If it was 100% a stranger that they did not know, why did they hinder the investigation so much? Why did they refuse to cooperate? Why did they compromise the crime scene at every turn? Honest questions![]()
It took months to arrange a meeting with the investigators in charge of finding out who murdered their daughter. I'd be at the station non-stop. Not traipsing all over creation in my private jet. JMO.
Ok, let me rephrase. It is insignificant in comparison with the plethora of evidence that suggests someone in the house is the perp. Again, JMO. But this is the IDI thread, so I should probably exit stage left.
Tawny, if you want to save any of your sanity, I would recommend coming with me...LOLOL:floorlaugh:
No offense, Scarlett, Tawny just killed me with the "exit stage left" comment.
And also, if it weren't for the totality of the evidence, I would say the tDNA was a huge clue, but in this case, it's not. JMO
Back to my corner now...I promise...:seeya:
I AM proposing an theory other than a RDI--it just involves them covering up the aftermath for one reason or another.
And, sorry, but other theories other than RDI consist of proposing some "unknown intruder" did it without proposing much else of anything except a few small samples of unknown DNA as evidence of this.
People wouldn't keep bringing up the Ramsey's if someone actually made a substantial case AGAINST their involvement and explain their actions. Proclaiming "an intruder did it" and "this case is over" is not substantial
Yes, this. Please, support your argument. Lay it out persuasively, Scarlett. Explain it in detail. I'm not trying to attack you or derail this thread, but there has to be more to it than proclamation. Build a case for IDI - I know I'm not the only one interested and willing to listen. But there has to be more than "an intruder did it" and "it makes sense to me" and "the DNA is important." Yes, DNA is important, but you have to consider the totality of the circumstances here. Where is the circumstantial evidence which supports your theory? How do handle the evidence which seems to implicate the Ramseys? Spell it out a little more for us, please.![]()
I am just going to say that no one can know what they would do. We just can't. Your child was just murdered and in your house. I would be half out of my wits and I think I would want to get out of there as fast as possible and never return but I don't know that. I don't know. I can bet that I would not want to talk to anyone, I would be medicated and just destroyed. I don't think I would be thinking about the investigation at that point. The worst had already happened.
That is just my opinion.. and the fact that they had attorneys that they were trusting to work this all out for them and take care of the legal stuff. I think when you trust people to take care of things you leave it entirely in their hands.
All this stuff has nothing to do with guilt to me.. IT is just people's judgments on their actions based on what they think they would do in that same circumstance. So for me this stuff while interesting to speculate on means nothing to the actual facts of the case that could lead to someone being convicted of this crime.
When my son went missing, I was a nut. I could not think, I could not function. I could not speak. I was a mess. When he was found I completely fell apart and could not cope for awhile. That extreme stress and fear is biological. I can not imagine and won't think about if it had gone differently. I can not even imagine that.
I like to play Devil's Advocate a lot, too, so it's good to know it's not taken personally
For instance, the pen that matched the pen that wrote the ransom note. It was found in the butler's pantry. Why would an intruder put it away instead of just leaving it where it was?
She wouldn't have been thinking clearly, IMO, because emotions would have been running high. The routine of putting the pen where it belongs would take over in the midst of the chaos. (jmo)
Good! I hope that is always clear.
To hide it and make it look like it was them to throw suspicion that way. If she had written the note, Why would she keep the pen??
I understand this, but you'd think, with the Ramsey's being fairly intelligent, that they would realize that not meeting with investigators for weeks and months after the crime considering they were IN THE HOUSE during the murder was NOT helping in the investigation of who killed their daughter.
If you are planning to cover up the murder of your child in your house, You are thinking pretty darn clearly.. If you just sat and wrote a note to mislead police you know that you need to get rid of the paper and pen for it to work.
I think this all goes against her writing the note.
IT makes no sense. She can not be panicked and write that note, It just does not go hand in hand.
Actually a three page ransom is pretty extreme and could point to someone in a panic "overthinking" what needs to be done. She wiped the pen clean of fingerprints and really thought nothing of it, consider she also left the garrot with the broken paint brush from inside the house around JB's neck.
I disagree.. Complete panic paralyzes you. This is not a chronic killer if you believe it was her. This is a new crazy circumstance. I don't believe that at all.
I think the reason it was wiped clean was because it was an intruder.. She would not have to wipe it clean. Her prints are supposed to be on her stuff.
She did not kill JBR so she did not leave the Garrote anywhere.. Remember this is not an RDI thread.