Whaleshark
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Yes, just saw that..... Was first replying to 'Pages' comment from the bonita papers saying they were on the counter..
I agree-I think B had more of a motive THAT NIGHT then John!!
I keep coming back and asking myself-Why that night?
midwest mama,
I agree. Something like that, IMO the emphasised phrase represents Ramsey arrogance completely, maybe thats why it worked eventually?
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Ok, so they did each use their own pad, perhaps, but both pads were there on the counter, and either one, or both of them, used one of the pads that they owned to write the note. They did it anyway, and they are both equally implicated, as they both had access to their own, and each other's writing pads...
Exactamundo!! This has been my take on the Ramseys all along. They always acted as if everything they said or done would be totally accepted by everyone, and they would expect nothing less. Both of them were always in the driver's seat of all phases of their adult lives. Their abilities, actions, achievements - everything pointed to continual successes, and they had no reason to ever feel they would not succeed at anything they attempted.
I've posted several times in threads in this forum about my impression of the narcissistic characteristics they seem to have possessed. Any failures portrayed to the public by them in any way would have been unthinkable to them, IMHO. This crime HAD to be made to look as if someone other than any of them was responsible. And it would never have crossed their mind that they would fail at proving that. :moo:
Right, so we can quit saying it was Patsy's paper and pen, etc. It was the Ramsey's paper and pen, etc.
So, going along with doc's theory (which I think is a pretty good theory) wouldn't PR have to recognize that the RN is on "their" paper? Or at least paper very like their own? Wouldn't she have to recognize that it was written with a sharpie, vice a ballpoint?
Exactamundo!! This has been my take on the Ramseys all along. They always acted as if everything they said or done would be totally accepted by everyone, and they would expect nothing less. Both of them were always in the driver's seat of all phases of their adult lives. Their abilities, actions, achievements - everything pointed to continual successes, and they had no reason to ever feel they would not succeed at anything they attempted.
I've posted several times in threads in this forum about my impression of the narcissistic characteristics they seem to have possessed. Any failures portrayed to the public by them in any way would have been unthinkable to them, IMHO. This crime HAD to be made to look as if someone other than any of them was responsible. And it would never have crossed their mind that they would fail at proving that. :moo:
Whaleshark,
All the R's had access to everything in the R's house, whats new?
You and Chrishope are becoming tedious with your repeated generalizing from the particular.
You seem to resort to this when the evidence does not fit docg's theory, e.g. fiber evidence. Its not a particularly intelligent form of rebuttal and over time will weaken docg's whole case, as other board members become cynical of this approach
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why? the various detectives and investigators labelled it as such:
ST, pg. 31
When Sergeant Bob Whitson had arrived at the house, he asked for handwriting samples of John and Patsy Ramsey, standard procedure to begin eliminating people as possible suspects. John Ramsey had picked up two tablets of white lined paper -- one from a countertop and the other from a hallway table a few steps from the spiral staircase -- and handed them to the policeman. Whitson scribbed John across the top of one, which contained business notes Ramsey said he made, and Patsy atop the second, on which the first four pages were covered with doodles, lists and other writing in a feminine hand.
AJK, pg. 93
When Sgt. Bob Whitson asked John Ramsey for samples of handwriting for him and his wife, Ramsey grabbed a pad of paper and wrote out the following: "Now is the time for all good men". He also produced another pad of paper from the kitchen that he described as belonging to Patsy.
What's new is that I was originally answering blefuscu's comment who was asking why Patsy would be so daff to use her own pad and pen in her own handwriting and implicate herself. I pointed out to blefuscu that they had to use what was in the house anyway, and that one could then make the same argument about John - why would he implicate himself... Yadda yadda. Chrishope chimed in with his questions from that.
I was not using any excuse to back up docg's theory for any reason. Chrishope backs up Docg's theory.... I am not committed to any theory.
Just because Chrishope happened to agree with a comment about the point I was trying to make to blefuscu does not mean I was using some pointless comment in agreement with docg. No.
Perhaps you should read the origin and beginning of the discussion a few pages back before you presume to know what you are talking about.
Ok, so they did each use their own pad, perhaps, but both pads were there on the counter, and either one, or both of them, used one of the pads that they owned to write the note. They did it anyway, and they are both equally implicated, as they both had access to their own, and each other's writing pads...
No no, they'd never use each other's pads. They'd only ever use the one they had already been using. Especially since the pads are so very different, JR's being blue, and PR's being pink.
Don't start getting facetious, now. You'll only confuse people - as you can see, people are already not following what some people are even talking about...
midwest mama,
I think you make a good point. Psychology is not a subject I'm strong in, but I noticed this tendency when John told one of the police officers he was leaving Colorado, without JonBenet , using his private plane, because he had some business appointment to attend that day!
Duh, what a brassneck!
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Chrishope said:
Right, which was in answer to blefuscu's questions and fallacious argument....
:floorlaugh:
I absolutely agree - the final few lines of the note are florid and melodramatic, almost as if the author was relishing their own 'poesy'. In an age without the internet, I still persist in viewing the dictionary opened at 'incest' as a desperate attempt to find some information about what had been discovered to have occurred to JBR. Reference books were for referring to back then.
My utterly unsupported interpretation is that Burke executed all the sexual defilement, including the paintbrush jab. I don't think the Ramseys realised they were brilliantly covering up past abuse meted out by Burke. They were simply confronted by the horrific mess of their daughter's genitalia. Patsy had her suspicions upon visits to the pediatrician which had now been tragically confirmed. One last thing - the dynamic seems to be Patsy firmly in the driving seat during the entire evening with John taking a grief-stricken backseat.
I have no problem with any other part of this post, Chris, but have to take exception here. The pad used for the note was absolutely generic, the type of pad used by millions of people and probably many thousands in Boulder. The police determined the note came from patsy's pad, only by magnifiying the tear holes at the top and matching them with corresponding holes in the pad. We have no reason to assume patsy would have recognized that the note came from her pad, no more than that she would have recognized john's writing, which was obviously disguised (how else would he have been ruled out?).