If it truly were simply an "accidental death", I really feel the Rs would have come up with some kind of explanation for the skull fracture (there could easily have been a slip in the bathtub, etc) that while their world would have been shocked, it would have been seen as a tragic accident and that's that. They'd have called 911 and dealt with the consequences, probably never have faced prosecution (especially in Boulder) and we wouldn't be here discussing this 10 years later.
It's the garrotte, strangulation, apparant sexual abuse and vaginal wound that paints this as a murder. The head wound alone COULD HAVE been explained without it being seen as murder. The rest cannot.
So SOMETHING ELSE needed to be covered up. Not just a fractured skull. It's the cover-up that smacks of parental involvement.
And if they were covering up for their son, isn't that a crime in itself despite his age? I mean, it's evidence tampering, tampering with a corpse, etc. Even with Colorado's inane laws about shielding children under 10 from prosecution to the extent of preventing a murder from being solved and innocent people from being suspected it still seems like that kind of covering up is illegal to me.
DeeDee, exactly! The cover-up has to be of something more than just the head injury, because even a really bad head injury, if that were all, wouldn't automatically mean criminal charges and jail time. For one thing, just look at the R's house! Multiple staircases, a balcony in JBR's room, fireplaces, oddly angled countertops (look at the one near the phone in the kitchen, for example), the laundry area right outside JBR's room, the nightstand in her room (and the trunk, and the headboard of the bed, and the trophies on the cabinet--heck, even the TV in her closet!)--there are literally dozens of ways to create a "head injury" scenario,
if that was all the R's had to cover up.
And if PR had called 911 hysterical just before or just after midnight saying, perhaps, that her little girl had climbed on a stool to try to turn on her TV by herself and had caused the whole think to fall on top of her, and that PR had hear the noise and come rushing in, and saw JBR with the TV on top of her head, and she's not breathing, etc. etc. who's to say that LE wouldn't have, at least officially, believed her? They might have privately suspected that something else caused the injury, but unless they had a really good reason to try to prove that a TV falling on JBR's head wouldn't have fractured her skull, chances are that with the money and power and lawyers the R's had available to them that the "accident" scenario would have been accepted, and that would have been that.
But the R's, or at least one of them, knew that something else had to be accounted for, and quite honestly the only thing that makes sense to me is preexisting sexual abuse. An abuser would know that all the "sad, tragic accidental death of a six-year-old" staging in the world wouldn't explain to the police why the six-year-old's hymenal opening was abnormally enlarged, which in turn would raise red flags about the "accident" in the first place.
And I keep coming back to the idea that the original plan was to get JBR's body out of the house. I envision the mind of the killer/killers this way:
1. JBR is dying; sexual abuse must be covered; vaginal wound inflicted.
2. JBR must
be dead; strangulation.
3. JBR must be removed from the house; ransom note.
4. JBR
can't be safely removed from the house; staging with garrote and 'wrist restraints.'
5. JBR must not be found immediately, yet police must be called and flight to Charlevoix canceled; keep RN, hide body in wine cellar.
6. JBR's body must be found so we can leave, hire lawyers, plan what to do next; 'discover' body in wine cellar with FW along as a 'witness' of the discovery.
Why did the killer want JBR's body out of the house? Because sufficient time before the discovery/sufficient decomposition would have made it impossible for sexual abuse to be uncovered. But the killer didn't make the Susan Smith mistake, and therefore we're still talking about this crime ten years later.