Burke testified to the Grand Jury. He apparently also at that time admitted to being downstairs after he thought everyone else was in bed.
Yes, which matches what John has said from day one.
John mentions this at one point, saying that neither he or Patsy were aware that Burke had been awake after he was put to bed.
At one point? Where?
We cannot assume that Officer French is the source for an error. John told two other officers the same story.
Arndt and who else? I can't say I'm impressed with Arndt's report - weeks late and plenty of dollars short.
Then John & Patsy started telling a different story. If one looks at the history of their comments, especially John, they were prolific at changing stories. This is where the Ramseys score low on the credibility scale, and there is no one to blame for that except themselves.
Yet funnily enough, a third party usually has to be involved. It's rarely "Ramsey said this here and that here" but "Ramsey said this here and some other person claims they said that here." That makes me skeptical, especially when the people in question are French and Arndt, arguably the two cops most responsible for nothing the case.
The coroner was unable to pinpoint the time of death. The most probable timeline was sometime between midnight and 2AM, but it could have been later.
So the point is that changing the story from "she was awake when we came home and we put her to bed" to "she was asleep when we came home and we put her to bed" changes nothing from a timing perspective. So why would they change it (if they did)?
Yes, Smit's theories were debunked. Quite easy. He was not brought on to the case until later on and made most of his observations by viewing photographs.
And proceeded to back them up. Smit was just what was needed to break the case out of tunnel vision.
One of my favorites is his insistence that there could not be any footprints visible because there wasn't snow. The first officers on the scene arrived before sunrise and it was still dark. Snow was still on the walkways at that point. The pictures were quite obviously taken well after sunrise as it is no longer dark. Even when it's still cold, at our high altitudes here in Colorado snow on pavement melts very quickly once the sun comes up. His conclusion was not well thought out. Smit's reputation was somewhat legendary.....legendary in that it was exaggerated. The infamous case he was credited with solving was actually solved by someone on his team and not him, although he certainly took credit. His main attribute was not giving up. While admirable, that doesn't qualify him as a "Sherlock Holmes". And I am not the only one who holds the opinion that he got too close to the Ramseys, that was / is a widely held opinion that has been discussed even in the law enforcement community. He also was allowed to present his "theories" to the Grand Jury. They didn't buy them either.
He got a little time to present out of the massive and lengthy Grand Jury sessions. Interestingly, the Grand Jury didn't buy the police theory either, since they didn't indict either Ramsey for the murder of JonBenet.
Perhaps Smit convinced them the case was much weaker than the prosecution claimed?
The flashlight has been discussed as the possible heavy object that was used for the head blow. It was wiped clean inside and out.
We don't know that. All we know is that there were no fingerprints on it. And if they wiped it "inside and out", why leave it out?
John initially tried to deny it was his, then changed the story (another instance!) that he never used it and it probably didn't work because it was never used and so the batteries would be dead. Even Patsy knew it was theirs, given as a gift by John Andrew. If it was never used, why was not in its drawer?
Did they change their story? Because from the interviews it's clear that they think it looks like theirs (though dirty in at least one picture) but couldn't be sure.
Remember what I said about geography? The flashlight was kept in a drawer in the same hallway the pen and paper were. If, like I believe, the killer wrote the note after the murder, he could have written it on the kitchen counter - like John's study, it was adjacent to the hallway. The flashlight could then have been used for illumination (the northern neighbor did say they saw an unusual light from the kitchen during the night).
What is clear is that the Ramseys didn't need to use a flashlight.
The bowl of pineapple was left out, along with an empty glass with a used tea bag in it. In the police photos, one can clearly see that there is a bowl with pineapple in milk.
There's no milk. That's a late myth, but if you look at statements and documents from everyone who saw the bowl, handled the bowl or tested it's content, they only ever describe it as a bowl of pineapple. Thomas says do in his book, as does Schiller. Patsy was interviewed extensively about her kids' snacking habits in relation to the bowl and pineapple, and milk or dairy of any kind was never mentioned - as it absolutely would be had there been milk in the bowl.
As for the white stuff visible in some of the images, by the time they were taken the bowl had been sitting out for three days in an empty house - and it clings to the top of the fruit. White mold, most likely.
It was there and was quite obviously triggering for Burke when he was asked about that picture when he was interviewed in Atlanta.
"Obviously triggering." It is no such thing, people just tend to see what they want to see. Burke sees a bowl filled with something he has no idea what it is, that's it.
The story about grapes and cherries in JonBenet's system is false. That was put forth by Paula Woodward, but when the material was sent to UOC for examination, they confirmed that it was raw pineapple. Yet the rumors about a fruit cup persist.
Woodward reproduced the scanned documents from the FA's office which showed that, yes, the botanists were sent the material from the duodenum and yes, there was fresh pineapple and yes, there were grapes and cherries too. Not a fruit cup, then, but some kind of fruit salad.
The kids played everywhere around the house. And had well observed habits of dropping their stuff everywhere. Finding it on the north side does not mean they played baseball there, but certainly Burke could've carried it around and dropped it there. They wouldn't have played baseball on the patio either, and yet there was a bat found there.
That was the front of the house, not the back. It makes sense to leave toys there, not on the north side. And this bat showed signs of having been in the boiler room, which is the room where JonBenet died.
Where things were found isn't proof of anything other than kids who were known for not putting there things away where they belonged. One of the neighbors who lived across the alley from the Ramseys told police her dogs barked whenever anyone was in the alley, or when anyone was wandering around that area. That was on the north side. Her dogs did not bark at anything that night.
The alley was on the west side.
Barbara Fernie recounted hearing John ask for the gold club bag. That was one of the first things she heard said where she started to wonder about the Ramseys.
She suddenly remembered it over a year later. I'm guessing cause and effect are vice versa in this case.
Then there was the blatant lie from Patsy about the pry marks on an outside door that she had told Barbara were already there from some time ago. After Patsy allowing police to think the pry marks might be proof of an intruder trying to get in the house, she called police as her suspicions were starting to grow.
There were pry marks on more than one door. On one they were described by police sources as fresh.
It is interesting to note that the Fernies were not the only friends who found the Ramseys behavior suspicious after awhile and started questioning their veracity, their credibility and their refusal to cooperate with the investigation. And certainly worth mentioning is why Fleet White was called to the Ramsey's attorneys office on 12/27 and told in no uncertain terms that Haddon & Morgan were in charge and that he needed to "not interfere". Threats being made within 24 hours?
I take Fleet White with quite a few grains of salt. He, like Thomas, espouse a political conspiracy theory.
I already said it was a mistake for the police to let Patsy's sister just grab whatever she felt like from the house. That also included their passports. They needed those for the funeral?
Their personal documents. Since they likely knew even then that they would never again live in the house where their daughter died.
I am very aware of Thomas' suggestions of "friends in high places", and it is not some random, bizarre theory. If you look at the people involved from the DA's office to the attorney firm, to Mike Bynum, there are some very interesting connections.
That is literally a conspiracy theory. "Some very interesting connections." Vague yet ominous.
One cannot ignore the misconduct by the DA himself in this case, which he should have been called on the carpet and fired for.
While I can't say Hunter didn't make mistakes, his conduct was far less egregious than the Boulder police.
He has admitted that he and his office were responsible for many of the leaks to the tabloids that occurred,
And the Boulder police also leaked plenty.
and also that he gave investigative information to the defense team. Remarkable and highly suspect. Grounds for prosecutorial misconduct.
Withholding evidence from the defense should be grounds for prosecutorial misconduct, not the opposite.
Of the long list of close friends and acquaintances that the Ramseys ended up throwing under the bus of suspicion, they were all cleared.
Because even a close friend could have been the killer. The Ramseys suggesting people to investigate isn't throwing them under the bus - the investigation will determine what's true. Of course, then Thomas and Kolar can put it all in their little books...
Given that this mystery intruder had to have known the house and the Ramseys so well to pull this off as they did, which John liked to say was an inside job, it's certainly interesting that despite efforts to point fingers that has been unsuccessful. This person is very good at keeping secrets apparently! A master criminal. As an inside job, even Smit decided that it was someone with a grudge against John. Nothing to do with thrills.
I agree with Smit that the killer had a grudge against John - but in a parasocial sense, all tied up in his obsession with JonBenet, John being the prime obstacle between them. There was a news article found in the basement, an article featuring John and a few other business men. John was marked with a red heart, the others crossed out. Since there was a red heart painted in JonBenet's palm, I think this was the original note, the one he brought with him, put away after he came up with the plan to hide JonBenet and write s ransom note. The red markings are similar to the movie Ricochet, which in turn is similar to the movies paraphrased in the ransom note.