skybluepink
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Sayin' it don't make it so, though, does it?
skybluepink said:Sayin' it don't make it so, though, does it?
skybluepink said:Gentle Reader: Miss Manners has pointed out that society would crumble if we were all honest. BTW, thank you for your earlier reading recommendations; I'm enchanted by the titles alone. I reciprocate w/Miss Manners' Guide to Excruciatingly Correct Behavior.
I also regret any offense that my harsh observation about this poor darling child's lack of real talent engendered. (But the competition usually gets stiffer as one progresses in any such endeavor.) I think we can at least agree that we're all on her side and that her killer needs to confront this crime.
Desperate Soul: Mercy awaits you, whoever you are.
Do you really think the boy was strong enough to inflict the kind of injuries JB suffered? He was not much bigger in stature than she.BlueCrab said:Did the Ramsey grand jury, after investigating the JonBenet Ramsey murder for 13 months and interviewing an estimated 100 witnesses, solve the crime back in 1999? It appears this could be so.
But if so, why hasn't the name of the killer been released to the public? The only answer that could fit this question is that it would be against the Colorado Children's Code to release the name of a juvenile too young to even be charged with a serious crime.
BlueCrab
Goody said:Do you really think the boy was strong enough to inflict the kind of injuries JB suffered? He was not much bigger in stature than she.
BlueCrab said:Goody,
Yes, Burke definitely was physically capable of inflicting the injuries on JonBenet. Burke was twice the size and weight of JonBenet.
We know from the autopsy that 6-year-old JonBenet weighed 45 pounds. We don't have any measurements on 9-year-old (he would be 10 in 4 weeks) Burke, but he appears to weigh at least 90 pounds.
By way of comparison, my average-built 10-year-old grandson lives with me, weighs 110 pounds, and is strong as a bull.
BlueCrab said:Goody,
Yes, Burke definitely was physically capable of inflicting the injuries on JonBenet. Burke was twice the size and weight of JonBenet.
We know from the autopsy that 6-year-old JonBenet weighed 45 pounds. We don't have any measurements on 9-year-old (he would be 10 in 4 weeks) Burke, but he appears to weigh at least 90 pounds.
By way of comparison, my average-built 10-year-old grandson lives with me, weighs 110 pounds, and is strong as a bull.
bensmom98 said:From the following website http://www.cdc.gov/growthcharts/:
The average (50th percentile) sized 10 year old boy is 54"-55" tall and weighs ~70 lbs. Therefore, Burke would have been bigger than the "average" boy if he were 90 lbs at the time of JB's murder.
The younger skull should be the more fragile and easily fractured. Babies have especially fragile skulls, and the plates sometimes do not knit until 1-yr or more.RedChief said:This is something I've tried to track down: Is the skull of a 6-yr-old more resilient than the skull of a 16-yr-old? Is more force required to crack a 6-yr-old's skull than a 16-yr-old's skull?
I've encountered differing opinions even on this. The older skull is thicker, but also less elastic and therefore more frangible? Not necessarily?
The skull of a really old person is more brittle than that of a middle-aged person, and therefore more frangible. The two skulls are of about equal thickness. The skull stops growing at around what age?
I've heard it opined that skulls tend to crack along suture lines, yet JonBenet's apparently didn't. What's the explanation for that?
Can we even agree where, approximately, the blow to the head landed? My guess is at the site of the displaced fragment. I once thought the skull and brain and scalp injury could have been caused by her falling or being shoved against a hard surface. Now, after seeing the CS photo, I think someone struck her with a powerful blow.
Thoughts?