With all due respect, this makes no sense to me. Frame him how? By sending threatenting messages to his family, killing his family when he is out of the house and then leaving a message something to the effect of "I told you this would happen" on the wall of his home after the murders? If that's all there was here, I might agree with your point of view. But, what we have are several things that Chris himself did that caused Chris to look like the guilty party. In fact, pretty much everything Chris has done - having an affair, putting the house and cars in his name recently, apparently having a loud argument at @ 3:00 a.m. when he was admittedly still home on the morning of the murders, lawyering up mere hours after the murders, compelling LE to seek a Court order for fingerprintsrather than campijng on their doorstep and voluntarily giving whatever they wanted, not notifying his wife's family about his wife and sons' demise for two whole days, then acting strange with them about allowing them to say goodbye at the funeral - all of THAT is what makes me feel he is guilty. So how did the real killer force Chris to do all that? Because forcing him to act like he's guilty as hell is the only way a framing scenario makes sense here. IMO.