I was aware of all this, but wasn't sure whether it was OK to reveal anything about it. I didn't know RMG and I'll say that RMG isn't my prime suspect, but that means nothing.
I can say that when I learned about RMG (in 1979) I forwarded that information to Lt. Joyce. I told him that the people who told me about RMG did not know whether he was in Cambridge at the time of the murder, or whether he knew or kept company at all with Jane. What Lt. Joyce did or didn't do with that information is, as usual, unavailable.
There was an article in Smithsonian Magazine, sometime later in the 1970s. It seems as though the Smithsonian Magazine's archives are not online, but I'm sure some libraries must have a collection.
Thanks all for the welcome! Mad Mike, as he was known to his students when he taught as an adjunct at Stony Brook, often flew off the handle, verbally attacking colleagues who disagreed with his interpretations, causing at least one to contact me worrying about safety. While I am only speculating here, the violence of the attack on JB (a single blow?), the symbolism of the artifact used to kill her, the post murder ritual suggesting to me regret at losing his temper (trying to make things right), all point to a jilted suitor that may have gotten into an argument over the archaeological interpretation of something. Does anyone remember him being there? He was certainly enrolled and if physically there he must have been interviewed by the police, right? Coupled with the fact that he was the last person to see Ann Abraham alive should be more than enough to suggest him as a person of interest, not to mention his other legal troubles with the state of New York and the Seneca Nation, his macabre handling of human remains while teaching as an adjunct at Canisius College, and more suggestive behavior. I've read over the many posts here, but want to ask again...was there any physical evidence collected from JB's murder like DNA or finger prints?
DNA wasn't around at that time, so it's not "botched."
DNA wasn't around at that time, so it's not "botched."
Several people have said the investigation was botched by one agency or another. I didn't mean to single you out, Donamena. I'm sorry if you thought I was.
I just get tired of the way we on Websleuths tend to assume there was some obvious answer that would have been found if "somebody" in LE hadn't screwed up. That certainly happens and without inside information I remain neutral on whether it happened in this case.
The rumor out in the sticks has always been that higher-ups squashed the investigation to protect Harvard and its reputation, and possibly the people involved. That's sickening and despicable, but it's not the fault of the cops who investigated.
The rumor out in the sticks has always been that higher-ups squashed the investigation to protect Harvard and its reputation, and possibly the people involved. That's sickening and despicable, but it's not the fault of the cops who investigated.
Hi folks,
New to the site and I think I have some information relative to this case, info completely ignored by the Cambridge Police Dept. In 1976 Richard M. Gramly, an archaeologist/geologist/Indian grave looter that graduated from Harvard and was enrolled in their anthropology department when Jane Britton was murdered, was involved in another cold case, that of Anne Abraham. I've attached a link for your convenience: http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=bfwtAAAAIBAJ&sjid=cYgFAAAAIBAJ&pg=1101,2689266&hl=en
Ann Abraham, was an attractive young aspiring archaeologist that was paired with Gramly on a Smithsonian funded expedition to Labrador. Her body was never found. It was surmised she became the victim of a polar bear, though in the intensive search for her, the helicopter pilots reported seeing no such predators. Gramly is an expert of ancient Persian lithics, and of course an ancient stone axe was used to murder Bitton, at least according to the reports. Gramly has had a checkered life, having been forbidden by the state to conduct archaeological investigations in New York as he violated provisions of NAGPRA (Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act). It is reported that he had skull cap ashtrays and body part adornments throughout his office, and I have included a link for this as well: http://www.ag.ny.gov/press-release/landmark-settlement-protects-native-burial-site
His name once again surfaced recently in the news involving an FBI investigation of another Indian grave looter/body part collector: http://www.vocativ.com/culture/art-culture/indianas-real-indiana-jones/
Question, has anyone made this link and/or explored this? There are whispered rumors in the archaeological community that Gramly was interested in both deceased young women. Please let me know what you think, as these two women and their families deserve justice, and this guy fits the m.o.
I was aware of all this, but wasn't sure whether it was OK to reveal anything about it. I didn't know RMG and I'll say that RMG isn't my prime suspect, but that means nothing.
I can say that when I learned about RMG (in 1979) I forwarded that information to Lt. Joyce. I told him that the people who told me about RMG did not know whether he was in Cambridge at the time of the murder, or whether he knew or kept company at all with Jane. What Lt. Joyce did or didn't do with that information is, as usual, unavailable.
There was an article in Smithsonian Magazine, sometime later in the 1970s. It seems as though the Smithsonian Magazine's archives are not online, but I'm sure some libraries must have a collection.
I was aware of all this, but wasn't sure whether it was OK to reveal anything about it. I didn't know RMG and I'll say that RMG isn't my prime suspect, but that means nothing.
I can say that when I learned about RMG (in 1979) I forwarded that information to Lt. Joyce. I told him that the people who told me about RMG did not know whether he was in Cambridge at the time of the murder, or whether he knew or kept company at all with Jane. What Lt. Joyce did or didn't do with that information is, as usual, unavailable.
There was an article in Smithsonian Magazine, sometime later in the 1970s. It seems as though the Smithsonian Magazine's archives are not online, but I'm sure some libraries must have a collection.
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