trixie said:How do you know the wooden shards had been whittled off the end of the stick? Is it just your guess?
Not enough time to make a garrote, but time to write a 3 page ransom note, clean her up, whittle off the end of the handle, and change her clothes?BlueCrab said:trixie,
Yes, it's a guess. I feel that way because the tip of the stick is missing, so it must have looked like something or contained something the perp didn't want known, so he destroyed it. I also believe the EA device was made at least one day prior to the killing; there wasn't enough time to construct such an elaborate device the night of the crime.
The most obvious thing the perp probably didn't want known would be the sexual aspects of the crime. He cleaned up Jon Benet and changed her underwear, made the killing look like the work of a foreign terrorist, and wrote a three-page ransom note to make it appear to be a kidnapping gone wrong, thus pointing away from Ramsey family members and the sexual aspects of the murder.
So yes, IMO the wooden shards were probably from the tip of the stick that was tied to the ligature.
BlueCrab
Linda7NJ said:Not enough time to make a garrote, but time to write a 3 page ransom note, clean her up, whittle off the end of the handle, and change her clothes?
How do you account for JonBenet's hair being entangled in it? How about the way it was loosely tied to her wrist?
But there was no evidence on her wrists that it had ever tightened. I think there would have been had she been suspended or even tight for any length of time. I do think she was alive when the stick was quickly tied to the rope while JonBenet was unconscious. I think the murderer needed the extra leverage to strangle her until she died. I think the wrist could have been staging like the duct tape.BlueCrab said:Linda7NJ,
You got me in regard to the hair entangled in the knot on the stick. I just studied the crime scene photo of the knot again and you're right. JonBenet's hair is definitely imbedded in the knot.
I retract my statement about the ligature being constructed ahead of time. The knot on the stick had to have been made in place on JonBenet -- but why? Since she was probably already dead by that time, what use would the stick have? The stick appears to have been staging.
The wrist ligature is easier to explain. Ligatures are like slip knots. If JonBenet's body weight was pulling on the ligature it would have made the ligature tight. When the body weight was removed from the ligature it automatically loosened the ligature. John said the wrist ligature was tight and hard to remove -- which meant that JonBenet's body weight was likely keeping the ligature tight. It suggests JonBenet was strung up somehow and John cut her down.
Once the pressure from the wrist ligature was removed, the ligature loosened and fell off one wrist and almost fell off the other wrist. (The wrists had been bound together with one ligature.)
BlueCrab
BlueCrab said:Linda7NJ,
You got me in regard to the hair entangled in the knot on the stick. I just studied the crime scene photo of the knot again and you're right. JonBenet's hair is definitely imbedded in the knot.
BlueCrab
Linda7NJ said:But there was no evidence on her wrists that it had ever tightened. I think there would have been had she been suspended or even tight for any length of time. I do think she was alive when the stick was quickly tied to the rope while JonBenet was unconscious. I think the murderer needed the extra leverage to strangle her until she died. I think the wrist could have been staging like the duct tape.
I once did a lot of research on strangulation, it takes much longer and is far more difficult than most imagine. Remember Dennis Raders comments on the subject?
Exactly!BlueCrab said:Linda7NJ,
But the victim was a little 45-pound girl. A man wouldn't have needed additional leverage to strangle her. The average man could have wrung her neck like a chicken, using just his bare hands. Only an older adult with greatly diminished hand strength or another child would have needed the extra leverage. Hmmm.
BlueCrab
Which is exactly why I think it was staged: to make it look like a bizarre sex crime.BlueCrab said:Linda7NJ,
But the victim was a little 45-pound girl. A man wouldn't have needed additional leverage to strangle her. The average man could have wrung her neck like a chicken, using just his bare hands. Only an older adult with greatly diminished hand strength or another child would have needed the extra leverage. Hmmm.
BlueCrab
I don't think that part was staged as she was alive when she was strangledrashomon said:Which is exactly why I think it was staged: to make it look like a bizarre sex crime.
Linda7NJ said:I don't think that part was staged as she was alive when she was strangled
BlueCrab said:I retract my statement about the ligature being constructed ahead of time. The knot on the stick had to have been made in place on JonBenet -- but why? Since she was probably already dead by that time, what use would the stick have? The stick appears to have been staging.
But suppose she was in a coma from the blow struck to her head, and the person who delivered the blow realized that he had injured her so heavily that she was probably going to die, or stay at least permanently brain-damaged from the injury.Linda7NJ said:I don't think that part was staged as she was alive when she was strangled
UKGuy said:Jayelles,
This is curious, since you would expect a wealthy family to suit and boot Burke for a public funeral at which they knew the media may be present. Particularly if they went to great lengths to appear well dressed.
Are you suggesting this is indirect evidence that Patsy habitually negelected Burke.
As a counterpoint, if Burke had been involved in the death of JonBenet, then you would think that John and Patsy's public focus would be on Burke, making sure nothing leaked into the public domain?
My understanding is that when the body was found there was a ligature around only the right wrist which I always wondered what the purpose of that would be. I have also always wondered what position JonBenet would have been held in for the sexual abuse. Now I am hearing you say there was a ligature around each wrist but that one had fallen off and that JonBenet had likely been strung up somehow. That all sounds very logical to me. Do you know if they found another wrist ligature anywhere? If there had been a ligature around each wrist and JonBenet had been strung up by the wrists to something, what do you imagine it would have been? Were there any beams or hooks on the ceiling in the basement? I don't expect you to know the answers BlueCrab but you must have some ideas. I was wondering if they (your perpetrators or mine) could have had a portable device that clipped onto overhead doorframes like the ones I have seen used for baby swing chairs.BlueCrab said:Linda7NJ,
You got me in regard to the hair entangled in the knot on the stick. I just studied the crime scene photo of the knot again and you're right. JonBenet's hair is definitely imbedded in the knot.
I retract my statement about the ligature being constructed ahead of time. The knot on the stick had to have been made in place on JonBenet -- but why? Since she was probably already dead by that time, what use would the stick have? The stick appears to have been staging.
The wrist ligature is easier to explain. Ligatures are like slip knots. If JonBenet's body weight was pulling on the ligature it would have made the ligature tight. When the body weight was removed from the ligature it automatically loosened the ligature. John said the wrist ligature was tight and hard to remove -- which meant that JonBenet's body weight was likely keeping the ligature tight. It suggests JonBenet was strung up somehow and John cut her down.
Once the pressure from the wrist ligature was removed, the ligature loosened and fell off one wrist and almost fell off the other wrist. (The wrists had been bound together with one ligature.)
BlueCrab
That is so mean of them not to release the information on where the additional DNA was found.BlueCrab said:capps,
DNA-X was mentioned by Chief Mark Beckner during a deposition in the Wolf v Ramsey defamation lawsuit. He said DNA-X was not on the body nor her clothing. That's all we know. My guess is it was on the wooden shards found on the basement floor, which in turn had been whittled off the end of the stick attached to the ligature device around the neck.
The fingerprint information on the spoon and waterglass containing the tea bag has never been made public. But due to the stickiness of pineapple, there were likely prints on the spoon and waterglass. My guess is they contained the prints of JonBenet and the perp.
BlueCrab
No, I don't think there is any evidence that Patsy neglected Burke generally or habitually. However it is clear that he wasn't on their minds prior to the funeral (which may be understandable - I don't know). This refutes RST claims to the contrary.UKGuy said:Jayelles,
This is curious, since you would expect a wealthy family to suit and boot Burke for a public funeral at which they knew the media may be present. Particularly if they went to great lengths to appear well dressed.
Are you suggesting this is indirect evidence that Patsy habitually negelected Burke.
As a counterpoint, if Burke had been involved in the death of JonBenet, then you would think that John and Patsy's public focus would be on Burke, making sure nothing leaked into the public domain?
Jayelles said:No, I don't think there is any evidence that Patsy neglected Burke generally or habitually. However it is clear that he wasn't on their minds prior to the funeral (which may be understandable - I don't know). This refutes RST claims to the contrary.
(I don't think the Ramseys killed jonbenet and I think they brought a lot of their own post-murder troubles upon themselves. I also think the RST are a group of people who have helped to demonise the Ramsey by supporting them in such an obviously biased and blinkered way).