Hi Don,
I have a few questions if you don't mind
-- Jim Humphries and I entered Jane's studio apartment together. I lifted the rug to see that she was dead. We left and I or my wife called the Cambridge police. I called Jane's father's office.
That was at Jim's request correct ?
Prior to entering the residence that he felt something was wrong, or that he felt something bad happened ??
You stated you "lifted the rug"?.. I take it she was wrapped in a rug ?
When you found her, how was she positioned? on her side, face up , face down?
-- there was no "cairn" of any kind -- no stone structure. There were features that could be interpreted as "strata" or as a burial.
Could you explain what you mean by a burial?
-- the apartment was left entirely unsecured after Jane's body was removed. This was astonishing to me.
So the scene was never secure? which means tainted evidence, and possibly why the blackout was ordered .
-- the stone tool (an Acheulean hand ax) was in Jane's possession; never in mine. The police didn't discover it; my wife and I discovered it together, in the apartment, when we went in a few days later to feed her turtle. The ax had been washed. I said the cops were incompetent. I said the place was unsecured.
Do you recall where in her Apartment it was found
You also stated it was "washed"? but you also stated it was a few days later, so what made it look as though it was washed off ?
-- I noticed and tentatively IDd the red ochre (powder) that was on what was covering her and on the wall behind her. This was a couple of days later; we had unfettered access to the apartment. I did not and do not doubt that that's what it was, and that someone had thrown it. I called the Cambridge detectives to report that I'd found something interesting, and the red ochre and "ritual" report appeared on a TV station that night. The Cambridge PD's telephone system was a leaky one.
-- "iodine" was never involved in any way.
First, thanks for clearing that up , can you tell us what the purpose of the red ochre powder was, I believe its a pigment correct? Was it something she had in her apt, or do they believe the killer brought it with him/her
-- Jim got a lawyer; we didn't -- we knew we'd done nothing wrong, so why get a lawyer? Of course this was stupid, but this was 1969 and we were supposed to believe that the justice system was fair -- fair for graduate students at an elite university, that is.
Did he ever state to you why he felt the need to get a lawyer? , as you mentioned, this was in the late 60's where the mentality was different.
What was his behavior like following the homicide?
-- I saw the autopsy photographs. Blunt trauma to the back of the skull. The blow with the hand ax could well have stunned her but did not kill her. As for whether the hand ax delivered the fatal blow, I can't say. I think the forensic people believed it to be a hammer or geologist's pick.
Were all her wounds to the back of her head, or were there others? if so where ?
-- It was obvious to me, a non-professional who at least understood about looking around a death scene for clues, that she had been struck in the open part of her studio apartment and had fallen there and had been later taken to the bed. She had a wound that matched a bloodstain on the carpet and the profile of the hand ax. No one seems to have noticed this except me and my wife (who, by the way, has been an ex-wife for many years).
Very sorry to hear, so your feeling having seen the crime scene 1st hand is that she was attacked, struck, then moved to the bedroom?
Is that correct?