Jayelles said:
OK, so we're going to disregard the DNA - which rules everyone back in (including the ramseys).
Fine by me so long as we use the WEIGHT of the evidence, in its entirety, when judging suspects.
Jayelles said:
How far would Santa Bill have to travel that night to commit this murder?
I thought he lived right in town, so I don't think his travel time/distance would have been appreciably further than Wolf, Helgoth and other similar suspects. Someone with more details at their fingertips than I could probably say for certain what distance this was, but I haven't heard any claims that he was out of town that night, so am not certain this distance is that relevant (2 miles vs. 20 miles: would it appreciably change our assessment of his ability to commit the crime?)
Jayelles said:
If you read the "history" Sissi pointed to earlier, you'd see there's sure an extraordinary number of "coincidences" including 22nd anniversary TO THE DAY of his own daughter's death etc. [each one can be explained away, but the combination is rather extraordinary: if Santa Bill had immediately been identified as the killer, we would have looked back on all these coincidences and said "Well, duh! THAT was an easy case to solve."]
It's been said many times that it's not clear this was a sexual crime or an effort to make it LOOK like a sexual crime. Motive may have been some sort of anger towards John, for example (that's certainly what one picks up in the RN), in which case anything sexual done to JBR is to get to JOHN not for sexual gratification etc. In the history, you see multiple clues that Santa Bill was "obsessed" with JBR, so the fact that he may have gotten off on gay




doesn't automatically rule him out. If there was evidence of actual rape, that might be harder to explain etc.
Jayelles said:
Regarding the excitement, I think you misunderstand. I wasn't suggesting sexual excitement. I was referring to adrenalin pumping - the thrill of the kill so to speak.
What do you think his motive was?
As indicated above, taking all the evidence together, my best guess would be some sort of anger at John: perhaps he was jealous of John's financial success and/or his "perfect" (to all appearances) life in terms of material goods, marriage to a former beauty queen, charming daughter etc. John was on an upward trajectory in terms of business sucess and the prospects for JBR being a huge star (if she'd lived to enter Miss America pageant, would anyone have been surprised that she won?). Santa Bill's life may have been a pretty sharp contrast to that and given the trigger of the holidays and depression related to remembering his daughter's death, that might have been enough to set him off. Depression often manifests itself as anger/rage in men. So even a small tiff between him and John over his Santa activities may have been enough to plot to get even etc.
Again, the foregoing is all contingent on it being physically possible for Santa Bill to have done this--i.e., unaccounted for up to several hours without being noticed by his wife or anyone else. At some level, given that some of the coincidences involve her novels, I guess I'd be willing to entertain possibility of conspiracy between Bill and his wife, but it seems to me that it would vastly complicate the story.