Yes AK....I used matrilinear for clarity sake in lieu of mitochondrial so that people may be able to follow the train of thought that I was presenting. So we don't really know if they utilized mitochondrial methodology analyzing any of the DNA?
Also, I have read numerous times that DNA is not about excluding.
Who said anything about impossible? And, no one is talking about dropped tissues. Venon was referring to the box of tissue that was on the table, near the bowl w/pineapple and the glass/tea bag.
The only one suggesting magic pants is you.
...
AK
I do see the humor. And, I hope it was intentional. But, it is also nonsensical and heavily flawed. I dont mean this as a personal attack; it is a reference to his reasoning only. For example, his ridiculous claim that we must either accept or reject the six DNA samples. This is a False Dichotomy, and an incredibly stupid thing to assert.Perhaps you should reread the Kolar book. Also, try to see the humor and twists he has to contort the scene into to make the intruder theory match evidence.
I think that the Kolar book pretty blatantly makes it apparent that Kolar has a vivid imagination and questionable reasoning skills.In other words, the Kolar book pretty blatantly makes it apparent there were not intruders. That chapter was pretty ludicrous and it shows his disbelief in that theory.
I think that the Kolar book pretty blatantly makes it apparent that Kolar has a vivid imagination and questionable reasoning skills.
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AK
In other words, the Kolar book pretty blatantly makes it apparent there were not intruders. That chapter was pretty ludicrous and it shows his disbelief in that theory.
Ak,
Could you take a moment and answer one question for me? Who do you think has better perspective on the case evidence: Kolar, who has seen all the evidence, or us Websleuthers who have seen about 10 percent of the so-called evidence, half of which is allegedly inaccurate?
Ak,
Could you take a moment and answer one question for me? Who do you think has better perspective on the case evidence: Kolar, who has seen all the evidence, or us Websleuthers who have seen about 10 percent of the so-called evidence, half of which is allegedly inaccurate?
This is on topic, but won't start out appearing to be.I just finished a book about another famous murder that took place almost 60 years ago, Marilyn Sheppard. It is about a civil trial brought by the estate of Sam Sheppard against the sate of Ohio for, among other things, wrongful imprsonment.
The point of course, was to clear Dr. Sam's name, once and for all. As such, it really amounted to a third murder trial. In fact, much of the testimony from both the 1954 and 1966 trials was read back as part of this trial (because many, but not all, witnesses were deceased).
What I found very interesting about this "third trial" which took place in 2000, is that by that time, they had extracted DNA from the blood samples that had been retained. According to the tests, a third parties DNA was mixed in with the blood samples taken from the room Marilyn was killed in. That is mixed in, no periphal, which would certainly point to it being a part of the murder. The blood was not Marilyn's and it was not Sam's.
So, of course, I thought of all the IDI's in this case who are insistent that touch DNA is absolute, irrevocable proof of their mystery Intruder. There was significant evidence, undisputed on both sides, that Marilyn fought and fought hard for her life. There was disagreement about whether she had bitten her assailant, but whether or not she bit him, she fought. The idea that he would have bled at the scene was not disputed by either side (although obviously the State believed that was the explanation for Sam's injuries from that night).
However, the jury in this trial clearly did not find the DNA compelling enough to override all the evidence of Dr. Sam's guilt. Most of which, BTW, was circumstantial. It included things like his being the only other person in the house that night other than their 7 year old son who it appears really did sleep through it, the fact that Sam's story changed repeatedly, the fact that there was no evidence of a break in, the fact that the home appeared to have been "staged" . Any of this sounding familiar to anyone?
In this instance, the estate even offered up a suspect, a convicted murderer (he was convicted of another murder years after Marilyn's death but well before this trial took place) who worked as a window washer in the Sheppard home around the time of the murder, a fact that is not disputed.
The jury ruled in favor of the State of Ohio, thereby stating clearly that Sheppard was indeed guilty and therefore was not wrongfully imprisoned.
So, while the TDNA may or may not represent actual "evidence" in this case and certainly much of what we discuss here is circumstantial, It is clearly not all it takes as some like to opine.
What's the name of that book? I'd like to read it.
To me this is the only scenario that ever made sense, the parents lying to protect their son, even though it's really hard to imagine a 9-year-old killing his sister.
playing catch up with Dec 2014 JBR News
Justice For JonBenet! Retired Cops Club Vows To Hunt Down Her Killer As New DNA Claims Emerge Posted on Dec 18, 2014 @ 4:10AM
http://radaronline.com/exclusives/2014/12/jon-benet-ramsey-retired-cops-vow-hunt-down-killer/
re: dna may belong to Asian factory worker
"Now the group of still-sharp retirees includes Bobby Brown, a former criminal defense investigator, 86-year-old Charlie Hess, a former FBI agent and Colorado Springs homicide investigator, and Steve Pease, a former detective."
Charlie Hess
http://www.amazon.com/Hello-Charlie-Letters-Serial-Killer/dp/1416544860
Steve Pease
http://www.denverpi.com/stevepease.php
Question .... is it BB, from Dog the Bounty Hunter?
Bobby Brown
https://www.linkedin.com/pub/bobby-brown/27/b28/45