What others cases interest you as much as JBR's?

I mainly obsessed with JBR at the moment, I read a book about the case and get obsessed then forget about it for a while and then remember and become obsessed again lol! I'm pretty sure i'll be curious as long as this case is still open. The other case that really piques my interest is the Canadian case of Karla Homolka and Paul Bernardo (the Barbie and Ken killers). This couple raped and killed 3 girls (including Karla's sister!); not to sure why i'm still so interested in this case since it's essentially solved, but ever since reading about it on crimelibrary.com i've been interested in it. Interestingly enough if any of you caught the recent news story about the 'Canadian psycho' Luka Magnotta who killed (and apprently partially consumed) his lover and taped it then uploaded it to the internet, he has been linked to Karla in the past!
Also interested in Maddie McCann and Caylee Anthony, but don't know enough about them to comment really, need to read up more on them!
 
The term "umbrella of suspicion" was coined during the JonBenet case. Recently, my ears perked up when I heard Joe Tacopina, the lawyer for Baby Lisa's parents, say that they are under an "umbrella of suspicion". He has actually used that term quite a few times. Now that term has been used in other cases (post 1997) but it's almost exclusive to the Ramsey case. One similarity between the two cases is that the parents won't talk to LE, and it has me wonder if Tacopina got that "idea" from the Ramsey case, because well, IMO, they got away with it.
 
The term "umbrella of suspicion" was coined during the JonBenet case. Recently, my ears perked up when I heard Joe Tacopina, the lawyer for Baby Lisa's parents, say that they are under an "umbrella of suspicion". He has actually used that term quite a few times. Now that term has been used in other cases (post 1997) but it's almost exclusive to the Ramsey case. One similarity between the two cases is that the parents won't talk to LE, and it has me wonder if Tacopina got that "idea" from the Ramsey case, because well, IMO, they got away with it.

Eileen, I often wonder how many killer parents thought they could get away with it because the Rs did.
 
This is interesting: I found a list of the most publicized news stories of 1997, by number of minutes on the evening news, and one case that got almost as many minutes as JonBenet was the Louise Woodward case. But I feel like the Woodward case has almost faded into obscurity, because I was born in 1992, and I don't think I have ever heard anything about it on the news, or anyone ever bring it up. You could say it's solved, but so is Susan Smith, and she is still talked about. BTW, I know that the Woodward case was big in England, so maybe it is still well-known there. But it was just weird to think about how different the two cases are, 16 years later, when they were equal in evening news coverage back then.
 
Eileen, I don't know if the case is still talked about in England, but Louise Woodward eventually left the US and her name was lost to memory for many people here...but the lasting legacy of that case was its focus on "shaken baby syndrome," and the lead prosecutor (Martha Coakley) went on to have a political career after vigorously denouncing the judge's decision to release Woodward. I was obsessed with Louise Woodward's trial and don't think a missed a day of watching it on what was then Court TV. It really did share the spotlight equally with the Ramsey case.
 
Madeleine McCann occupies MORE of my time than Jonbenet.

The similarities between the two cases are staggering.
 
The Louise Woodward case interested me, I am in the UK and my sister worked as a Nanny in the US a few years before. I think its largely been forgotten in England but reading this reminded me of Neil Entwistle, a British guy who killed his American wife and baby in Massachusetts in 2006. Ive just read a bit on this case and found his parents believe the evidence points to Rachel killing the baby then committing suicide. I wonder if there is a thread on WS?
 
The Louise Woodward case interested me, I am in the UK and my sister worked as a Nanny in the US a few years before. I think its largely been forgotten in England but reading this reminded me of Neil Entwistle, a British guy who killed his American wife and baby in Massachusetts in 2006. Ive just read a bit on this case and found his parents believe the evidence points to Rachel killing the baby then committing suicide. I wonder if there is a thread on WS?
Yes, webnut, there is:

[ame="http://www.websleuths.com/forums/showthread.php?p=8267414#post8267414"]Neil Entwistle - Post Sentencing - Page 5 - Websleuths Crime Sleuthing Community[/ame]

.
 
Another case which I took a bit of interest in was the ase of David Bain in Dunedin in New Zealand who served a fair bit of time for supposedly killing all his family - he was set free due to a high court judgement a year or so ago after serving 15 years i think it was. Personally I felt the perp was his sister's pimp - like the Entwistle case he witnessed his siser's death gurgle which didn't look so well for his case, but I felt the residue left on her bedroom wall was consistent with toothpaste which I felt the perp had used to clean his gun barrels and thus was going to leave his girlfriend alive - but when david came home she must have panicked for his safety causing the boyfriend pimp to blow a **** (EDIT: don't know where the stars came from - shot/bullet) into her head just before David found her. It was very interesting case for a number of reasons. I didn't find anything in the evidence suggesting it was toothpaste but I ran the ingredients listed and the chemicals were "consistent with" toothpaste which some people use to clean evidence from their barrels. There was a note left on the computer saying that David was allowed to love (EDIT: LIVE)which of course there was speculation about and also the angle at which the father had been shot left open a theory to speculate as to whether or not it was all murder suicide was David was out on his paper run before coming home to the massacre.

The police bungled a lot in this case too and it could also be speculated they received pay offs from the local pimps. I can't remember all the details now.
 
Rebecca Zahau and the little Maxie....yep, that case intrigues me. I especially think the message left on the door is super-creepy. Something like, "she saved him, can you save her"?
 
Anyone following Alanna Gallagher's case? She was the 6-year-old girl in Texas who was found murdered in a tarp. Her case reminds me of JonBenet's for a few reasons. They were the same age, and both of their fathers worked for Lockheed Martin. Both families lived unconventional lifestyles; The Gallaghers were involved in polyandry and the Ramseys were involved in pageants, and who knows what else. The theories that people come up with for both cases are pretty similar: There's theories that the parents unintentionally were involved and it was covered up. LE took samples from their hot tub along with Alanna's swimsuit and chlorine products. Or that a predator did it. Or that someone else was at the house who was involved. Also, if you believe that a predator was involved, both girls were dead before their parents realized they were missing.

One big difference though is Alanna's parents are cooperating, which the Ramseys didn't do. They are talking to LE separately, do not have lawyers, did not put up a fight when LE came through with a search warrant, etc.

If you want to discuss the similarities, just remember that we can only talk about what's in MSM and we have to be careful about accusing her parents of anything since LE says they are not the prime suspects.
 
judge me if you want but I find this "family" picture creepy and disturbing...

article-2359353-1AA68E33000005DC-725_634x497.jpg


Investigators probing her death seized more than 100 items from the family's home, but said none of the three parents are prime suspects. However, Saginaw Police Chief Roger Macon added that no one has been eliminated as a suspect, The Star-Telegram reported.
 
Damon Ing, a Saginaw police spokesman, said Alanna's death was being investigated as a homicide, but sought to reassure frightened neighbors that police considered her death to be isolated.

reminds me of "there is a killer on the loose"....NOT
 
there's a rule on Alanna's WS thread,do not sleuth the parents so I guess I will be quiet ...at least until we have a COD...I just pray it's not drowning (some stuff I read somewhere I found not quite OK) cause if it's so I know who my nr 1 suspect/ts will be....sigh...

one more thing though....she was found dead pretty quickly after she went missing,so whoever did this must have left something behind...you have to be pretty lucky to commit a perfect murder in just a few hours...
 
Alanna had a plastic bag over her head, and she was gagged. If the COD shows that she didn't suffocate as a result of either the bag and/or the gag, then that means that they were part of the staging. LE said that Alanna was not shot, stabbed, beaten, or strangled. If the bag and gag didn't kill her, that means her COD was not visible just by looking at her. The case would be very similar to JonBenet's then, because you couldn't tell JonBenet had a head blow by looking at her, someone would just think she was strangled.
 
JBR is what brought me to Websleuths (lurking for years before registering)-- the case has been high on my true crime radar since it happened. It's still probably the one to which I've devoted the most time & skull-sweat.

An historic cold-case is my biggest obsession right now, one that I may end up doing as a major research project as an historian: the Great Fires of Rome in 64CE, which just celebrated it's 1,949th anniversary last week. There are a few historians working on this (and by cold, call it near-freezing) but some new leads have cropped up and I am hoping to meet with some archaeologists doing digs in the marshes of Ostia-- debris from the city was dumped there during clean-up from the fires. Maybe some new clue may pop up? Hope so. We know Nero never "fiddled" whilst Rome burnt (he, a self-proclaimed dramatist may have recited a rendition of the Homeric Fall of Troy to entertain whilst surviors milled about), we know he rushed back from his villa in Antium to Rome & opened his private gardens to the survivors, but he also benefitted from the wreckage of almost all of the districts (all but 4 of 14 were damaged or fully destroyed) to build his Domus Aurea. Cui bono? Maybe. Did Nero scapegoat the Christians, or was there an active non-pagan or political sect that may have started the fires on that date (which has some basis in apocalyptic writings & calendrical significance of the era)? Or could it have been another case of just an accidental fire that got out of control-- a very common occurence in the mostly wooden, twisting lanes of Rome at the time, so much so that Augustus had formed a 7,000 (IIRC) strong fire brigade? Talk about red-hot, ice-cold case!

Another case I am deeply concerned with right now is the missing Johnny Lamar Brown. If you folks aren't aware of it, read the threads here on the Websleuths missing forum. Next month will be a year that he's been missing, and I pray daily for resolution in this case-- preferably a happy one. I feel so awful for his family & friends; I think I'd go stark raving mad if I couldn't find one of my siblings. [ame="http://www.websleuths.com/forums/showthread.php?t=184473"]SC SC - Johnny Lamar Brown, 44, Myrtle Beach, 3-Aug-2012 - SPECIAL NEEDS - #2 - Websleuths Crime Sleuthing Community[/ame] Let's find Johnny!

The Black Dahlia case has long interested me, morbid as it is, and the Boy in the Box (also yucky). The WM3 interests me for professional reasons, although I don't like to discuss it other than with collegues. Not being coy, it's just that it has some aspects that cause some controversy and I am tired of arguments.

I've stayed out of big things like Caylee Anthony's death & the Jodi Arias trial as they just make me sad & angry. I did follow the entire Zimmerman trial, listening ONLY to the evidence presented at trial-- wanted to see how I'd see it were I a juror. Fascinating.

I have a nodding familiarity with may other cases, and enjoy "true crime" shows & books, but most of the time I look at the forums here-- mainly the missing forums-- and just feel sad & overwhelmed. I honestly am in awe of all the fine LE people & volunteers who see the sheer volume of human doings-- good & bad-- and keep on doing hard work. Talk about heroes!

Oh, one other current "missing" case has me interested as it is local to me, and prayers would be appreciated: the historic American schooner Nina which disappeared with 6 aboard on a trip from NZ to Newcastle, NSW-- my local stomping grounds (roughly). [ame="http://www.websleuths.com/forums/showthread.php?t=213662"]Australia Australia - NZ en route to AU ∙ 6 Americans, 1 Briton, ages 17-73; 04 June 2013 - Websleuths Crime Sleuthing Community[/ame]

Many of the cases you fine folks have mentioned on this thread are fascinating & new to me; thank you for sharing them. Any & all attention we can give to these people is a blessing.
 
I have always wondered about the David Bain case in Dunedin NZ. A family bloodbath.
 
The Robin Hood Hills Murders

I read about the case on the web and then after seeing the first 3 minutes or so of Paradise Lost, my blood boiled with rage, as I cried, when the bodies are seen along side the water as one of the cops sits off to the side crying. Absolutely infuriating how LE screwed up that case. Obviously, I don't believe the WM3 did it.
 

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