Patsy Ramsey

  • #421
The fact that you are asking this question means you don't know.

Try not to posit theories about things you don't know. That's how gossip get's started.

I was asking the question to try to prove a point which must have been lost. I will post theories on things, last I knew I could on here as my posts are moo. My posts/theories/opinions are just as good as the rest in here.
I'd just like to know how you know that the fibers got in the knot by being pulled through her hair. There is no way to know that with certainty, so to try to assert it is gossip as they say. Shouldn't anybody post theories on things they don't know?
 
  • #422
This is a valid point if the only fibers that were found on the body were from the home. But the key is when there are fibers that don't match the people in the home on the body.

That's KEY right there. Jonbenet had long hair. Hugging her would easily transfer fibers from the family members into her hair. If that hair was then pulled into the garotte it would make sense. We know this is what happened.

All BBM...

Possible. but the last part of that statement is complete speculation on your part, and IMO is a stretch considering....

from "Foreign Faction"

Trujillo advised me that lab technicians had identified eight different types of fibers on the sticky side of the duct tape used to cover JonBenét’s mouth. They included red acrylic, gray acrylic, and red polyester fibers that were subsequently determined by laboratory examination to be microscopically and chemically consistent to each other, as well as to fibers taken from Patsy Ramsey’s Essentials jacket. Further, fibers from this jacket were also matched to trace fibers collected from the wrist ligature, neck ligature, and vacuumed evidence from the paint tray and Wine Cellar floor.

Some intruder theorists thought that the transfer of Patsy’s jacket fibers to the duct tape may have taken place after John had removed it from JonBenét’s face, and placed it on the white blanket in the cellar. They believed it possible that prior contact taking place between the blanket and jacket could account for the transfer of these fibers to the tape. Lab technicians had conducted experiments with the same brand of duct tape, by attempting to lift trace fibers from the blanket recovered in the Wine Cellar. Direct contact was made in different quadrants of the blanket. There was some minimal transfer of jacket fibers made to the tape during this exercise, but Trujillo told me lab technicians didn’t think that this type of transfer accounted for the number of jacket fibers that had been found on the sticky side of the tape. It was thought that direct contact between the jacket and tape was more likely the reason for the quantity of fibers found on this piece of evidence. BPD investigators looked to the other jacket fibers found in the Wine Cellar, in the paint tray, and on the cord used to bind JonBenét as physical evidence that linked Patsy with the probable location of her daughter’s death – the basement hallway and Wine Cellar. The paint tray was reported to have been moved to the basement about a month prior to the kidnapping, and investigators doubted that Patsy would have been working on art projects while wearing the dress jacket. The collection of jacket fibers from all of these different locations raised strong suspicions about her involvement in the crime. Investigators also learned that fibers collected from the interior lining of the Essentials jacket did not match control samples from the sweater that had been provided to police by Ramsey attorneys. Investigators thought that this suggested she had been wearing some other article of clothing beneath the jacket. But there were still other trace fibers that had yet to be accounted for. Brown cotton fibers had been found on four items closely associated with the body of JonBenét and implements used in her murder. Lab technicians thought the fibers similar to a pair of cotton work gloves. Had the gloves gone the way of the cord, duct tape, practice notes, and stun gun when the perpetrator left the home that night?
2996-3023

The hugging/transfer theory would have had to have led to transferring a great many fibers.

Absence of other fibers and DNA would definitely be a smoking gun to me. It would seem impossible that the level of violence perpetuatedagainst Jonbenet, especially the garotte, would not "pick up" fibers off the person doing it to her.

JB died a "violent death," however, it seems as if much of what happened to her was done after the head bash. There was no "violent" struggle given the crime scene. she had no defensive wounds, the tape was placed on her mouth after being rendered unconscious, there is no clear evidence she tried to fight the cord around her neck, no marks on her wrists indicating she struggled against those bonds, her room showed no signs of struggle, and its even possible the penetration she suffered was done after the head bash as there are no bruises on her thighs. even the ME states that the intrusion was not "vicious."

So if they examined Jonbenet and she was free from any foreign fibers or DNA, I'd be right in the corner of the RDI.

However there were foreign fibers and DNA on the body. So how do you all explain that? Where did it come from? Not only did they test the Ramsesys, they tested the Whites, the neighbors, the children, other friends, the Santa, etc etc. They tested everyone she had come in contact with and it didn't match anyone. So where did it come from? She was a six year old child, not someone who could leave the home on her own.

You do realize that we are all covered in "unsourced" fibers and DNA right? JB was surrounded by people in the days preceding her death, both in and out of her own home. The joke in this scenario is that if Patsy was just a tad more diligent about bathing JonBenet, there might not have been so much of this stuff all over her daughter.

Many years ago I took a Criminal Justice course and the professor told us that he felt that in most criminal cases the cops knew who did it but were just unable to prove it. I have always felt this to be the case. I've believed that the cops "hinky meter" based on years of experience would lead them in the right direction.

In your class i would hope the following was also discussed, b/c its also a big part of any investigation:

1) Barring a confession in a criminal case, there is likely to be aspects and/or "evidence" that doesn't seem to "fit." Confessions usually take care of those sorts of inconsistencies, but most prosecutors don't enjoy such a luxury.

and

2)When looking at a case, and examining the evidence ALL things must be considered. LE DOES NOT discount a suspect's behaviors, nor do they ignore motive. of course physical evidence is important, but so are these other aspects of a case. For me, evidence of prior sexual contact is a mighty strong motive.

Evidence, statements, and behaviors are given weight, and depending on the circumstances, some things are given more weight than others, which brings us to the tDNA...

there are some highly informative threads on the forum about the DNA, and they outline clearly why some of us, including many in LE, don't give the tDNA the weight others feel it deserves. below is a video from an interview conducted by Greta Van Susterern, AFTER the "new" tDNA was retrieved

www.websleuths.com/forums/showthread.php?t=147105

and this, Dr. Krane was on Tricia's show last summer...lengthly, but again, highly informative.

Transcript of Dr. Dan Krane’s DNA info related to the JBR case: Tricia’s radio blogcast, Sunday, August 18, 2013
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/websleu...t-8-pm-eastern
(Special thanks to KoldKase for her help with the transcript.)

Dr Krane’s website:
http://www.bioforensics.com/

Dr Krane’s CV:
http://www.bioforensics.com/CV/KraneCV01-12.pdf

The following begins at 52:30 and extends to the end of the show segment with Dr. Krane

Cynic: I cannot let you go, Dr Krane, without your thoughts regarding the DNA evidence in the JonBenet case. I know that when we spoke, and when we emailed one another, you made some interesting comments that need to be said, so I’m going to give people a real quick lead-in and then let you take it away.
I don’t want to get into the minutia of the DNA case primarily because I don’t have the time, but I would like to focus on the DNA that’s been in the mainstream media for many years with respect to the JonBenet case.
One area in the crotch of JonBenet’s underpants that was tested revealed a profile that was ultimately uploaded to the FBI database, CODIS.

JonBenet was the major donor by virtue of contributing blood, and there was an unknown minor male profile from unknown cellular material.
That minor unknown male profile was a mixed profile with drop-out because only 10 out of 13 loci were found.
In 2008 the long johns which were worn over the underpants were sent to a private lab, Bode, as I’ve already touched on before, and they did razor scraping and so on, and it was publicly revealed that this testing resulted in DNA profiles which, while weaker than the CODIS profile, were considered to match.
So we know that these profiles were 9 loci or less.
There are, of course, a number of possible transfer mechanisms between two articles of clothing, one worn tightly over the other, you know, it could have been transfer based on that.
It could have been something that happened perhaps at the autopsy, perhaps proper safeguards weren’t in place.
Things were touched, even with gloves, it doesn’t matter, if you’re touching certain evidentiary items if you touch others without changing your gloves it’s possible that that could be a source of contamination.
Even the coroner or medical examiner, if handling instruments that weren’t properly cleaned, could have transferred from previous autopsies, and so on; there’s just a number of ways, as we’ve touched on throughout this broadcast in terms of transferring DNA evidence.
I would like to focus, however, on the fact that this was a mixed sample with drop-out-- and by drop-out I mean we don’t have information at all of the loci. For example, if I were to take a swab, a cheek swab, and send it to the lab I would have all thirteen of the CODIS loci light up and there would be a full profile.
These are partial profiles, also mixed; at least we know for a fact that the blood spot was mixed because it primarily had JonBenet’s blood.
You’ve made the statement, and it’s one that I’ve actually never heard before. You’ve told me that there is no generally accepted means of attaching a reliable statistical weight to a mixed DNA profile where allelic drop out may have occurred. You then went on to tell me that, essentially what this means is that, in your opinion, from the evidence that I sent you that this DNA evidence really could not be presented in court. Could you comment?
Dr Krane: I’m sad that you hadn’t heard that before because that means that we’re not doing a good enough job of getting the word out, and often a big part of my job when I get involved with a case is educating attorneys and educating juries about things like that: that at the present time there is no generally accepted means of attaching a statistical weight to a mixed DNA profile where drop-out may have occurred. In other words, we’re getting partial or incomplete information about one of the contributors.
Now, in an unmixed sample, we can deal with drop-out; but in a mixed sample, I don’t think we have the time for me to explain to you the underlying reasoning behind it, but it’s just not possible for us at the present time. It’s not for lack of trying.
At the Forensic Science Service (based in the UK), before it went out of business a few years ago, had invested millions of pounds into solving this problem. There are some people now starting to say that there might be some way to attach weight to those kinds of samples. But here’s what it all comes down to: there’s an abundance of case law within the United States that says that if you can’t attach a statistical weight to a DNA inclusion, saying that someone matches an evidence sample, if you can’t put a number on that--one in a million, one in a quintillion, something like that-- you can’t admit it as evidence. It is not something that can be presented to a jury because they simply won’t know what weight to give it if you can’t attach a reliable statistical weight. So, absent a statistical weight all that can really be said is, about a mixed sample where drop-out might have occurred, is that the test results are inconclusive. We simply are in no better position to say if an individual has contributed to a profile or not, relative to where we were before the test or after the test was performed.
So, the samples that you’re talking about here, the blood stain in the JonBenet Ramsey case from the crotch of the panties, I think at the end of the day that’s simply not something that could be presented to a jury.
Now it could be used to generate investigative leads, law enforcement could use Ouija boards to generate investigative leads if they like…
Tricia: Exactly, there you go.
Dr Krane: …but it’s not something that you could talk about in court.
Tricia: Exactly.
Cynic: Tricia, this is concerning Mary Lacy, our “friend,” so I would be remiss if I let Dan go without this real quick point.
We also spoke about this:
The District Attorney went from saying this in 2006: "The DNA could be an artifact. It isn’t necessarily the killer’s… “
To, in 2008, saying: “Unexplained DNA on the victim of a crime is powerful evidence.
The match of male DNA on two separate items of clothing worn by the victim at the time of the murder makes it clear to us that an unknown male handled these items. Despite substantial efforts over the years to identify the source of this DNA, there is no innocent explanation for its incriminating presence at three sites on these two different items of clothing that JonBenet was wearing at the time of her murder.”
When you and I talked I just asked you as a hypothetical, if a District Attorney is, for example, exonerating people that were suspects for many years based exclusively on the DNA that we’ve just discussed here, is that an overreach?
Dr Krane: Well, let me draw particular attention to the word, “exclusively”: right, if that is the sole basis for the decision, I think that conveys a lack of understanding of what’s involved with those particular types of DNA test results.
Tricia: Thank you, perfect, keep going – I just wanted to hear that. That’s exactly what we wanted to hear. Please continue and we’ll wrap it up.
Dr Krane: Well, I don’t know that there’s too much more to say. It’s an overreach in the sense that, again, we’re talking here about something that couldn’t be presented to a jury and it’s an overreach because it seems to be violating, or it has the potential to violate, that axiom that I began with: that the presence of a DNA profile doesn’t necessarily say anything about the time frame or the circumstances. We can’t say that it got there because it was deposited during the commission of a crime; we can’t say it got there because the laundry had been done in a way that got somebody else’s DNA there; or it could have come there through contamination after the evidence had been collected and handled in a lab. There’s so many different ways that the DNA could have gotten there that, that by itself, those partial profiles, that’s not something that we should be attaching that kind of weight to.


also, lastly. the following is inaccurate. you are attributing FWs actions to those of a cop.

Like the cop that looked in the wine cellar but just walked away because there wasn't a light switch and he couldn't see.
 
  • #423
I've c&p both parts of this convo so that it's all in context...

Quote:
Originally Posted by Venom
The ancillary hair was sourced to be from PR, an arm hair.
I don't put much stock in tabloid reports coming from anonymous sources...

Regardless, the "pubic hair" to which I'm referring, upon analysis, was found to belong to an unidentified, male, non-Ramsey.

Please provide a source. venom is correct. Kolar addresses this specifically.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Venom
I believe it was DeDee that already stated that up thread. As per the dna, wasn't it 5-6 sources found via the nail clippers


Yes. It was theorized that the clippers had been used at more than one autopsy, see Kolar, and Thomas. And even if this wasn't the case, the ME used the same clipper for all 10 fingers. Not proper protocol.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Venom
(that were contaminated by being used on others
Doubtful. (Have you read Kolar's book? He answers questions such as this.)

See above
Quote:
Originally Posted by Venom
so does that mean that we have 5-6 intruders?
No, but there was at least one, and only one, IMHO.

Huh?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Venom
Why do we not complain about how inept the ME must have been to have used those clippers on different people?
I've seen a lot of these unfounded complaints, and I wonder why so many posters don't dig a little deeper (research) before voicing complaints based in ignorance.

Research, yea...

Both Thomas and Kolar discuss the possibility of the clippers being used previously. And I know Thomas specifically discusses how he used the same clippers on all 10 fingers, rather than one set of clippers for each finger.
When Meyer clipped the nails of each finger, no blood or tissue was found that would indicate a struggle. He used the same clippers for all the fingers, although doing so created an issue of cross-contamination. For optimal DNA purposes, separate and sterile clippers should have been used for each finger. Furthermore, we later learned that the coronor's office sometimes used the same clippers on different autopsy subjects.
(Thomas pg. 45-46)
 
  • #424
BBM

This is a valid point if the only fibers that were found on the body were from the home. But the key is when there are fibers that don't match the people in the home on the body.

That's KEY right there. Jonbenet had long hair. Hugging her would easily transfer fibers from the family members into her hair. If that hair was then pulled into the garotte it would make sense. We know this is what happened.
Absence of other fibers and DNA would definitely be a smoking gun to me. It would seem impossible that the level of violence perpetuated against Jonbenet, especially the garotte, would not "pick up" fibers off the person doing it to her.

So if they examined Jonbenet and she was free from any foreign fibers or DNA, I'd be right in the corner of the RDI.

However there were foreign fibers and DNA on the body. So how do you all explain that? Where did it come from? Not only did they test the Ramsesys, they tested the Whites, the neighbors, the children, other friends, the Santa, etc etc. They tested everyone she had come in contact with and it didn't match anyone. So where did it come from? She was a six year old child, not someone who could leave the home on her own.


I'm open to suggestions and evidence and explanations. But when I ask I get comments that are about Patsy's pageant history from 20 years ago and "talk of the town" type answers.


Many years ago I took a Criminal Justice course and the professor told us that he felt that in most criminal cases the cops knew who did it but were just unable to prove it. I have always felt this to be the case. I've believed that the cops "hinky meter" based on years of experience would lead them in the right direction.

However in this case there's just too many screw ups. Like the cop that looked in the wine cellar but just walked away because there wasn't a light switch and he couldn't see. Really? That's how you search the premisis?


But again, how do you explain foreign fibers and DNA that couldn't be sourced to anyone in Jonbenet's family or friends or neighbors etc being found on the body.

How do you just dismiss that as "irrelevant?"

snip

We do not know that the red fibers that came to be in the knot at the child's neck arrived there by being hugged earlier.

It would seem impossible that the level of violence perpetuated against Jonbenet, especially the garotte, would not "pick up" fibers off the person doing it to her.

It did pick up fibers from the person doing it to her. The fibers belong to her mother.

However there were foreign fibers and DNA on the body.

There was no foreign DNA found on the body of JonBenét.

The unsourced fibers are blue and brown. The blue fibers may have come from the wipe down cloth as opined by the ME. The tape also had pink and lavender cotton fibers. LE asked PR if she owned a pair of gardening gloves for that reason. LE also had information that the tape likely had direct contact with the red Essentials sweater, as bettybaby has already shown in the above posts.

I'm open to suggestions and evidence and explanations. But when I ask I get comments that are about Patsy's pageant history from 20 years ago and "talk of the town" type answers.

Patsy's pageant history is relevant because she made it relevant when she entered her young daughter into pageants wearing red lipstick and show girl costumes. Patsy showed her young daughter how to walk in a sexy manner that was not taught to her by her instructor.

"I hated to see her played up as some sort of little beauty queen. I guess it was something she liked to do," recalled former High Peaks Principal Barbara Chomko. The images sparked criticism that parents were forcing little girls to act out grownup dreams - and shut down the Colorado pageant circuit within a year, [pagaent organizer] VonDuyke said.

http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/news/sweet-memories-live-hearts-article-1.629307#ixzz31AcEWA9v

Oh, and one more thing,

BBM- Seriously, we cannot say that is how those fibers got there. :maddening: That's a far stretch to say we know that happened.

Were ALL the people who were at the White's party tested against those fibers? All the R's would have been in contact with all those guests. Maybe that's how they got there. Because you know fiber transfer is so easy to happen.

Your response:
The fact that you are asking this question means you don't know.

Try not to posit theories about things you don't know. That's how gossip get's started.

Why the hypocrisy?

Jonbenet had long hair. Hugging her would easily transfer fibers from the family members into her hair. If that hair was then pulled into the garotte it would make sense. We know this is what happened.


No. We do not. That is how gossip gets started and rumors begin taking root.
 
  • #425
BBM



We do not know that the red fibers that came to be in the knot at the child's neck arrived there by being hugged earlier.



It did pick up fibers from the person doing it to her. The fibers belong to her mother.



There was no foreign DNA found on the body of JonBenét.

The unsourced fibers are blue and brown. The blue fibers may have come from the wipe down cloth as opined by the ME. The tape also had pink and lavender cotton fibers. LE asked PR if she owned a pair of gardening gloves for that reason. LE also had information that the tape likely had direct contact with the red Essentials sweater, as bettybaby has already shown in the above posts.



Patsy's pageant history is relevant because she made it relevant when she entered her young daughter into pageants wearing red lipstick and show girl costumes. Patsy showed her young daughter how to walk in a sexy manner that was not taught to her by her instructor.



Oh, and one more thing,



Your response:


Why the hypocrisy?




No. We do not. That is how gossip gets started and rumors begin taking root.

DeDee,
After all the analysis done by the BPD, none of the locations, if any, where other family dna samples were discovered on JonBenet's person or clothing has ever been made public.

Only the mixed touch dna sample which has no evidentiary value, a point completely lost on other protagonists, just as they have no explanation for the lack of any other fibers or dna samples deposited by the Foriegn Faction, not simply on JonBenet, but other locations, as they went about their murderous business that fatefule night!

.
 
  • #426
I've c&p both parts of this convo so that it's all in context...



Please provide a source. venom is correct. Kolar addresses this specifically.



Yes. It was theorized that the clippers had been used at more than one autopsy, see Kolar, and Thomas. And even if this wasn't the case, the ME used the same clipper for all 10 fingers. Not proper protocol.


See above


Huh?


Research, yea...

Both Thomas and Kolar discuss the possibility of the clippers being used previously. And I know Thomas specifically discusses how he used the same clippers on all 10 fingers, rather than one set of clippers for each finger.

(Thomas pg. 45-46)

Just because Kolar or Thomas say something does not make it fact. It just makes it opinion in print. Their thoughts. Their agenda.

It does not make it fact or true.
 
  • #427
The fibers weren't sourced to the Ramseys, nor to their residence, SOOO...Can't say for sure....& gloves, a stun gun, rope, etc.The "if qualifier" pertains only to the evidentiary DNA collected in 1997, from JonBenét's panties, right hand fingernail clippings, and left hand fingernail clippings. The forensic DNA profiles submitted to CODIS (via the FBI) in 2003, from a second bloodstain in JonBenét's panties, and in 2008, from both sides of her long johns, is exculpatory to the Ramseys. According to Joe Barnhill, the Stantons, Scott Gibbons? No, not quite...
There were no fibers, sourced to the Ramseys, obtained from the knot(s), the cord, the garrote, etc.

Let's not forget the two shoe prints and the male, pubic/ancillary hair that remain unsourced.

There was no pubic hair, male or female. The hair in question was a hair that was sourced to the g=forearm of Patsy Ramsey.
Fibers from Patsy's sweater were found on the tape, in the paint tote and in the knot of the cord. JR's fibers were found inside her panties. These are FACTS.
 
  • #428
0200
3 MR. LEVIN: I think that is
4 probably fair. Based on the state of the
5 art scientific testing, we believe the fibers
6 from her jacket were found in the paint
7 tray, were found tied into the ligature found
8 on JonBenet's neck
, were found on the blanket
9 that she is wrapped in, were found on the
10 duct tape that is found on the mouth, and
11 the question is, can she explain to us how
12 those fibers appeared in those places that
13 are associated with her daughter's death.
14 And I understand you are not going to answer
15 those.


The male hair on the blanket prob got there innocently when the blanket was placed on the floor in the moldy windowless room.

What was the trace evidence removed from her left hand? The beaver fur? JP stated Patsy had beaver boots that Judith liked because they were great looking.

Maybe the child reached out to her mom in her hour of great need and caught a piece of beaver fur in her grasp. I also want to know what fibers were under her gold ring.



''With a great joy I recognized what it was I had left behind me, my body lying strangled on the floor.''
~ Muriel Sparks; Shuffling the Cards

Once again- there was NO male hair found on the white blanket. There was a hair, misreported as a pubic hair, that was tested and found to have come from the forearm of Patsy Ramsey.
 
  • #429
Just because Kolar or Thomas the Rs say something does not make it fact. It just makes it opinion in print. Their thoughts. Their agenda.

It does not make it fact or true.

Got it.
 
  • #430
Just because Kolar or Thomas say something does not make it fact. It just makes it opinion in print. Their thoughts. Their agenda.

It does not make it fact or true.

So basically, you're taking the word of murder suspects over the word of professional detectives? The fact that they felt strongly enough about the case to write a book speaks loudly to me. Their opinions weren't built out of thin air. If you've read the books you'd understand how they came to that conclusion, just like I understand how you came to the conclusion that tdna means it was an intruder. The Ramsey's have been caught in multiple lies and have played the blame game from day one.
 
  • #431
The thing is, how would you even know what fibers are "foreign"? It's not like DNA. Large amounts of fibers from a single source that came from nothing in the house would indicate something foreign, but I'm sure there are tons of fibers all over the house, from all the outfits everyone has worn, their furniture, bags, whatever. Fibers have a lot more sources than DNA does, and items could have been thrown out or otherwise been untraceable. You wouldn't know whether a random shirt fiber came from a stranger or not unless it was an incredibly rare type or there was so much of at the crime scene that it was clearly recently deposited and you were able to search the house for a match.
 
  • #432
So basically, you're taking the word of murder suspects over the word of professional detectives? The fact that they felt strongly enough about the case to write a book speaks loudly to me. Their opinions weren't built out of thin air. If you've read the books you'd understand how they came to that conclusion, just like I understand how you came to the conclusion that tdna means it was an intruder. The Ramsey's have been caught in multiple lies and have played the blame game from day one.

They are suspects. They were cleared by DNA. No one is an active suspect in this case.

All writing a book says is that you think you have something to say. It does not mean it is right or that it is accurate.
 
  • #433
BECAUSE there is too much that points to normal transference. THe fibers are on her coat and left by her in the paint stuff. The killer picks up and uses the paint brush to wrap around the rope to kill JBR and the fibers then transfer to the rope.. And onto JBR.

It is not hard to figure it out. The fibers belong to Patsy. They are in her house. There is nothing that points it to murder.

Not that simple, Scarlett. She never wore those clothes in the basement, and she hadn't painted in a while.

No, the most direct scenario is that those fibers came into contact with PR's clothing as the crime occurred. It's not a difficult concept if you think about it.
 
  • #434
Not that simple, Scarlett. She never wore those clothes in the basement, and she hadn't painted in a while.

No, the most direct scenario is that those fibers came into contact with PR's clothing as the crime occurred. It's not a difficult concept if you think about it.

It does not matter if she wore those clothes in the basement. All she had to do was to put that on and then take it off and the fibers would be on her clothing and then had she gone down and just walked in that area, the fibers transfer to where she goes and what she touches.

It does not matter if she painted in awhile. The fibers would not just disappear. They would still be there.

It isn't that difficult a concept at all.
 
  • #435
Another question I've never gotten an answer to is why the Ramseys would go to so much trouble to stage the scene as if an intruder did it and then fail to simply OPEN A DOOR in the back to show a point of exit. Push a window open, even if they didn't make it look like a break in. They repeatedly said they didn't see anything out of place with regard to entry.

You would think the most basic staging effort would include showing how the intruder escaped or got into the house. Even as simple as "my god I forgot to lock the back door last night..." would make sense.

Why stage all this and then leave that out? I don't think I've ever heard of a staged crime scene that DIDN'T include a staged entry.

Actually, there is an answer to that, possibly more than one. For their story to have legs, it had to look like nothing was out of place before "finding" the note. This is either due to wanting the "killer" to appear to be a criminal supergenius out of Batman's rogue's gallery, or to appear to be someone within the family circle, such as LHP.
 
  • #436
Actually, there is an answer to that, possibly more than one. For their story to have legs, it had to look like nothing was out of place before "finding" the note. This is either due to wanting the "killer" to appear to be a criminal supergenius out of Batman's rogue's gallery, or to appear to be someone within the family circle, such as LHP.

That is not an answer. That is an opinion.
 
  • #437
All the tommylaw blog stuff, means nothing to me either. Blogs are just opinion and they are often not measured in unbiased reporting.

The man himself SHOULD mean something to you, Scarlett. He knows firsthand just what kind of people the Rs chose to surround themselves with, and the dirty tactics they're willing to use. I'd got into more detail, but that would take some time.
 
  • #438
:floorlaugh:

How is that an insult, what about Patsy's pageant history is more relevant than EVIDENCE?

Speaking purely for myself, it's PART of the evidence, Chewy.
 
  • #439
Im implying that the fibers don't matter. They belong to Patsy. She lived in the home. IT is just that simple Fiber transfer between members and surfaces is common.

Her fibers being anywhere have no place in the case. I just have not seen any other documentation of these so called fibers. Just in the depo and they did not want to supply the evidence to the defense to be examined.

Just to correct you on that last one, Scarlett: Lin Wood was NOT the Ramseys' defense. That was Haddon & Co. He was in no position to demand anything.
 
  • #440
It does not matter if she wore those clothes in the basement.

Somehow, I didn't think it would. :banghead::banghead::banghead:

All she had to do was to put that on and then take it off and the fibers would be on her clothing and then had she gone down and just walked in that area, the fibers transfer to where she goes and what she touches.

Then why didn't she SAY that? Ugh.
 

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