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Good Idea: JonBenet Ramsey’s Case Re-Opened After 14 Years

“Evil on this scale is impossible to comprehend. To know who murdered JonBenét Ramsey is to know what world we live in, where we are.”

I do not know what you think, but whenever a case gets closed without being solved, someone is getting away with something. If only this helps to bring clarity even if the perpetrator is not brought to justice, finding out the truth is detrimental to the growth of a society.

Colorado Episcopal Bishop Jerry Winterrowd, left, and the Rev. Rol Hoverstock, right, comfort Patsy, John and Burke Ramsey after services in Boulder in January 1997. (Helen H. Richardson, Denver Post file photo)

The focus is now on her then 9 year old older brother Burke who is now 23 years old.

Could it be that a 9 year old commits a sex crime and premeditates it?

Of course and anybody who dismisses it is ignorant.

Children reflect how sick society is.

It was a murder that shocked the world.
Child beauty queen JonBenet Ramsey, dubbed Little Miss Sunshine, was just six when her body was found in the cellar of her family home in 1996.
She’d been sexually assaulted, beaten and then strangled.
Despite hundreds of interviews and the finger of suspicion being pointed at her parents, police never solved the case.
But yesterday, in a fresh twist, it emerged that officers are planning to question JonBenet’s brother, Burke, who was just nine at the time of the killing.
Police, acting on the recommendations of an advisory committee that sifted through the evidence last year, hope that re-questioning and applying the latest DNA technology may open up the seemingly intractable case.

The investigation into JonBenet’s murder has proved one of the most acrimonious in U.S. criminal history.
Detectives have feuded publicly, and the Ramseys have sued and been sued for defamation.

JonBenet, pictured with her brother Burke, who is now 23. He was just nine when his sister was found strangled and beaten in the basement of the family home

JonBenet’s parents John and Patsy were officially cleared as suspects two years ago. Mrs Ramsay died of cancer in 2006

A FALSE LEAD

Schoolteacher John Mark Karr falsely claimed he killed JonBenet, but was exonerated after tests showed his DNA did not match that found in her underwear.

Karr, 41, was arrested in Thailand and brought to Colorado over the case after telling a colleague in emails that he was involved in her death.

He told reporters after his arrest that he was with JonBenet when she died, although he called her death an accident and said he loved her.

But members of his family insisted he was out of the state at the time of JonBenet’s murder and could not have been involved in the crime.

Karr, who has faced a number of criminal charges, was dismissed as an attention-seeking eccentric.

It has since been reported that he has had a sex-change operation and is now called Alexis Valoran Reich.

Patsy Ramsey, a former Miss West Virginia, told police she discovered her daughter missing in December 1996 after finding a ransom note demanding $118,000 (£74,000) for her safe return.
The body of the beauty pageant princess was later found in the basement, covered by a white blanket, with a nylon cord around her neck, her wrists bound above her head and her mouth covered by duct tape.
Investigators were immediately suspicious that the girl’s body was found in her own home in Boulder, Colorado, and said the parents were under an ‘umbrella of suspicion’.
Police initially worked on the theory that Mrs Ramsey had killed her daughter in a fit of rage after she wet her bed and that her husband – who as a former naval officer would have been able to tie the complicated knot around the girl’s neck – helped cover up the crime.
Investigators suspected Mrs Ramsey had written the ransom note.
Another theory speculated that Mr Ramsey, a wealthy businessman, had murdered the girl to cover up sexual abuse. Despite his age, Burke also came under suspicion.

Mrs Ramsey said he had been asleep when she found the ransom note but there were reports that his voice could be heard in the background when his mother rang police.
Boulder police gave up the case in 2002, in part because of accusations that they had bungled the investigation by ruining evidence and concentrating solely on the Ramseys as suspects.
In 2008 – two years after Mrs Ramsey’s death from cancer – the Boulder County district attorney told the Ramseys they had been exonerated by the discovery of DNA traces of an unidentified male on the pyjamas worn by JonBenet on the night she died.
Prosecutors said the DNA was not from the Ramsey family and was almost definitely that of the killer.
Mark Beckner, Boulder’s police chief, would not comment on the investigation. ‘We continue to work the Ramsey case. This has included additional contacts and interviews with those who may have information pertinent to the case,’ he said.
Lin Wood, the Ramsey family lawyer, said Burke, now 23, had been contacted by police but not yet interviewed. ‘I understand they met with Burke and gave him a card and said, “If you want to talk to us, here’s how you would contact me”,’ he said.


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/search.html?s=y&authornamef=David+Gardner

The murder of the six-year-old beauty queen remains one of America’s most notorious unsolved mysteries

A different take on it is here:

http://www.konformist.com/jonbenet.htm

And here’s another intelligent theory about Burke:

As horrific as it is, this last scenario covers the facts better than any other yet presented, and has a key piece of so-far unexplained physical evidence to support it. The perpetrator in this view is JonBenet’s brother Burke, not as an accidental event covered-up by his parents, but as a full scale, premeditated sex crime.

In the three years since JonBenet’s death, many things have happened, including two years of school shootings, culminating in the recent shooting death of a classmate by a six-year old in Michigan. With that in mind, it is no longer so easy to dismiss the possibility that 9 year-old Burke planned and executed the perfect murder.

Perhaps the attention being shown to JonBenet in her new role as Patsy’s beauty queen surrogate made her a prime target. Burke, fed on a diet of action movies and comic books, spends months planning out the scenario just so, to match some distorted fictionalized image of a kidnapping and sexual assault. He plants his seeds by telling JonBenet that Santa Claus will visit them special on Christmas night.

He lures her quietly downstairs where they wait, eating pineapple, for Santa’s appearance. Burke slugs JonBenet with the flashlight and then drags or carries her to the basement where he sexually assaults her with a paint brush and then strangles her to death. He hides the body with care, plants the note and goes back to bed. Patsy awakens early for the trip, and the story goes on from there.

Except for one thing. Burke, waiting for the sound of pandemonium, gets up and joins in as Patsy calls 911. On the enhanced tape, Burke’s voice is clearly heard in the background, as is John’s voice telling him to be quiet. Burke was sent back to bed, and by 7 o’clock had been dispatched to the Whites, where he remained all day. The Ramseys have insisted under oath that Burke slept through the whole thing. They have done everything possible to keep Burke and any question of Burke’s role out of the official record, including a credibility stretching insistence on the Intruder theory.

So, do we have the world’s youngest psychopathic sex killer? Not quite. It is very unlikely, as we will see below, that he could have written the note. We might imagine a precocious and deranged nine year old killing his sister, but the psycho-sexual component of the crime forces us into special pleading. Violent sexual activity in prepubescent children almost always stems from the desire to act out the abuse perpetrated on them. Therefore, if young Burke is sick enough to commit the crime on his own, then, as with his mother Patsy, we must ask how he got that way.

Finally we must deal with the fact that Burke attended his school for an entire semester following the murder. It is almost impossible to believe that he didn’t confide in anyone about his nefarious act. Furthermore, if John and Patsy were covering up for Burke it is doubtful that they would have insisted on sending him to school for a half a year.

As we look through our spread of scenarios, one key make-it-or-break-it point has been the ransom note. First of all its length, not so much a note as a letter, argues against its being written by an intruder. Secondly, there is a tone of barely suppressed rage against John Ramsey that permeates the entire letter. This strongly suggests a personal connection and motive. However, there is a certain degree of confusion in the note — John is not from the South — which suggests that the author confused John Ramsey and Patsy’s father, Don Paugh, who is from the South. As we will see, this just might be the single most significant clue in the whole ransom note.

An analysis of the ransom note and a psychological profile done by SERAPH Inc., a private profiling agency run by Dale Yeager and Denise Knoke, and delivered to the Boulder Police on May 25, 1998, suggests that the case is one of “a child’s murder with ritualistic overtones. Mrs. Ramsey’s motives and post incident actions cannot be understood with rational thought. This crime was committed by a delusional individual who has convinced herself of her own innocence. Sociopaths always view their violent actions as justified. When a divine intervention is added to this justification pathology, you have a highly volatile individual.”

The report continues: “We believe that Patsy Ramsey is a delusional sociopath. Based on our experience with religious sociopaths, we believe that she saw JonBenet’s death as a sacrifice for sins she had committed.” Essentially, Yeager and Knoke had cracked the case back in 1998. The only thing lacking was some justification for Patsy’s sense of sin and the need to atone by sacrificing her daughter. Therefore, the real story remained elusive.

That is, until two weeks ago when news began to surface about a child sex abuse ring and their involvement in the case. Suddenly, a motive for Patsy’s deeply held sense of sin and need for atonement was at hand. Finally, after three years, a coherent picture of the case began to emerge, one that explains everything from Patsy’s premonitions and the ransom note to the inability of the local authorities to make an arrest. If we have the courage to look at the unthinkable, the real story of JonBenet’s death appears with the sudden clarity of those 3D images hidden within apparent computer generated chaos. It all depends on your focus.

Then let’s focus our attention on the ransom note. From the very first line problems emerge. Addressed to Mr. Ramsey, it reads: “Listen carefully! We are a group of individuals that represent a small foreign faction.” Of course, a real “foreign faction” would never refer to themselves as such. The whole line eerily echoes the movie Nick of Time which aired at 7:30 on Christmas night on a local Boulder cable station. The movie concerns the kidnapping of a six year old girl by an unnamed political faction and in the film the victim is told to “Listen to me very carefully!” Bill Cox, a guest that night of the Ramseys’ friends the Whites, remembered watching it.

“We respect your bussiness (sic) but not the country it serves,” the note continues. “At this time we have your daughter in our possession. She is safe and unharmed and if you want her to see 1997, you must follow our instructions to the letter.” This is a rather straight forward, if stiff and somewhat formal, attempt to support the faction kidnapping idea.

The next line however provides an important clue, one that must be examined in some depth. “You will withdraw $118,000.00 from your account.” The use of such a specific amount is unusual. Terrorists, or even a normal kidnapper, would have asked for more money. The fact that this amount is almost exactly the bonus John received that year from Access Graphics is significant, giving us our first indication that the kidnapping is a personal attack on John Ramsey.
The number 118 has suggested to some investigators the biblical reference of Psalm 118. The police discovered during their initial search on December 26, 1996, that the Ramsey family Bible was open to Psalm 118 on John Ramsey’s desk. Others confirm that during Patsy’s bout with ovarian cancer, she used Psalm 118 as a source of spiritual strength.

In the analysis of the ransom note by Yeager and Knoke referred to above, this reference becomes an important clue. “Psalm 118 is a biblical chapter that is used quite often in the Charismatic/Pentecostal movement,” they write in their 1998 report to the Boulder Police Department “This subculture of the Christian Religion has many unwritten fundamentals that they adhere to. One area in which they divert from main stream Christian theology is in the area of biblical interpretation. Because of their extreme emphasis on spiritual gifts, they tend to have a more flexible view of interpretation compared to the more scholarly approach taken by their fellow Christians in main steam denominations. ”

Yeager and Knoke continue, pointing out that “rather than believing the scriptures to be the general will of God being presented to all believers, they take a more mystical approach by viewing the scriptures as a prophetic tool used by God to speak to individual believers. This flexible attitude leads to extraordinarily diverse views theologically. We believe that Patsy Ramsey took this approach from the Osteen, Hickey and Barnhill books that she was introduced to during her illness.”

However, Psalm 118, and particularly the verse quoted at the head of this article, verse 27, is more than just a fundamentalist text on the glory of God. As Yeager and Knoke point out, it is also suggestive of the power of sacrifice. “Based on my experience,” Yeager wrote in his earlier 1997 report, “this second section of verse 27 has been used by several white supremacy groups such as the Christian Identity movement and the Aryan Nation to justify their killing of blacks, Jews and other minorities. In their non-orthodox view, the verse is speaking of offering a person as a sacrifice to God and God is accepting their sacrifice on his altar as atonement. ”

Yeager’s 1997 report to the Boulder Police goes on to mention that “the Hebrews where required to offer a blood sacrifice to God to atone for their sins as a nation. A lamb or sheep would be placed on the altar and tied to the four extended horns of the altar with thick cords. The animal was then cut and bled until it was dead. The blood was then used in ceremony for the ‘washing away by the blood, the sins of the people.’ ” This idea is still found in the fundamentalist belief in the redemptive power of Christ’s blood, shed as it was as part of the final sacrificial atonement. “Washed in the blood of the lamb” is a common motif in fundamentalist hymns.

Even more interesting is Yeager’s reference to a similar case which “involved a woman with a very conservative Christian background, who strangled her daughter and used this verse as a justification for the killing. Her belief was that the child would be better off in ‘heaven with God’ and that the daughter would be a redemptive sacrifice to God for her [the mother's] sins.” It is unknown whether the Boulder Police followed Yeager’s advice and asked the FBI for details on the case. If they had, they would have been astounded by the similarities.
An extensive search of the ritual abuse literature turned up the facts in the case. In 1979, a Silver Springs, Maryland, woman took her five year old daughter to church and there strangled her to death. When questioned by Linda Stone for an article in David Sakheim and Susan Devine’s 1992 book Out of Darkness: Exploring Satanism and Ritual Abuse, the woman confirmed Yeager’s comments. She felt that she was saving her child from the same lifetime of sin that she herself had endured. The sin of course was ritualistic sexual abuse and pedophilia.

In commenting on the case, author Stone remarks that “the inability of a parent to protect his or her child while witnessing the ongoing symptomatic behavior that the child is exhibiting as a consequence of the ritual abuse is probably one of the most stressful circumstances that a person can endure.” In the case of the Maryland woman, such stress and the twisted nature of the Christian cult in which she was caught combined to produce the mercy murder of her own daughter. “God required a sacrifice,” the woman told Stone, “and at least she [her daughter] died before they could corrupt her.”

While considering the meaning of the $118,000 ransom request, we should also look at the other two verses from the Bible quoted at the head of this article. Genesis 1:18 suggests that God approves of separating the light from the darkness while Revelation 1:18 points to the resurrection motif of ever-lasting life in the faith. Both of these could be used in the same way as verse 27 of Psalm 118 to justify a sacrificial murder in the name of salvation.

Returning to the note, the next sentence dealt with the money: “$100,000 in $100 bills and the remaining $18,000 in $20 bills.” This is straightforward, and attempts to suggest a savvy kidnapper collecting his ransom in small bills. When we consider the request more closely however, it is clear that this is an arbitrary division, perhaps designed to emphasize the one and the eighteen of the Bible references. In which case the text of Revelation 1:18 becomes even more important: “I am the Living one. I was dead and behold I am alive for ever and ever! And I hold the keys of death and hell.”

And then comes a curious sentence: “Make sure that you bring an adequate size attache to the bank.” This sounds more like a wife instructing her husband in some household matter, than a kidnapper giving instructions. It also suggests that the writer is educated enough to spell attachй and use it correctly.

“When you get home you will put the money in a brown paper bag,” the note continues in the same nagging tone. “I will call you between 8 and 10 am tomorrow to instruct you on delivery. The delivery will be exhausting so I advise you to be rested.” The brown paper bag is another odd note. Why not keep the money in the attachй? The advice to rest seems to be taken from the movie Dirty Harry, which aired on November 29 on TBS in Boulder.

“If we monitor you getting the money early, we might call you to arrange an earlier delivery of the money and hence the earlier delivery [crossed out and replaced by] pick-up of your daughter.” The author of the note has used the word delivery four times in the space of a few sentences, then corrected the last usage to pick-up. This and the use of the word “hence” suggests an educated person, or the attempt to appear so.

“Any deviation from my instructions will result in the immediate execution of your daughter. You will also be denied her remains for proper burial. The two gentlemen watching over your daughter do not particularly like you so I advise you not to provoke them. Speaking to anyone about your situation, such as Police, F.B.I., etc., will result in your daughter being beheaded. If we catch you talking to a stray dog, she dies. If you alert bank authorities, she dies. If the money is in any way marked or tampered with, she dies. You will be scanned for electronic devices and if any are found, she dies. You can try to deceive us but be forewarned that we are familiar with law enforcement countermeasures and tactics. You stand a 99% chance of killing your daughter if you try to outsmart us. Follow our instructions and you stand a 100% chance of getting her back. You and your family are under constant scrutiny as well as the authorities. Don’t try to grow a brain John. You are not the only fat cat so don’t think that killing will be difficult. Don’t underestimate us John. Use that good southern common sense of yours. It is up to you now John! Victory! S.B.T.C.” (Italics not in original.)

At this point, the temptation is to see this as the War and Peace of ransom notes. It is as if the author became involved in their own creation and spun it out as far as it would. go This section is filled with references to movies, Dirty Harry again as well as Speed, and fairly drips with venom toward John Ramsey and/or Don Paugh. Clues also abound, as marked in italics in the above section of the note. We will look at these clues individually and then try to determine their pattern.

The word execution tells us that the author of the note felt that JonBenet was executed. The threat of no body to bury suggests the reason why the killer did not dispose of the body. The two gentlemen is very curious, suggesting that the author felt that two men were to blame. Certainly one of those men could be John Ramsey, and the other could be his father-in-law. The beheading reference seems to be an extra piece of nastiness, hiding perhaps a deep seated desire to castrate male authority. Stray dog echoes a line from Dirty Harry and has the added connotation of describing the author’s view of his or her self as isolated and degraded like a stray dog. Scanned is a word that has different connotations depending on how it is used. Here it is used in the sense of supermarket scanner, rather than a computer image scanner. The phrase law enforcement countermeasures has an oddly formal and made-up quality to it, as if the author was uncertain how to say it. Grow a brain comes from the movie Speed, with Dennis Hopper. Constant scrutiny is another indicator of the author’s state of mind.

Obviously, since the idea is present throughout the note, the feeling of being watched constantly is a powerful component of the author’s psyche. Fat cat seems to be a reference to Don Paugh, who, according to Access Graphics employees, used the words cat in its slang sense all the time. The confusion between John and Don continues with the good southern common sense phrase. It is also possible that this is another slap at John because he doesn’t have any, as he isn’t from the south.

The last two key words are the most important. In their 1998 profile, Yeager and Knoke found them to be very revealing. “In the Charismatic subculture, acronyms are quite common and used quite frequently as teaching tools and on banners [In church icons]. S.B.T.C. is a well-used acronym that represents the words “saved by the cross”. In our extensive database of terroristic groups, we find no use of this phrase with White Supremacy or International Organizations. The author of the ransom note uses this acronym along with the word “victory”. The word “victory” is used in the Charismatic subculture as a verb. It is seen as the result of actions taken by believers to bind and overcome Satan’s power primarily in the areas of physical health.”

What a strange way to end a ransom note! It is almost as if the author is trying to convey a very precise message, one that implies a victory of some kind over the forces of evil. Saved By The Cross becomes even more important when we remember Patsy’s supposed premonition over using Easter colors at Christmas. The closing actually forces us to the conclusion that Patsy is the author.

When we look at the totality of the clues and hints in the ransom note, we are struck first of all by its theatricality. The note was staged to convey a message, one that had nothing to do with any real kidnapping. When we look closely at that message, we come face to face with a Christian sacrificial victory, an innocent saved by the cross, even unto death. The similarities to the Maryland case cited above are only too clear.

In the note, the author places the blame on two “gentlemen,” who might be John and her father Don Paugh. The good southern common sense phrase, whether we interpret it as a dig at John or a confusion with Don Paugh in the manner of a Freudian slip, could only have come from Patsy. Add to this the amount of the bonus, the ransom request and the Biblical connections, including the open Bible on John’s desk, and Patsy is the only possible author. “Victory” and “S.B.T.C.” clinches the identification, and announces that the deed is done, the innocent is saved and beyond their reach.

The note was an attempt to tell those she felt were truly responsible that the sacrifice had been made, and at the same time to point the finger at the perpetrators of the true evil. Patsy made it as obvious as she could, and in the first hours after JonBenet’s body was discovered it is possible that Patsy wanted to be caught. Perhaps, she really wanted to tell her story, at least unconsciously. The note suggests that she did. But the opportunity was lost, and the “justification pathology” became fixed.

Everything detailed above was known to the Boulder Police as early as the summer of 1997. It was generally agreed that this evidence made Patsy the prime suspect, but no conclusive motive could be demonstrated that would be horrific enough to justify, even in Patsy’s mind, the murder of her daughter. In other words, what could be so bad that a mother would think that death was preferable? If the Boulder Police followed up on the Maryland case cited in the Yeager analysis, then they had an idea of what would drive a mother to such a deed.

But until Boulder Attorney Lee Hill showed up with his California informant, such a motive was pure speculation. Suddenly, it looked as if there might be something solid to the idea of sexual abuse. Patsy might have had a motive after all.

Barrie Hartman, in his February 25 story in the Boulder Daily Camera reported the details. “The woman has described to police years of sexual and physical abuse in California homes at the hands of adults who stayed at holiday and other parties after other guests had left for the evening. Then, she said, another “party,” one of sexual abuse for the gratification of a select group of adults, would begin. In talking to detectives, the woman draws parallels between sexual techniques used at these sessions and the physical evidence of garroting that investigators found on the body of JonBenйt Ramsey.”

California ranks number one in both pedophilia and ritualistic sexual abuse. In a study of 57 ritual abuse cases done by “Margaret Smith,” herself an abuse survivor, 37% of the cases occurred in California. She also found that 98% percent of perpetrators fell into four large occupational categories; 35% were professionals, either doctors or lawyers, 25% were teachers, 22% priests and ministers, and 15% were police officers. Given these statistics, the victim’s fears of authority are well justified . “The woman told detectives she believes JonBenйt was killed accidentally when an asphyxiation technique used to stimulate an orgasmic response during a child sex and porno “party” went too far,” Hartman’s story continued.

“The woman told police she knows firsthand about asphyxiation (choking) to produce a sexual response because it had been done to her when she was a child. The woman said in her experience little girls were dressed provocatively and trained to say provocative things, such as, “It’s a pleasure to please you.” She told police that when girls did not perform as expected, they were struck on the head. That was because their hair covered the wound. A big night for such “parties” was Christmas night, she said. Over the years, she said, many parties were held then because a large number of cars around a house did not arouse suspicion in the neighborhood and the children had a full week to heal from their wounds before returning to school.”

And then the story turns to the crucial element, a connection to the Ramsey case. “The woman said she knows the Ramseys through the Fleet White family. She said the godfather to her mother is Fleet White Sr., 86, of California. Fleet White Jr. of Boulder and John Ramsey were close friends until the death of JonBenйt. White Jr. was with John Ramsey when JonBenйt’s body was found in the basement of the Ramsey’s Boulder home.” What is curiously not mentioned is that the Ramseys actually attended a Christmas party at the Whites on Christmas Night. Fleet White Jr. was cleared by police in April of 1997, but this information casts new light on many of the strange elements of the case.

As Alex Hunter, Boulder District Attorney, said earlier in the same story, even if only 15% of the story is true, then it deserves to be investigated. Whether that investigation will go the way of all the rest remains to be seen.

However, this new information, combined with an analysis of the ransom note, allows us to piece together a scenario of the crime that fits the peculiarities of its signature. Whether this is the truth or not, only Patsy knows.

Patsy Paugh Ramsey fits the classic profile of an abuse survivor. Emotional and physical abuse are most likely, but sexual abuse can not be ruled out. Much of this trauma seems to be associated with her father, whom she recreated by marrying the older John Ramsey. We have no way of knowing how deeply the abuse went in her own family, but the symptoms are there.

Soon after the Ramseys moved to Boulder, they met the Fleet Whites, the family implicated by the California informant. Whether this was the beginning of the problem, or merely another step along the way is uncertain. All we can tell is that it marks a turning point.

Perhaps John was recruited by Fleet and began to receive child pornography in the “brown paper bag” that Patsy chides him with in the ransom note. Perhaps it was at first a social thing that grew slowly into something more. We may never know.

Patsy’s illness marks another turning point. She emerged from it with a strong fundamentalist Christian belief, one that curiously enough either allowed her to participate in her daughter’s pedophilic involvement or blinded her to it. A quote from “Margaret Smith,” who was a member of a Christian cult not unlike the one the Maryland mother who killed her daughter was involved in, shows how confusing the message can be. “In our belief system, the ultimate deity is God manifested through the actions of Jesus. . . We believed that Jesus’ teachings should not be dictated by some church. . . We believe that through Jesus radiated the perfect emanation of Heavenly Light. . . The heavenly light is also. . . Lucifer, the Light Bearer. . .”

What starts out as Christianity has subtly shifted to a worship of Lucifer. “We most certainly would not consider ourselves to be Satan worshipers,” Ms. Smith goes on. “We believe that Satan is a term used by the church to separate the world into good and evil through the eyes of the God of the Old Testament.” The emphasis in the cult was on Jesus as Light Bearer, and awaiting a Luciferian return. “We believe we have to create the perfect race: a race of warriors to prepare for his second coming.”

From the outside, it is hard to determine what the group around the Ramseys truly believed and whether the child abuse ring had cultic or ritualistic overtones. All we can be sure of, as Yeager’s report reminds us, is that is was “a child’s murder with ritualistic overtones.”

The beauty pageant frenzy in the last year of JonBenet’s life seems to have been part of her preparation for entry into the group. As the California informant said, the children were required to act adult and provocative at these gatherings. Several other beauty pageant mothers who knew JonBenet have commented on the inappropriateness of her routines. Her pageant coach claims that these moves did not come from her. Apparently, Patsy herself taught her daughter how to do her very adult bumps and grinds.

Christmas Night at the Whites has an atmosphere of an initiation, an audition to see if all the hard work had paid off. JonBenet apparently passed the test, and may even have been scheduled as the main attraction at the next major event. The California informant, as reported by her attorney Lee Hill, has suggested that JonBenet was killed at the party. This raises some interesting questions. If she had been killed at the party, which must occasionally happen given the nature of the goings-on, then her death would have been handled in a more direct manner. Certainly, no one on the inside of the group would have concocted something like the ransom note.

The most likely scenario is that all went relatively well at the audition. It is possible that JonBenet was not sexually violated, although sex play, including asphyxiation probably did occur. However, it just may be that Patsy did not fully grasp what was about to happen to her little angel. Patsy’s own abuse and sexualization at the hands of her father, Don Paugh, would allow her not to see the sexual objectification of her routines as anything out of the ordinary. The group itself may have appealed to her Christian and mystical side. Who knows exactly what, in her mind, Patsy was training the child to become?

However, after the Christmas party, something snapped in Patsy. In the early morning hours of the 26th, Patsy sat up at the kitchen table pondering what to do. She wrote the ransom note to carefully send a message to John, and subliminally to her father. She goes upstairs, gets the sleeping JonBenet out of bed, and carries her to the basement.

Patsy probably prayed, thinking of Abraham and Isaac, and the great sin for which she must atone. Just as in the letter, her intent in the murder was to leave clues, point a finger, at what she felt was the true evil, the true perpetrators, John and her father, or John and Fleet White. Praying, she slugged JonBenet with the flashlight.

The child awoke from the blow and screamed, once. Patsy stopped her scream with the garrote and strangled her to death. To make the point even more clear, she sexually assaulted her with the same paint brush used to fashion the garrote. Then, without removing the garrote, she dresses her and wraps her in a blanket in the far corner of the basement.

When everything is staged to her satisfaction, she goes upstairs, and puts the flashlight on the kitchen counter. Perhaps she sits for a while in the dark brooding, perhaps she does a load of laundry, and when it is time to get up, still in the clothes she wore to the party the night before, she goes downstairs to find the note.

John of course is confused. Burke is up and running around screaming. Patsy is on the phone to 911. But as John reads the note, it becomes clear that this no ordinary kidnapping. How soon John suspected Patsy is unknown, but it must have been soon. At no time does John show the least regard for the instructions in the note, which warn him that if talks to anyone, JonBenet will be killed.

John gets on the phone and calls the Whites and the others. By 7 o’clock that morning, there were nine people, not including the Boulder Police, wandering through the Ramsey house. By the time the body was found at 1 o’clock that afternoon, no such thing as a crime scene existed. John’s immediate reaction was to call his pilot and tell him to stand by in the company jet. Patsy of course was hysterical, making a variety of bizarre comments, such as publicly begging their priest to bring her back to life.

Soon however, Patsy was tranquilized, becoming by the end of the day totally incoherent. In the meanwhile, the word spread, reaching perhaps many other people in the Boulder community, as Alex Hunter speculated. The pedophiles needed damage control.

And so, two and a half weeks after the story broke, and five days after Alex Hunter decided to quit his job, the JonBenet Ramsey murder case remains in limbo. The real story almost emerged, but where formally there was a media rush, now the quiet is deafening. The Daily Camera’s stories have been picked up by few other media outlets. And now, with Alex Hunter soon to be gone, we face the possibility that the story will never be told.

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Wed, October 13 2010 » Law

7 Responses

  1. sharon zirn October 17 2010 @ 10:32 pm

    I have always believed Burke killed Jon Benet. Take a look at the footage of the funeral in Atlanta, GA.
    Burke is smiling ear to ear and appears so happy that he is almost skipping. Sure he was 9 years old, but murder and age are not mutually exclusive.

  2. firetown October 17 2010 @ 10:39 pm

    That would explain so incredibly much including the demeanour of the parents. And of course, they had their reasons to hide the truth. Question now is what penalty would be appropriate.

  3. Moonbeam October 25 2010 @ 5:16 am

    I read that Judge Judy also thought Burke had done it, but I also read the evidence showed that JB had to have been carried downstairs, not dragged. So I’m wondering if she was lured downstairs or was unconscious and carried downstairs to continue the cover-up.

    Has anyone done any tests to see from what part of the house her scream emanated in order to be heard by the neighbor? If it was in the middle of the night, and the house is two-story, and the windows presumably were closed because it was winter, could the neighbor have heard the scream if the neighbor also lived in a two-story house upstairs and was sleeping upstairs at the time if JB had screamed from the basement? Was that neighbor’s house also two-story, and if so, could she have heard the scream from a closed room in JB’s basement?

    If not, then JB must have been attacked upstairs, in which case an adult had to have carried her downstairs afterward. Burke was not big enough to have carried her without dragging. However, he could have knocked her out. He could be a sociopath who acted happy at the funeral (and previously expressed disappointment at their trip being cancelled because JB had just died). Even children that young usually will show some grief at a time like that. I know children are resilient, but that is ridiculously callous, in my opinion. Of course, if he has asperger’s, that’s a different story. However, I don’t know if he could have refrained from acting out in some way afterward, unless he really was a sociopath (or unless his parents had him put under hypnosis to wipe out the memory to protect him).

    The intruder story is silly, though. Parents who really thought their child was killed by an intruder would have turned over the clothing they had been wearing to the police immediately so those fibers could be distinguished from any the “real killer” left behind, they would have submitted to polygraphs immediately, etc. Even Patsy’s 911 call sounded staged to me. Also, I think too many people are ignoring the comments of the first officer on the scene, a woman whom I believe was later fired. Probably more people would have listened to her opinion if she’d been a man, but she is rarely mentioned in anything I read online on this case.

    I’m not convinced the sexual assault was related to the murder, but may have been done after JB was believed dead in order to cover-up previous sexual assault by Burke (wasn’t he caught playing “doctor” with her previously?) because they knew such evidence would have shown up in the autopsy and they wanted to protect him. This scenario makes sense even if Patsy is the one who struck the fatal blow by accident — previous sexual assault needed to be covered over, it would seem. That would also explain reluctance to take polygraphs. JB had talked previously about someone in a robe standing over her and hurting her in the vagina area, ostensibly in front of witnesses. Rather than a sex ring ritual, could it have been her brother playing doctor in a doctor outfit?

  4. Moonbeam October 25 2010 @ 5:28 am

    My above comments were just speculation, of course. In light of the former housekeeper’s comments about Patsy’s mood swings, the bed wetting/rage scenario in which Patsy accidentally kills her seems more likely. Then they would have had to stage the sexual assault/strangulation/kidnap not only to obscure the original crime, but also to perhaps cover-up previous sexual abuse which probably had nothing to do with Patsy, but of which she was aware. JB’s medical history of vaginal issues, broken fingers, falling down stairs and being hit with a golf club by her brother makes me think that just saying JB fell and cracked her head might not have led to criminal charges for her death, but the previous sexual assaults would still have been revealed in an autopsy. This is just all so sad. Even if Patsy did it, she must have been so, so remorseful when she was thinking more clearly. What scares me is that did she and John really believe JB was already dead, or did they stage the cover-up to protect themselves if there would have been a chance to save JB if they had called for help?

  5. D. December 19 2010 @ 9:44 am

    This is the most ridiculous theory I’ve ever heard and there are some doozies out there. No one who calls on Jesus as much as Patsy did would ever sacrifice their own child. People are so blind that Christian beliefs seem bizarre. It amazes me that no one ever theorizes that the intruder could have been someone who knew the Ramseys well or one who got another person to try and kidnap JonBenet. The clues all seem to fit something like that but people are so focused on Patsy just because she was pretty and very wealthy. Their wealth and intelligence are what got their sucesses in life and what kept them out jail. Even with dna evidence people are still insisting on the most outlandish and ridiculous accusations . And she was delusional, bizarre and ritualistic?

  6. William December 27 2010 @ 5:30 am

    Burke did not do it.

    If this case went to court DNA would loom large. That male DNA has to be accounted for.

    Someone is missing.

    The head blow was done with great force and deliberation to confuse the cause of death and nature of the crime. (adult male)

    The alarm system was disarmed. Why?

    Weren’t pieces of that brush handle found in JB and suggest she was alive when that happened(sex assault) due to white blood cells not being able to reach the wound in time because of death?

    John does not seem to be into the cover up that morning.

    What about the flashlight? Highly likely that it was the object used for the head blow. Highly likely that it was wiped down as JB crotch area was wiped down as well. (Patsy would not need to wipe her down for she is her mother and would help JB with toilet duties)
    Was flashlight even owned by Ramseys? Not great do it yourselfers I take it. It is certainly possible for them to own a mag light but I am somewhat doubtful that they would have a working (fresh batteries) like that one. And once in police evidence it disappeared?/ then reappeared? The story is not clear on this. Perhaps the original flashlight is gone and replaced with another since a mag light is a mag light and not unique.

  7. Charlotte July 4 2011 @ 8:43 pm

    She did it none of it makes sense the ransom note is the massive clue it rambled it had a womans touch nagging tones and professional kidnappers would keep the note short and sweet so not to put there identity at risk she did it and John helped covered it up she said she would hear John get out of bed at night to ise the bathroom but her daughter screaming and someone in the house writing a three page rAnsom note did not the best bit of all Christmas night two small children and no alarms set John said the next day I forgot to set it meaning he always sets it too many coincidences for me

    and why when ur daughter has been murdered would wait 2yrs to be convinced to take a lie detector test !!!!!!! There is no excuse anyone would give there right arm to help eliminate themselves from the case so efforts to find the true killer are put in to action not hinder it .it was her always has been always will be the only reason why they were not charged or John has not been brought in the police messed it up in such a catastrophic way they don’t have a leg to stand on too charge him now in this case saving embarrassment for police service is what is stopping anyone paying for this sometimes really what is most obvious is the answer it does not have to be the most difficult to figure out .

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