Anti-K
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Even though we know some crime scene photos do not purely portray how the items in the photos were originally found, the Barbie nightgown looks pretty out in the open to me. Besides, what about the blood on the nightgown? Certainly the nightgown was close and in sight while the sexual assault/something involving JBR's blood was occurring otherwise the blood wouldn't have made it's way towards the Barbie nightgown. According to PR, JBR didn't normally get nosebleeds, so the blood most likely had to do with the crime, right? As for the white blanket, I know some IDIs don't take what Linda Hoffmann-Pugh had to say as serious evidence (I don't understand why), but here:
From: Perfect Murder, Perfect Town: The Uncensored Story of the JonBenet Murder and the Grand Jury's Search for the Final Truth
by Lawrence Schiller:
"They also showed [LHP] a picture of JonBenet's white thermal blanket which had many urine and brown-colored stains on it. Some of them looked like dried blood. Then they showed her a picture of JonBenet's bed, which looked strange to her. Looking at the comforter, you couldn't tell that the blanket beneath it had been pulled off. The bed looked barely disturbed. Hoffmann-Pugh knew that to pull the blanket off, you had to first remove the comforter, otherwise it would get messed up. But in the photo, it was neat. Maybe the white blanket hadn't been on the bed at all. She told the police that the blanket might have been in the washer-dryer outside JonBenet's room. Then they showed her a photograph of the dryer, with the door open. Inside, she saw JonBenet's pink-and-white-checkered sheets, which she had put on the bed two days before the murder. But on JonBenet's bed in another photo were the Beauty and the Beast sheets.
"The logical explanation, Hoffmann-Pugh said, was that JonBenet had wet the bed on either Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday night. The clean sheets had probably been put on the bed and the wet sheets, blanket, and maybe even the Barbie nightgown were put in the wash and dried. The Ramseys didn't even have a clothes hamper, she said. When they took off their dirty clothes, they would just leave them lying around. The only things that went directly into the washer were JonBenet's urine-soaked sheets and blanket, so that they wouldn't smell. Only someone who knew which washer and dryer the Ramseys used for JonBenet's sheets and blanket would know where to find the blanket if it wasn't on the bed. Just as important, the washer-dryer outside JonBenet's room was built into a cabinet. Hoffmann-Pugh speculated that whoever killed JonBenet knew where the blanket was that night and probably took it out of the dryer."
I have no idea as to whether the blood on the night gown was fresh. It certainly could have been fresh, but I don’t know that it was. I don’t know if it wasn’t.
None of this matters to the point which was that the killer may not have been aware of the nightgown. By this, I mean that it ended up in the basement (if it wasn’t already there) by accident, without intent; static cling or simply caught up with the blanket or victim.
Maybe he did know about it, and maybe he even brought it to the basement on purpose. However, I see no reason why we should believe this to be true.
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Maybe someone else remembers this better than me (or, maybe my memory is wrong), but I think that at some point LHP was shown photographs wherein items had been rearranged. Anyway...
I don’t see anything being said by LHP about a “warm blanket fresh out of the dryer.” But, thank you for the quotes.
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AK