So then they'd have a body to get rid of. Unless you are suggesting they should leave it rotting in the cellar.
Nope. They get rid of the body completely. That would be a lot better than having the police find the body in the house.
I understand you don't see the evidence the same way I do. But you can't discount JR finding the body here by saying it doesn't make sense. When people stage a crime scene to cover up the accidental killing of their child (a not that rare of an event, sadly) you have people acting rashly, not necessarily rationally. If you stage the scene and expect the police to discover the scene you set up and they don't, you wouldn't reevaluate your plan, you'd find a way to have the scene discovered.
Then there is no point in debating the reason or logic of the Ramseys
or the killer. Any scenario that might seem unreasonable, we can use the same logic and say, "Well, they might not have been acting rationally."
And yet it has the opposite effect on your assessment.
It doesn't have the "opposite effect." Nobody is saying his finding the body is proof that John Ramsey is innocent. I am saying that his finding the body cannot be considered suspicious, or an indicator that he is guilty.
The problem with the scenario is simple:
if the killer left the body in the house (he did), and
if John Ramsey was instructed to conduct a "top to bottom" search of the house (he was), it was awfully likely that he would be the one to find the body. He'd probably be even more likely than the police to find it, since he knows the house better. Had he found the body, say, in the middle of the woods, or in some place where it was unlikely he would be coincidentally, it might be suspicious. But given the circumstances, the whole thing is a wash. It's not inherently suspicious.
I agree in and of itself, finding the body is not evidence of guilt. However, finding the body was consistent with knowing where it was.
It's also consistent with him
not knowing where it was -- and coming across it during a room to room search.
Since it was in his house, and since he was told to search the house, even if he didn't know where the body was, it was pretty likely he would find it sooner or later -- particularly if he was instructed to do a thorough search of the entire house.
But not the paintbrushes. And not taking the child to the basement instead of out of the house. And not taking the time to fashion an elaborate garrote. And not smashing the kid's head and strangling the child.
Still consistent with an intruder. The basement was the ingress/egress route. He very well have tried to knock her out, seriously injured her, then realizing she wasn't dead, made the garrote to finish the job. Or maybe he really did simply want to kill her, and the head blow didn't do it, so he made the garrote. Either way, nothing is inconsistent there. The only thing clear is that the garrote was not necessarily a planned event. That doesn't make it unlikely. Note above -- much like the Ramseys as the killer, there's no reason to think an intruder wouldn't veer from his plan, especially if it was disrupted.
And not writing the ransom note including writing it twice.
Why not? It actually makes a lot of sense to write the note in the house, with items from the house. The risk is spending longer in the house. But the reward is that there are no items to potentially trace back to you. The killer brought the things he needed that he couldn't reasonably expect to easily find in someone else's house (duct tape and rope, possibly a stun gun), and didn't bring items that he knew would be pretty likely to easily find (a pen and paper). There's also the possibility that the ransom note was spontaneous. He got there, felt confident after he realized everyone was asleep and probably wouldn't catch him, and left the note as a taunt to the Ramseys. It's the equivalent of saying, "Not only did I kill your daughter in your home, but I hung around in the house and wrote a note on your own pad of paper and you couldn't do a thing about it." The practice notes, interestingly, were never found, much like the duct tape and rope. If the killer was practicing to ensure disguised his handwriting, it would make perfect sense to take them with him.
Why leave the body? Either you murder the kid and leave, or write the ransom note and take the child, dead or alive with you. Or you have a bizarre sex fantasy involving the garrote and you take the child to a location where you will have privacy and time.
Why would the killer take a dead body with him?? That wouldn't make sense. Then he has to dispose of it (much like why you suggest the Ramseys would want the body to be found). Even walking in the middle of the night, carrying around a dead body would be a pretty risky thing to do -- and for what advantage? If his goal was to murder JonBenet, then there is no reason he would take the body with him. He'd
want the Ramseys to find it. If his goal was to kidnap and it went wrong, he sure wouldn't want to carry the body around with him. Also, if the killer exited through a basement window, it wouldn't be particularly convenient to take a body with him -- even one as small as JonBenet.
Why go to a middle room in the basement as well? That's like purposefully fleeing down a dead end.
It was a directly forward from the stairs, and not far from his exit route.
Here is a diagram of the house. The killer went down the stairs, went straight ahead (also where he picked up the paintbrush), garroted JonBenet, left her body, then proceeded on to his exit route. He had just spent a decent amount of time upstairs in the house, I doubt he was concerned about going an extra room into the basement.
Either way, I could ask the same question about the Ramseys: if they wanted the body to be found, why stick it in an out of the way place? Why not put it somewhere a bit more likely to be discovered. Why not leave it in the room with the window? That would reinforce the idea that the killer escaped there.
You can take any number of single pieces of evidence here and say this isn't logical if [X] committed the murder. But when you look at the entire picture, there is no outsider hypothesis that fits all the evidence better than a family murder covered up.
Obviously I disagree.
Would an outsider murder the child in the bedroom? Upstairs where other family members were? It makes a bit of noise to crack a person's skull as badly as JBR's skull was fractured. Do you think the guy took the kid to the basement instead of going out the door? There was no murder scene found. So that means the killer had time to erase traces of the scene. That's not a guy in a hurry to leave. Why would he even bother given he was leaving the body behind?
I'm not sure what you mean by "there was no murder scene found." I haven't read anything that suggests the killer did any extensive clean-up of the crime scene.
As for whether an intruder would murder a child in the bedroom... sure, why not? The Lindbergh baby was snatched from his crib while his parents were
awake and in another room. So this isn't without precedent. And yes, I think he took her to the basement -- because that's where he entered and exited the house. Much less risky then strolling out the front door -- even at night.
The garrote was not made and brought to the room. JBR's hair was threaded through it. That means it was fashioned around the child's neck, not made and then wrapped around the neck.
Yes -- a particularly brutal and deliberate method of killing somebody. To believe the Ramseys did this, you'd not just have to believe that they accidentally hit her over the head, but that they then finished the job by brutally strangling her to death. That would not just make them murdering parents, it would make them almost sociopaths.
I'd like to hear your hypothesis of how an outsider would have proceeded through the house, what occurred where and when that makes more sense than an accidental killing during physical abuse and a subsequent staged crime scene to cover it up. It's not hard, if you put the parents in as murderer and accomplice in the cover up. But try to do it with an intruder and you need a lot of stretching of the probable.
Enters through the basement. Moves upstairs. Writes the ransom note (practicing a couple of times to disguise his handwriting). Moves upstairs to JonBenet's room. Uses a stungun (maybe) to subdue her (consistent with wounds on her body). Ties her up and duct tapes her mouth. Brings her to the basement. Bashes her over the head, and then garrotes her (or the reverse. Since the garrote was made with something nearby, I tend to think it was used to 'finish' the job after the blow to the head didn't quite kill her). Maybe he does it for sexual thrill, maybe because he intended to kill her all along. Maybe she gets noisy or uncooperative and he tries to knock her out and hits her too hard. Who knows. But he drops the body off, and exits through the window again -- taking with him the duct tape, rope, and practice letters.
Some of that is political. Defense attorneys can always produce experts who say there's no evidence. The Ramsey's had some influence in that police department which could explain the opinions you note.
Lou Smit was hired by the Boulder PD to head the investigation. I doubt the Ramsey's "influence" did anything to him, and there is certainly no evidence it did. The Boulder PD was pretty focused on the Ramseys being guilty, so it's tough to argue the Ramseys "influence" had much impact. The Federal Judge made her ruling in a libel case brought against the Ramseys, so it is unlikely their "influence" had anything to do with her assessment. The only person on the list I gave who was "produced" by the defense was Douglas, who is otherwise a very well respected and experienced investigator. Like it or not, there are some very experienced, qualified people who find the intruder theory
more compelling than the Ramseys being guilty.
The DNA evidence of an unknown male was too small to also make sense. If he had gloves on, you wouldn't find it in the places it was found. If he didn't you'd have a lot more of it and maybe fingerprints. The amount of DNA we are talking about here is consistent with contamination from any number of sources, most likely on JBR's dirty hands.
Dirty hands that co-mingled the
same DNA with bloodspots in her panties, as well as two separate areas on the outside of her tights? That's stretching it. The DNA found makes perfect sense if the killer wore gloves and then took them off to sexually assault JonBenet.
Did the police find finger or glove prints? So did the guy wipe everything off he touched? That's a lot of cleanup.
The crime scene was so badly botched, with so many people -- friends, family, police etc. walking around, if the killer was wearing gloves, it wouldn't shock me if they missed the glove prints, or any glove prints they did find were virtually worthless, since they could have easily come from the police themselves or anyone else who was there. Plus, being winter, it wouldn't be shocking to find glove prints. In any event, I don't even know if they searched for glove prints. But they did find brown fibers that
could be consistent with a pair of gloves, on JonBenet's body. They were fibers that didn't match anything else they found in the house, in any event -- another sign of a third party being there.
The tape and rope being pieces within the house but not on their original spools is not hard to imagine. The Ramseys tossing the tape roll and/or rope source is not implausible.
Except the police searched all over the police -- the house, trash cans, etc. -- for them and found nothing. And if they were smart enough to get rid of the duct tape and rope, why would they leave the pad of paper and pen in plain sight? Why leave
part of the paintbrush in the art tub and then get rid of another part of it (one piece was never found)?
Like I said -- I wouldn't say 100% that they are innocent -- but an intruder scenario absolutely fits the evidence that is there, and it fits at least as well as any other scenario. There is nothing in the evidence that rules out an intruder, and there is plenty of evidence that suggests that there could have been one.