1.) I understand what you're saying, but I do not buy that her fibers magically clung to the intruders supposed gloves and then managed to transfer to all of the places they were found. It's a difference of opinion, and I'm not playing the "what if" scenario's.
2.) Agreed, but what I find odd is that she wore the same clothes as the night before. After getting ready with her make up and hair she chose to put on the same exact dirty outfit as the night before? She was a pageant girl. That doesn't add up for me.
3.) Yes there has been innocent explanations for the unsourced DNA. I don't find it reliable evidence, but again this is a difference of opinions.
4.) I know what totality means, that would be why I used it and how I have come to my own conclusion.
5.) Potential suspect, or innocent transfer. That's disputable and it's NOT a set in stone piece of evidence. You can't say the fibers were transferred innocently, but not the DNA. That's hypocritical. Why wasn't PR's DNA found on her longjohns considering she claimed to have dressed her?
6.) IMO, the fact that not even Team Ramsey could exclude PR as the author is a red flag. I believe she wrote it. Why would an intruder who was prepared enough to leave NO fingerprints use paper and pen from the Ramsey household and then put them back neatly?
7.) Weird, because before Christmas, during the month of December, PR had a receipt to the hardware store for an item costing $1.99 which happened to be the exact price of duct tape. Hmm. I wonder if that's why team Ramsey wanted credit card purchases. "During the search of the residence, the detectives found pictures hanging on the walls with black duct tape used in the framing on the back. This tape appeared to be identical to the duct tape found in the wine cellar. Both the tape found in the wine cellar and the tape on the back of the pictures were sent to the FBI for analysis which concluded that the two samples were consistent in manufacturer, but from a different production time." Another strange coincidence considering PR told Haney she never bought duct tape and only the "clear kind" because she thought it was too sticky.
8.) There's quite a bit of things missing from the home. Pam made off with boxes and boxes of their belongings. Remember that?
9.) Well, you just said totality is "all of it." but you left off quite a bit of important information.
-Linda's interview, "I think she had multiple personalities. She'd be in a good mood and then she'd be cranky. She got into arguments with JonBenet about wearing a dress or about a friend coming over. I had never seen Patsy so upset...I don't believe Patsy meant to kill her. I truly believe it was an accident that just continued," said Hoffmann-Pugh, who worked in the Ramsey house until three days before the slaying on Dec. 26, 1996, and testified before the grand jury in January 1999." Considering she worked for the R's and saw them on a day-to-day basis I would consider her interview important. She wasn't a friend. She wasn't anyone of a higher status, so she saw the real Ramsey's IMO.
-PR's palm prints were found on the wine cellar door
-Mismatching stories and lies told by the parents from day 1
-The placement of the RN is important as well. How would an intruder know which stairwell she would descend from? She claimed to have stepped over the step with the note on it and then turn around and read it. Detectives tried this and couldn't without falling because it was so steep. Again, it doesn't add up.
-The FBi said the "disposal of the body had the classic elements of a staged crime."
-The multiple RN mistakes and slip ups. For a example, the author first wrote "The two gentlemen watching over your daughter do particularly like you" and then carrot-ed not into the sentence. Why would an intruder make this mistake as well as the others?
-What would the intruders motivation be? It obviously wasn't money considering he or she never made a move to contact the parents and left the body in the home. I don't believe it was sexual, but I could be wrong. If it was, it still wouldn't explain the RN. If it was the parents I believe it was a coverup.
As I've said before, the intruder theory leaves me with more questions than answers.
Youve said too much here for me to comment on without going on forever, and I already have a bad enough problem saying anything in twenty words or less. So, Im just going to address a cpl of your points:
Yes, I left out a lot of information but thats because I was only addressing your claim regarding the totality of the evidence pointing towards the Ramseys. This claim is false, as I have shown; some of the evidence points towards the Ramseys and some of it points away from the Ramseys.
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Theres no magic involved in the transfer of fibers. Transfer comes from contact. Ramsey fibers found on Ramsey items in the Ramsey house this is to be expected.
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Whatever you may think of Mrs Ramsey, getting up in the morning and putting on the clothes you wore the night before is not an unusual act.
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So far none of the innocent explanations for the dna has proven to be true despite great effort and expense. Although, I would agree that if Kolars description of the dna is correct, than there is likely an innocent explanation for SOME of the dna.
But, we dont have those explanations yet, and until we do the dna specifically, the CODIS sample and matching tDNA samples do, in fact, indeed, beyond all reasonable doubt represent a person who must be identified and investigated. Perhaps an investigation would excuse that person from suspicion. If that happened, then we could say that the dna has an innocent explanation, but that hasnt happened yet.
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No one knows why an intruder would have done the things that were down. We dont know why because we dont know who. You tell me who and Ill tell you why, at least Id be able to make an educated guess. Here are a few reasons the killer could have had for leaving both a ransom note and a body in the house:
1. a kidnapper could have intended on murdering and hiding his victim in the house right from the get-go, possibly believing that the Ramseys would not call the police and that he could collect his money before they discovered the body (why would they look for it?). Murdering and hiding the body in the house relieves him of the risk of having to handle, transport, hide and return/dispose of his victim and reduces the risk of forensic evidence accruing.
2. a molester who happened to kill (as opposed to a killer who happened to molest) could have created the note as a means of hiding from himself and/or others his perverse desires and true motivation. Wiping, redressing, covering body and elements of a kidnapping (cord, tape, note) all could have been done as a means to misdirect. <quote> We know that offenders are more reluctant to admit sexual motives than other types of motives (e.g., profit, revenge, anger, power). Some offenders may not even realize their true motivation. An offender may eventually request a ridiculously small ransom for a child he had abducted to molest in an apparent attempt to convince others, but primarily himself, that he is not a sex offender <unquote>
http://tinyurl.com/dxqnv
3. a killer wishing to direct suspicion towards the occupants of the house (thus, away from himself); see my Theory if Intent
4. a killer wishing to create an enduring mystery; see my Theory if Intent
5. a killer hoping to create for the parents a sense of false hope mingled with hours of angst and pain reaching its peak when the body is discovered
All of the above are also reasons the killer could have had for taking his victim to the basement. To those we add,
1) because he had nowhere else to take her
2) because he had no means of transporting her
3) because it fulfilled a fantasy, a desire
4) because, once decided to commit the crime in the house, the basement presented the least chance of being caught.
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AK