Exactly! I agree, and I hope that one day someone says something. JDI and PDI theorists fall flat when trying to explain why the other stayed loyal.
All of this is speculation as none of us have any idea what the family dynamic was like in the home. For me to say one single person was responsible would be unfair and completely unfounded. That being said, the short answer is yes. I theorize that he was responsible both in the past and the night in question. If you want more info, my long answer is below! Again, this is all speculation and by no means a fact or my assertion of guilt.
In my theory, one of the two was responsible for the abuse previous to the night of the murder. According to different crime statistics, SA by a parent accounts for roughly 25-40% of ALL reported SA cases, whereas SA by a sibling accounts for 15-25% of reported cases WITHIN FAMILES. (Feel free to research these stats for yourself as I by no means swear by my sources.) Though relatively rare, SA perpetrated by a sibling does happen.
My thinking is this:
If JR was responsible for the past SA, he would have a reason to cover it up by making the attack look like a sexual crime. His hope would be they would see the SA from the "intruder" that night, and not find that it had been ongoing.
However... (This is where I believe multiple scenarios appear
- If BR was responsible for the past SA and the Ramsey's were aware that is had happened or was a pattern, again JR would have a reason to cover it up as stated above, both to protect BR and themselves since they were aware and chose to not disclose it.
- If BR was responsible for the past SA and he had just knocked JBR unconscious (even unintentionally,) one might think this was an opportunity to either continue or see what you can get away with. (Obviously being too young to understand the severity of the head blow and/or following actions.) JR/PR would, again, have a reason to cover it up as stated above, both to protect BR and themselves since they were aware and chose to not disclose it.
I don't debate differing theories when it comes to this as I honestly have no idea and can't imagine being put in any of these scenarios. My theory tends to include BR committing the head blow, SA, and garrote (which I know is not nearly as popular, happy to explain in a different post if interested,) and the family finding her and panicking. At that point, it wouldn't matter whether or not they knew about any previous SA leading up to that night, the cover up would (in my opinion) be the best next step. If it were me, part of that would be sending BR back to bed, instructing him not to wake up, shipping him off to a friends house before investigators can speak with him, etc.
All theories have a hole. It's about finding the smallest oneExactly! I agree, and I hope that one day someone says something. JDI and PDI theorists fall flat when trying to explain why the other stayed loyal.
All of this is speculation as none of us have any idea what the family dynamic was like in the home. For me to say one single person was responsible would be unfair and completely unfounded. That being said, the short answer is yes. I theorize that he was responsible both in the past and the night in question. If you want more info, my long answer is below! Again, this is all speculation and by no means a fact or my assertion of guilt.
In my theory, one of the two was responsible for the abuse previous to the night of the murder. According to different crime statistics, SA by a parent accounts for roughly 25-40% of ALL reported SA cases, whereas SA by a sibling accounts for 15-25% of reported cases WITHIN FAMILES. (Feel free to research these stats for yourself as I by no means swear by my sources.) Though relatively rare, SA perpetrated by a sibling does happen.
My thinking is this:
If JR was responsible for the past SA, he would have a reason to cover it up by making the attack look like a sexual crime. His hope would be they would see the SA from the "intruder" that night, and not find that it had been ongoing.
However... (This is where I believe multiple scenarios appear
- If BR was responsible for the past SA and the Ramsey's were aware that is had happened or was a pattern, again JR would have a reason to cover it up as stated above, both to protect BR and themselves since they were aware and chose to not disclose it.
- If BR was responsible for the past SA and he had just knocked JBR unconscious (even unintentionally,) one might think this was an opportunity to either continue or see what you can get away with. (Obviously being too young to understand the severity of the head blow and/or following actions.) JR/PR would, again, have a reason to cover it up as stated above, both to protect BR and themselves since they were aware and chose to not disclose it.
I don't debate differing theories when it comes to this as I honestly have no idea and can't imagine being put in any of these scenarios. My theory tends to include BR committing the head blow, SA, and garrote (which I know is not nearly as popular, happy to explain in a different post if interested,) and the family finding her and panicking. At that point, it wouldn't matter whether or not they knew about any previous SA leading up to that night, the cover up would (in my opinion) be the best next step. If it were me, part of that would be sending BR back to bed, instructing him not to wake up, shipping him off to a friends house before investigators can speak with him, etc.