If it was an ACTUAL intruder, I don't think the bedwetting would have been an issue. See, there were TWO separate types of crimes staged that do not usually occur together in reality. ONE, a kidnapping for ransom (as opposed to a parental kidnapping to interfere with custody of the child) in this case, the child is removed from the home immediatly, especially with the sleeping family at home. It is well-planned enough NOT to have to write a ransom note with paper and pen that needed to be searched for in the home, and a get-away car or other method of leaving quickly with the child is readily available, including fast and easy point of exit from the home.
TWO, the murder/sexual assault of a child. When kids are sexually assaulted like this, they are rarely left alive, especially when they are old enough to tell who did it. When pedophiles kidnap, it is for the purpose of sex and possibly murder, never for ransom. They dispose of the child when finished with them. Ransom needs a live child for exchange.
This may explain the anterior staining and the non-matching blood stains?
I don't think so. They'd have had to put both items back on her the wrong way. The blood stains were not on the long johns anyway, only on the panties, and because there was no VISIBLE blood on the pubic area, that's why it was described as non-matching. This told the coroner that she had been wiped down.
Why both, it is the anterior staining that appears anomolous, Coroner Meyer outlined the issue with her blood-stained underwear?
Lets start at the beginning. If JonBenet had been killed because she had wet the bed her killer would have removed any urine-soaked clothing, otherwise why bother with a wine-cellar staging, also the bedtime wetting would have emptied her bladder, making a further release improbable?
So if her urine-stained longjohns are the result of a postmortem release then she must have been wearing them when she was killed?
If she was wearing them when killed and if her killer noticed they were wet, then it was not considered important?
So either she was wearing the longjohns prior to her death, or they were placed upon her in the interval between say the head blow and the final asphyxiation?
It seems likely that the size-12's were placed upon JonBenet in this same period of time?
What Coroner Meyer suggests is that JonBenet was wiped down,
after being redressed in the size-12's because of the non-matching blood stains, again this tells you that the urine-staining was ignored?
So have we established that there was a postmortem urine-release, postmortem blood-release, and a postmortem wipe down?
Also that her killer noted the postmortem-release then decided to wipe her down, possibly replacing her longjohns on back to front?
So a possible sequence of events is:
1. JonBenet is sexually assaulted.
2. JonBenet is manually asphyxiated.
3. JonBenet is mistakenly assumed to be dead.
4. JonBenet is cleaned up and redressed in the white gap top, size-12's and the longjohns.
5. JonBenet is discovered to be alive, so a head blow is delivered using the flashlight.
6. Upon moving her it is found she has had a postmortem release, so she is wiped down.
7. Wine-cellar staging is enacted including the wrist restraints, mouth tape, and garrote.
Considering event 5. at this point some might suggest this was when a
staged sexual assault was inflicted revealing JonBenet to be alive, if so why bother wiping her down?
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