts. But other sources, including Schiller's book, do name them. Their names read as follows:
-Dr. James Monteleone, Professor of Pediatrics at St. Louis University School of Medicine (and Director of Child Protection Cardinal Glennon Children's Hospital);
-Dr. David Jones, Professor of Preventative Medicine and Biometrics at University of Colorado Health Sciences Center;
-Dr. Ronald Wright, former Medical Examiner, Cook County Illinois;
-Dr. Virginia Rau of Dade County, Florida;
-and Dr. John McCann, Clinical Professor of Medicine, Department. of Pediatrics at University of California at Davis. According to McCann, examination findings that indicate chronic sexual abuse include the thickness of the rim of the hymen, irregularity of the edge of the hymen, the width or narrowness of the wall of the hymen, and exposure of structures of the vagina normally covered by the hymen. His report stated that there was evidence of prior hymeneal trauma as all of these criteria were seen in the post mortem examination of JonBenet.
Lastly, Thomas writes in his book that, during an evidence presentation in June 1998, Det. Jane Harmer gave the gathered group an anatomy lesson. She showed side-by-side photographs of JonBenet's vagina and that of a normal six-year-old girl. "Even to the uninitiated, the visual difference was apparent."
8) In the autopsy report, JonBenet's intestine was explored. Inside was a greenish substance that could have been digested plant material such as fruit or vegetables. As Det. Thomas and Det. Smit later confirmed, it was, in fact, pineapple, the same kind that was found in the bowl on the counter of the Ramsey home kitchen. In Perfect Murder, Perfect Town, the coroner's report said that the pineapple was in "near-perfect condition" with "sharp edges" and appeared to have been "poorly chewed." The pineapple in the bowl was fresh, not canned. Smit told John Ramsey in 1998 that it was a "big bugaboo."
The average rate of digestion for pineapple is two hours. It can take as little as one-and-one-half hours, or as long as three hours. This can be affected by the person's metabolism or any illnesses they might have. To narrow it down, the police investigated what JonBenet might have eaten that day. According to Fleet and Priscilla White, they did not serve pineapple at their party on Christmas night. They did serve cracked crab, and apparently, JonBenet liked it enough to ask to take some home. Fleet White obliged. It's likely that whatever she had eaten was already processed by the time of her death, since no cracked crab was found.
Now, the Ramseys have always said that JonBenet fell asleep in the car on the way home and remained asleep until she was killed. The pineapple is important because it puts the lie to the idea that JonBenet was asleep. The Ramseys arrived home at 10:00 PM. Dr. Werner Spitz estimated the time of death as around 1:00 AM. That means that JonBenet had to have eaten the pineapple after she got home. Since the only fingerprints found on the bowl and spoon belonged to Patsy and Burke, JonBenet didn't get to it herself. She couldn't reach the top of the counter, so she'd need to climb on something to reach it, but nothing was out of place. None of the kitchen chairs were moved. So, someone had to get it for her. This is the big lie the Ramseys were caught in. To this day, they contend that no one in the house fed it to her, and even they can't swallow the idea that an intruder gave it to her, then waited the two hours for it to digest before he killed her. During the 1998 interviews, the first day John Ramsey was interviewed, he said that no one fed JonBenet pineapple under any circumstances, since she wouldn't have eaten it from an intruder anyway. Det. Thomas writes in his book, quote:
"The very next day he retracted that firm statement, saying his lawyer chastised him for making it. Nether he nor Patsy fed her pineapple, he said, but then he asked, 'What if she knew the intruder?' After thinking about it, he said, 'It hit me like a ton of bricks.' JonBenet 'adored' Santa Bill McReynolds, and if he had come into her room, she would have gotten out of bed and gone downstairs with him without a problem. 'She may have had a secretly prearranged meeting.' he said. 'Maybe he fed her pineapple.' The detectives stopped the tape and watched that section repeatedly. Only the day before, Ramsey had said such a thing was impossible. Now he laid it on Santa Bill."
And that's not even the WHOLE thing. Not by a long shot it isn't. But the magician does not reveal all of his secrets.