Who initially implicated the parents?
How do you mean?
(I could give you my personal answer, but I don't think you'd like it.)
Who initially implicated the parents?
Initially implicating the parents in a little girl's murder, before all the facts were in, was probably a huge blow to finding justice in this case.
Implicating the parents should have happened the minute LE open the door from the 911 call. That was the huge blow to finding justice in this case.
I'm not sure.
Lets suppose RDI for a minute. Its getting harder to do that, what with LE going IDI and finding new intruder leads.
I think I would've considered not taking samples or questioning or sounding alarm bells, in favor of surveillance. Maybe even get a judge to go along with wiretapping and all that. They do it all the time.
I'm not thinking RDI/IDI. I don't know who kill JBR. I'm just thinking if they were put under the microscope when LE first entered their home it would lesson suspicion of R's guilt. KWIM? The R's leaving with bags and large coats the day of the murder? The sister dressed as a police officer to retrieve things out of the home? It's almost like The Church Lady, "How convenient."
Why didn't they do all those things you named above? Samples and questioning seems like regular police procedure.
I'll question your facts or your sources here.
I'm not an expert on R post-crime behavior, as that is a waste of time IMO.
Having said that, are you sure they left town the day of the murder?
Are you sure that the R's were behind some scheme to remove critical evidence from the house while dressing their relative as a police officer? Are you sure the sister came up with the idea to dress like an officer by herself? I thought impersonating a police officer is illegal. Was the relative charged?
Samples and questioning were seen by the R's as done 'at the exclusion of other suspects' which raised the alarm that LE were considering the R's and only the R's. This is the big problem because it would put the R's on guard, thereby averting any real post-crime behavior or remarks that would indicate guilt. Y'know something actually incriminating not petty stuff like pineapple bowl ownership.
I never thought they left town. I believe they left the house the day of the murder. No? IMO They could have taken things incriminating with them.
Yes, it is illegal to impersonate a police officer. Are you saying that never happened or you just don't know?
I wonder why the R's would feel so alarmed by LE considering them as suspects early on? They were in the house. Process of elimination. Right? But they made that process very difficult. IMO R's alarm so early on looks like guilt. What are they guilty of?
Holdontoyourhat said:Lets suppose RDI for a minute. Its getting harder to do that, what with LE going IDI and finding new intruder leads.
I think I would've considered not taking samples or questioning or sounding alarm bells, in favor of surveillance.
Maybe even get a judge to go along with wiretapping and all that. They do it all the time.
Reznor said:Why didn't they do all those things you named above?
Samples and questioning seems like regular police procedure.
Holdontoyourhat said:I'm not an expert on R post-crime behavior, as that is a waste of time IMO.
Having said that, are you sure they left town the day of the murder?
Are you sure that the R's were behind some scheme to remove critical evidence from the house while dressing their relative as a police officer? Are you sure the sister came up with the idea to dress like an officer by herself?
I thought impersonating a police officer is illegal.
Was the relative charged?
Samples and questioning were seen by the R's as done 'at the exclusion of other suspects' which raised the alarm that LE were considering the R's and only the R's. This is the big problem because it would put the R's on guard, thereby averting any real post-crime behavior or remarks that would indicate guilt.
When did that article appear?
No one will ever convince me that someone came into the house, killed JBR and hid her in the basement without leaving a trace of themselves in the house or on JBR.
Not finding what should have been there is strong evidence that someone in the house killed her.
OK no one will ever convince you.
No traces? How about DNA, cord, tape, pineapple, and handwriting?? Thatsa lotta traces.
Pleeeze don't explain to me with tall tales about how the R's owned these items because you can't show at all that they did.
All of these can be possibly traced to the Rs. Can't be proven? Maybe not, but it can't be proven than they DID NOT belong to them. To do that, you have to prove who they DID belong to. And there is no evidence of an intruder associated with THESE items. Of your list, the DNA is the only thing that is shown to be NOT of R origin. But it still does not prove they had no involvement in this crime. Only that the DNA on the clothes is not theirs. And that DNA could have gotten there innocently. We've explained it many times how that COULD have happened.
All of these can be possibly traced to the Rs. Can't be proven? Maybe not, but it can't be proven than they DID NOT belong to them. To do that, you have to prove who they DID belong to. And there is no evidence of an intruder associated with THESE items. Of your list, the DNA is the only thing that is shown to be NOT of R origin. But it still does not prove they had no involvement in this crime. Only that the DNA on the clothes is not theirs. And that DNA could have gotten there innocently. We've explained it many times how that COULD have happened.
I still don't believe this is a DNA case,not until they find a match on the garrote or paintbrush or note (even so it could be the dna of an accomplice)
BUT after reading about Kevin Fox I will be a bit more quiet about Lacy exonerating the R's based on DNA match.
<<<shrug>>>
ETA link
http://abcnews.go.com/TheLaw/Story?id=6196896&page=3
Interesting ,was the same lab where the dna in the R case was sent.
http://newsgroups.derkeiler.com/pdf/Archive/Alt/alt.true-crime/2007-12/msg00473.pdf
Riley Fox: DNA on duct tape detailed