Lacy Wood said:
Your post above comments on your earlier post (10:07 AM, same thread), in which you state at length that you are "busting the myth" that the Ramsey's 4 month delay in interviews affected the evidence in the case. But as VOR pointed out in a response, the answers given by PR regarding touching or moving the ransom note seemed to change to fit the evidentiary implications of the questions asked her in the cited exchange during the dealyed interview. The quote above is your response.
I'd like to ask how you can at the same time claim it's a myth that delays affected the investigation and then explain away criticial "memory lapses" as "I seriously anyone in the same situation would (remember) either." Personally, I seriously doubt anyone would forget how he/she learned a daughter was kidnapped even years later. The issue here though, is that without the 4 month delay, no impartial person could seriously accept the "lapse". The total numbers of questions answered in the interview is hardly relevant if critical or significant questions are evaded. The fact that no family prints were on the note has suggested to some that they didn't pick up or read the note beause they already knew what was in it! This is no minor matter, since the mom's prints reportedly being on the notepad the pages were torn from is part of the "adverse" evidence. Staightforward answers to police in the days after the event would have been very useful either for or against the family. *IF* the family was involved, the delayed interviews are probably what saved them from early contradictions that could have exposed it, and that's not a myth.
I believe I responded to Voice of Reason's comment by citing Patsy Ramsey's use of the words, 'may have' in her original answer. In the subsequent answer, she again uses the words, 'may have.' This is not an alteration or change in her response.
The myth has been disproven by the number of responses which were responded to with "I don't remember," "I don't know" by looking at the individual responses and noting how the majority of those responses are then expanded upon.
You say you seriously doubt anyone would forget how he/she learned a daughter had been kidnapped even years later. Neither of the Ramseys 'forgot' how they learned of JonBenet's disappearance. What was lost were minute details of their own movements after the discovery of the note. Even without the lapse of time or stress, a person's memory is not infallible. Had they answered questions five minutes after the discovery, they still would have had memory lapses because humans are not computers with photographic recall.
For example, do you remember which leg you wash first when you bathe/shower or which foot you step into the tub/shower with first? Does it matter in the broad scheme of your daily life?
I understand why Steve Thomas proposed these questions. What is apparent is they had no bearing on finding the killer of JonBenet unless Thomas believed that killer was Patsy Ramsey.
Porous items such as paper absorb body oils and perspiration and if a person is perspiring or has not washed their hands in some time, such items should be a perfect medium for fingerprint impressions. However, Patsy had just applied her make-up, after which presumably she washed her hands. She also fussed with the red jumpsuit in the laundry area. Fabric absorbs body oils and perspiration also, leaving behind dry skin which would not have been a suitable transfer medium to paper. Thus, no fingerprints even if Patsy Ramsey did pick up the paper.
The same applies to John Ramsey since he had just stepped out of the shower when Patsy screamed his name.
The total number of questions in the interview is relevant in that it is frequently stated the Ramseys failed to answer the majority of the questions with anything other than "I don't know,' "I can't remember."
Patsy Ramsey's fingerprints found on the note pad have no relation to the lack of Patsy Ramsey's fingerprints on the note left at the house since it is logical she would have used the notepad during the course of any given day at times when she had not just completed washing her hands. The thrust of the interview questions in regard to prints or lack thereof was for no purpose other than to entrap Patsy Ramsey into confessing she had written the note based on the belief she or John Ramsey were the perpetrators of JonBenet's murder. None of the answers given by the Ramseys were evasive, in my opinion. Other opinions differ.
Given that both parents gave statements to the responding officer(s) and to Linda Arndt, their answers could have been verified by checking against those officer's reports. Unfortunately, many of those reports were later altered and some were at odds against what the Ramseys reportedly say they told those officers.
Rainsong