thank you
at the time i wrote that, i was considering the possibility that all the discussion of the broken window was a big red herring, because there wasn't a proper accounting of whether all doors were locked at 7 AM. therefore, i thought, an intruder might well have walked in one of the doors. but it's my understanding now that JR told the police at 7 AM that all the doors were locked. IMO that's almost as good as the police personally checking all of them, because, guilty or innocent, i see no reason for him to lie about that -- if anything, his incentive might be to falsely claim they were unlocked. and, guilty or innocent, i would think he would diligently check them all.
Good thinking re the window intruder theory. It
is a red herring, and not even because of a possible unlocked door, but just on its face. The evidence doesn't support it.
There are conflicting stories about the butler's pantry door. In one version, one of JR's friends told arriving police at 6:00 AM that the door was ajar. In another version, the door had been left open by a crime scene tech. In yet a third version, JR and one of the officers checked all the downstairs doors together and all were locked, as John (and later, Patsy) said. Both Schiller and Steve Thomas say an officer checked all the doors from the outside; all were secure. Multiple sources say that Officer French checked all the doors from the inside and found them all locked. But, a couple of police officers told Newsweek they had found one door unlocked. So - ? I think all the doors were locked. That's the consensus; and, otherwise, any unlocked one would have been a main focus of the investigation. Plus, Officer French’s statement deserves particular weight IMO because he was first on scene and immediately searched the house for any point where a kidnapper could have exited.
one area where i'm a little hazy is why other windows aren't talked about much as a possible entry point. did JR also report them all locked? did the police check them all later in the day? if either or both is true, that would mostly satisfy me. no reason for the ramseys, guilty or innocent, to go around locking windows after the police were there. and you can't lock a window from the outside, so that rules out any locked window as the exit point.
Exactly. Officer French checked the windows, too, and found all of them locked except for two small ones in the basement left open for Christmas lights cables to pass through. Neither window was large enough to be a point of entry. Patsy, I don't know but, IIRC, John told police all the windows were locked. One other location had to be checked, JBR's balcony. However, the frost on it was pristine, and her balcony door was locked.
i suppose that would still leave the narrow possibility of an intruder 1) entering through an unlocked window, 2) locking that window behind himself, and later 3) leaving through a self-locking door. ... but that's getting contrived. (on top of the usual problems with IDI theories -- no tracks in the snow, killer spent a loooong time in that house, visited all four floors, nicely put away the pen and paper, etc.)
I agree; IDI is problematic in many ways. There is one other possibility for it, though. What if an intruder had a key? The Ramseys had given keys to family, to housekeepers, and to various workmen. Don Paugh, Linda Hoffman-Pugh, and Mervin Pugh were cleared (though doubts persist among case followers). Other people with keys were interviewed and cleared, but I don't recall whether all were interviewed. And, of course, a key could have been copied or stolen.