Posted Thursday, December 17, 2009 by
gastedmyflabbers
While we remember the little ones taken too soon, like JonBenet Ramsey and so many others, keep room in your heart for those in need. It's not too late to give a little Christmas ...
"Sadly, there are so many other innocent children to be added to this list. Everyone of them should be looking forward to a glorious Christmas morning. Never forget the missing and always keep in your heart those that were lost...."[...read more]
Posted Wednesday, December 16, 2009 by
gastedmyflabbers
In 2008 when the Ramseys were cleared as suspects in the murder of their daughter JonBenet, DNA processes were used to pinpoint the yet to be identified man that left his skin cells, biological and tissue behind at the crime scene. The reactions by many was that the forensic method used to isolate the skin cell DNA was too new to be relied upon, and an in sundry list of contentions and challenges from professionals and the public alike who were taken back by advances in DNA technology that in reality, has been around since the time the murder was committed back in 1996.
Like discovery and advances in DNA technology other science disciplines are exploding through shared data and technology and a natural progression will be how these advances will be applied to forensic investigation, perhaps already in play with evidence types or known circumstances associated with JonBenet's murder - -
"In a speech given just a few weeks before he was lost at sea off the California coast in January 2007, Jim Gray, a database software pioneer and a Microsoft researcher, sketched out an argument that computing was fundamentally transforming the practice of science.
Dr. Gray called the shift a “fourth paradigm.” The first three paradigms were experimental, theoretical and, more recently, computational science. He explained this paradigm as an evolving era in which an “exaflood” of observational data was threatening to overwhelm scientists. The only way to cope with it, he argued, was a new generation of scientific computing tools to manage, visualize and analyze the data flood..."[...read more]
Posted Tuesday, December 15, 2009 by
gastedmyflabbers
Recently I have been scanning studies and debates on the affects and safety of stun guns, with a specific interest in dangers to to children. A good number of the tests in the studies, and there are several in the past few years, were performed on anesthetized pigs. Experts and investigators experimented with pigs over a decade ago to recreate the stun gun marks found on JonBenet's body. Interest in the past few years has increased due to accidental deaths and few studies, if any, on the use of stun guns were available at the time one was used to torture or subdue JonBenet. Since there were so few studies about stun guns circa 1996, it might be reasonable to project that proper use by stun gun owners was a void as well - -
"A stun gun is a hand-held electronic device that produces a high-voltage pulse that can immobilize a person for several minutes ...The stun gun has actually gained notoriety as the weapon of choice for muggers and rapists. There was even an expert that believed that Jonbenet Ramsey was first stunned by one of these devices before being raped then murdered.
In the real world what could possibly go wrong?
1. Did you even bring it?
2. Can you find it in the bottom of your bag?
3. Do you know how to work it?
4. When was the last time you changed the batteries?
5. What is the weather where you are at? If it is winter, the attacker may have several layers of clothing on in addition to a thick winter coat. Thus requiring that you touch skin.
6. If the current is not applied correctly, the attacker may become enraged thus magnifying the threat.
7. etc. etc. etc.
Like anything else the outcome is what you will it to be. You must first have the will to make the outcome what you want...."[....read more]
Posted Monday, December 14, 2009 by
gastedmyflabbers
Lin Wood, the brilliant and highly regarded attorney that represents the Ramseys against false accusations made about family members in reference to the murder of JonBenet, weighs in on Tiger Woods public relations nightmare - -
"I believe a lawyer has a duty to advocate for a client in a court of law and in the court of public opinion.
I have long been an advocate for several high-profile clients over the years who found their reputations under attack in the court of public opinion by members of the media or "talking heads" who use the media as a forum to publish accusations or express opinions based on incorrect information, incomplete information or too often, no information at all.
These clients include Richard Jewell, falsely accused in the Olympic bombing, John and Patsy Ramsey, falsely accused in connection with the brutal murder of their six-year old daughter, JonBenet, and the victim in the Kobe Bryant case whose privacy was invaded and whose reputation threatened...My advice remains consistent, keep private matters private" [...read more]
Posted Monday, December 14, 2009 by
gastedmyflabbers
Law week online recently published the updated report of 1500 Colorado unsolved homicides and missing persons cases, the murder of JonBenet Ramsey on that list.
In Boulder County, population 291,288, there are 2 unresolved missing persons cases: Rex Douglas in 1984 and Jon Truscott Haynes in 1981. Cold case homicides in Boulder County tally up to 17, dating back to the murder of Dorothy Gay Howard in 1954. The City of Boulder Police Department is listed as the agency of record in 4 of the 17 unresolved homicide cases in the county, the balance worked by the Sheriff's department.
Posted Sunday, December 13, 2009 by
gastedmyflabbers
Pondering the source of curious comments on her blog, mystery author Catherine C. Mambretti dips a toe into pedophile ring conspiracy theories around the murder of JonBenet Ramsey and abduction of Madeleine McCann - -
"Recently this blog has been haunted by some “comments” that are possibly spam but possibly simply illiterate conspiracy theorists. My only recourse has been to shut off comments on current posts...
Organized Rings of Child Exploitation
The murder of JonBenet Ramsey is thought by some to have been inspired by or instigated by child pornographers: when John Mark Karr was under suspicion, I heard a private detective say on the air that he was on the trail of a child pornography ring. Madeline Mccann’s parents are convinced their daughter was kidnapped by pedophiles. And, sadly, these are not baseless conspiracy theories. The FBI devotes a considerable amount of its resources to preventing and solving crimes against children by organized criminal gangs..." [...read more]
Posted Saturday, December 12, 2009 by
gastedmyflabbers
The folks over at NOW (and elsewhere) are promoting pictures of Suri Cruise, out and about in a pair of dance shoes in comparison to JonBenet Ramsey in a pageant costume photo-shoot. I just don't care how Katie is dressing Suri; her child, her choice. But NOW wants to know readers views of the pictures of Suri wearing dance shoes or lip gloss.
Fair enough.
In turn, perhaps the paparazzi is game for asking parents how they feel about pedophile's gazing and redistribution of innocent images of children, surreptitiously captured by these companies that are then traded, displayed and discussed on pedo websites without the child's parents knowledge or approval --
"Suri Cruise has been photographed wearing her gold high-heeled shoes again and appearing to apply lipgloss....Katie, 30, has defended her decision to let daughter Suri wear shoes with heels.
‘Like every little girl, she loves my high heels,' Katie explains.‘They are actually ballroom dancing shoes for kids. I found them for her and she loves them.'
Jonbenet Ramsey - who was murdered in 1996 at the age of 6 - was a child beauty queen....[...read more]
Posted Friday, December 11, 2009 by
gastedmyflabbers
Writing that the story of JonBenet Ramsey is thecontemporary version of the Lindbergh baby kidnapping, Chris Larsen winds up a rant about quality news versus media madness with the question
"Is it possible our value system has corrupted our reality?"
I don't know if there is some new brand of corruption of reality. I don't see this generation is all that different than those past in that respect. The lines that once defined 'society pages' from political, financial, local and world events are blurred within different delivery methods and more of them - -
"For her birthday, my father would always give his aunt a subscription to The Christian Science Monitor.
He didn't do this because of any political or religious views that great newspaper would propound. He liked The Monitor simply because it refused to sensationalize the "Lindbergh baby story."
For those too young to remember or who may have missed that paragraph in your American history books, the kidnapping and death of Charles Lindbergh's baby was the JonBenet Ramsey story of its day.
I bring this up because the last few weeks have been pretty much filled with nonstop stories about a professional golfer crashing his expensive SUV in the middle of the night and a pair of con artists crashing a party at the president's house...."[...read more]
Chris Larsen, who formerly worked in public relations and lobbying in Washington, lives in Southern Pines. Contact him at cdlars42@gmail.com.
We can quibble about whether there ever really was an investigation rather than a police instigated campaign to enmesh the parents in an ordeal-by-tabloid, but rather than continue to spin our wheels lets just focus for the nonce on making some progress in this perplexing and frustratingly maddening case.
I've been focusing for quite a while now on just what the stumbling blocks might be for this case. Its obvious we can not go back in time and do a neighborhood canvass which is not only the universally accepted procedure but also the one most likely to be helpful. The BPD's error is indellible. It can not be overcome. There is never any way to do a historical canvass. There is no such thing as a "cold-case canvass". There never will be.
I've suggested that we draw some wisdom from Friedrich Durrenmatt's The Pledge which dealt not only with a perverted serial killer but also with the interplay between a methodical scientific investigator and a purely random event. I've particularly noted in another of Durrenmatt's works, The Judge and his Hangman, that the name of the policeman translates to Chance and the name of the criminologist to Doctor Light of Lights. Durrenmatt's sense of humor is well known. Nothing herein contained is meant to indicate that I consider the torture, rape and murder of JonBenet Ramsey to be a random event or that anything other than perhaps the letters SBTC were selected in a random manner.
I've also suggested that we focus on the initial actions of the BPD prior to the time they turned so stubbornly defensive of themselves and their turf and turned so obsessively angry at the Ramseys. This involved a focus on the early questioning which I thought was largely a sensible set of questions to ask. Who are your enemies, who thinks you owe them money, who has been around JonBenet when neither parent was present? I think if you put aside the police inspired and tabloid perpetuated feeding frenzy that soon developed and continues to this day, you will agree that those initial questions were quite sensible indeed. Its almost as if you were seeing a film wherein the Keystone Kop actually knows how to twirl his nightstick. The rest of the film may be pure slapstick but those first few scenes of competent nightstick twirling sure make an impression if you will only pause to think about it.
I've also suggested that we broaden the cultural perspective involved in the investigation. Now ofcourse sociology and anthropology are of great interest but the question is are they of relevance to the investigation. They certainly open up the field of candidates rather than narrowing it. Sleuths generally prefer to narrow the field of candidates!
What sort of cultures or subcultures have I suggested? Oh it really doesn't matter much, but I've suggested that we look at foreign males more closely. This is because of the different value systems but also because they have at times a difficulty in establishing relationships with adult American females. I realize its a bit of a longshot to suggest that a combination of inability to have normal adult relations just happened to combine with a hatred of the Ramseys but we could use a longshot in this case. We surely could!
I've also suggested we look at what might be termed culture-by-shared-values or what a marketing oriented person would now term an affinity group. One such group would be what I've termed the "I don't get mad, I get even" type person. These people are found in prisons, in the police, in the military and in many other areas of life. One place to encounter them is in a real gym rather than a fern-foliaged foo-foo health club. If you start with a health club and strip away the valet parking, the ferns, the perfumed ladies wearing fetching outfits and bedecked in eye shadow, you eventually get to a real gym. No frills, no marketing, no nonsense. You go to that gym to work out, not meet some broad. The gym will have males from many walks of life and will have males from many different income levels, but they will tend to share certain values. Amongst the shared values is the "I don't get mad, I get even" ethic. Every man at that gym, irrespective of his occupation or wealth or interests in life keeps himself in shape. Every man at that gym puts in time with a body bag rather than being some sort of rythmic show-off with a punching bag. Its a place wherein wealth varies, age varies, strength varies, but values tend not to vary all that much. Its the intersection of this sort of a group with the Ramsey family that might benefit the investigation.
I've also suggested we look at situations involving other cultural norms than we might normally consider for Boulder, Colorado. I used as an example the incident of controlled flight into terrain of an Egyptian airliner carrying homeward a disgraced pilot who was unable to curtail his actions towards American females so as to make them culturally acceptable in this country, although they would clearly have been perfectly acceptable and expected in his own society. I've suggested a simple interaction of the Ramseys with a man of a foreign culture might have been sufficient to set off a chain of events that would otherwise not be of the remotest interest to a sleuth. Most homicide investigators in Boulder, Colorado would not take particular note of some rather trivial act such as Patsy Ramsey having asked an Arab male to wash his dinner plate. Most homicide investigators would not look askance at Patsy Ramsey having been generous in supplementing the woefully inadequate food at the church event which took place in their home. Yet we must not forget that there are indeed foreigners in Boulder and in Charelevoix. Is this too a longshot? Ofcourse it is a longshot when viewed from one aspect, but when viewed from the aspect of a fundamental question of who are your enemies it becomes a fairly sensible point of inquiry. An enemy usually chooses to be your enemy for reasons that are good and sufficient to his viewpoint. And some people have viewpoints that are quite different than those of the average sleuth. The Ramseys statements to the police about not having enemies really means that they do not have enemies from the point of view of the Ramseys. However, its the point of view of the demented child-killer that is the relevant vantage point. His point of view may be difficult for us to visualize and we will never be able to comprehend it intellecutally or emotionally, but we should indeed be able to comprehend the necessity for our focusing on his point of view rather than our own.
One fundamental stumbling block in the investigation is that the squeaky clean Ramseys simply were not aware of anyone who was a child molester or anyone who had any reason to hate JonBenet or hate anyone in the Ramsey family. It might be different if John Ramsey had been an Enron executive, but Access Graphics was viewed by most as a good place to work. The atmosphere was relaxed and friendly and it was a generally open place without secrets or cliques of any sort. It is possible that the BPD got their dander up at John Ramsey's insistence that he had no enemies or skeletons in his closet but after a thorough investigation by the police and the well-funded tabloids no enemies or skeletons at all have been found. And lets face it, those tabloids can hire more private detectives than could be fielded by all the police departments in the entire state of Colorado. And those private detectives would have really fat wallets when it came to paying for information, something the state of Colorado can't do. So if the well-funded and very experienced tabloids can't come up with any real dirt, it doesn't exist.
I thought that a way around this stumbling block of "no enemies" might be to broaden our sense of what might provoke someone to become an enemy. A cultural view might help us in that regard. We would not necessarily be looking for someone in a deviant subculture we might then be only looking for someone in a different culture. By broadening the definition of enemy we just might be able to crack this barrier to progress in the investigation since not much headway was being made by focusing on deviant subcultures.
I also thought that a way around the "no enemies" stumbling block might be to consider some of the aspects of the homicide that indicate a "mission kill". This would make the child murder less of an act of a depraved pervet and more an act of a person who was dedicated to a principle of some sort and who viewed the crime as an assasination rather than a murder. Ofcourse that in itself is a bit of a stretch but a sleuth's desperation knows no bounds! I suggested the corporate employment policy imposed upon John Ramsey by the defense contractor of which they were a subsidiary might be a source of that "principle" that for some might turn child-murder into assasination, but that alley seems to be a dead-end since the BPD, two District Attorneys and the FBI have done nothing in that direction. Some have suggested a real estate transaction or a zoning variance involving peripheral players in the case might have been an impetus for what would otherwise be viewed as improper retaliatory measures in our society. My view that the case might best be described as a mission kill is butressed by the lack of any similar crimes in the decade following the murder of JonBenet Ramsey. If we view the crime as simply a pervert who enjoys strangling little girls and is somewhat weird about his penchant for leaving notes at the crime scene, we come up against the immutable stumbling block of "n". How do you have a serial killer when n equals one. How do you develope additional clues when n equals one. How do you maintain confidence that you are chasing a kinky, demented pervert when n equals one? Kinky demented homicidal perverts don't suddenly get cured, they continue to rape, torture and kill. Its what they like, its their hobby! Its their meaning in life. Its their fun and quite likely its their only fun. So why would such a demented pervert suddenly decide to limit himself to but one venture into the netherworld of madness? Or are we being too strict in our determination of the value of "n"? Do other crimes actually exist that our intruder has committed but simply altered his signature pattern sufficiently to avoid our efforts to classify him? Did he learn to bring a book of crossword puzzles with him so as to kill time rather than to compose weird ransom notes to while away the hours? Is that why n still equals only one?
We have the attempted rape at a fairly nearby and large home which everyone but Linda Arndt seems to consider to have been an entry during the day and a lying in wait situation. Now personally I am of the opinion that this probably was not the same intruder, but the BPD reached the conclusion that it was not an intruder at all. And they reached that conclusion instantaneously. Is it possible that n is equal to 2? Or more? I don't know. How strict should our narrow-margin classifier be? If we have more "n" we surely have more clues and more chances to get the perpetrator. Yet if we erroneously introduce a false-positive into our calculation of "n" we only introduce conflicting and erroneous clues. Where do we draw the line? If we have drawn the line properly then what do we conclude from this n=1 situation? No one goes from normal person to demented homicidal torturer and rapist of a helpless six year old girl and then promptly shifts back to their former self. If n really does equal 1 and only 1, then I think it is proper to conclude that the target was the Ramsey family and that the intruder was not a pervert but only engaged in perversions as a tactic to mislead the investigators. Yet once we conclude that the crime was simply to injure the parents rather than fulfill a demented lust for a six year old girl, are we any closer to finding the intruder? Its particularly hard to find someone who merely wanted to hurt the parents when that darned "list of enemies" is so utterly blank.
In reality, it is clear that the "no enemies" stumbling block is a difficult one to circumvent. I merely suggest it might be easier to see enemies if we look for enemies that according to our cultural values would not exist but which might exist in other cultures. Ofcourse the danger is that we might start seeing enemies that are not in fact actually there. And it is definitely a mistake for a sleuth to allow his desperation to distort that which he observes.
I've also thought that a disgruntled investor in some prior corporate entity might have become angry at the financial success of John Ramsey's Access Graphics. The recent publicity may have triggered a desire for revenge. I considered it unlikely that such a revenge would take the form of the rape and torture and murder of a helpless six year old girl, but I felt it was a proper avenue of inquiry for an investigator to make. An investigator must plod along despite a sense that the particular lead he is following is not likely to pan out. So far, it does not appear as if there is anyone who feels he was cheated by any prior partners involving the entities that later became Access Graphics. And ofcourse we should recall that most of that publicity was limited to the Colorado area so it is less likely that prior investors in geographically remote corporate entitities would have even become aware of it.
I've also thought of the Value Added Retailer business model in general. I've not found anyone who would really have an objection to a firm that buys high-end unix boxes, high-end graphics cards, high-end monitors and links them all together to work seemlessly with AutoCad drafting software. It really is a win-win situation. Sure, its the business world and there are competitors and the ordinary working world situations that develop, but its not a cut-throat business atmosphere at all. Its hard enough to imagine an enemy and its even more difficult to imagine the type of enemy who having a business related grudge opts to work his mad off by doing battle with a six year old girl. When you add in such things as gratuitous but modest use of a stun gun as well as bondage trappings its hard to figure out just how a business oriented grudge could be worked off that way. Wouldn't a man given to such excesses have succumbed to his prior excesses in his life? How did he manage to get old enough to develop a business grudge if he is the type to fly off the handle at rather trivial or even totally imaginary wrongs?
I feel my head is spinning because I just don't know what direction to go in. And this constant spinning-my-wheels is futile and foolish. I just can't think what other options are available. Its quite likely that somewhere in the files is a forgotten lead that wound up being buried because an investigator was overworked or unenthusiastic due to the BPD's administrators being so convinced that the parents had done it. I sometimes feel we really can't blame some anonymous drone for inadvertantly burying a clue if the official party-line within the department is the parents did it. Just as it is probably wrong for us to blame the uniformed officers who fruitlessly searched the basement. It was the supervisory detective who gave them vague instructions and who failed to obtain detailed reports from them. They wandered around the basement not really knowing what they were supposed to do. It was sort of like being on a routine patrol and happening to turn down a particular street. They didn't do anything special or fulfill any specific mandate. They just pretty much strolled around not quite knowing what they were supposed to do. Oh, if they had encountered a large pool of blood they would have reacted to it. And if they had encountered a stack of particularly interesting jazz recordings in the basement they may well have paused to paw through them out of curiosity, but in reality the uniformed cops were really just strolling thru the basement without any clear sense of exactly what it is they were supposed to be doing. They did not know what they were to do or how thoroughly they were to be looking through those nooks and crannies. A quick "once-through" or a detailed examination or something inbetween? Linda Arndt gave no guidance and received no feedback.
We can cast a jaundiced eye at the journalism integrity of Dateline and at the history of Perverted Justice but watching those episodes we surely note that many of the guests would clearly be of interest to an endocrinologist. We also know that weak grip strength is an indicator of low testosterone values but we can't quite go around shaking hands with half the males in Colorado. Prowling the internet for pedophiles might prove worthwhile but after over a decade he has surely learned how to keep hidden. No matter what project we might embark on to snare one particular pedophile out of all the filth out there, we still have the fundamental question. Is the project worthwhile when we can only say that the intruder was probably a pedophile?
I've mentioned before about the massive investment of time and manpower in the Unabomber investigation when all along one wise soul at the end of the conference table kept saying its not a disgruntled aeronautical engineer, its a monk on a mountain top in Montana. Some people can be right but they are not heeded because their analysis falls on ears that have been deafened by adherence to a pre-determined theory of the case that has become cast in stone. Well, I'm trying to chisel away at that stone but I just don't seem to be making much progress.
I guess I've mixed my metaphors rather horribly: chiseling away at stone while spinning wheels in an automobile. Seems strange. Questions about mixed metaphors aside, does anyone have a suggestion as to how I can stop spinning the wheels or how I should strike that next blow on the chisel?
Posted Tuesday, December 08, 2009 by
gastedmyflabbers
Paired up with Mark Fuhrman as crime investigator experts for FOX News, Steph Watts wrote one of the more positive reviews of Fuhman's recently released book that includes yet one more regurgitation of the same under baked theory-from-a-distance about the murder of JonBenet Ramsey.
I confess; I had no clue who Steph Watts was until today. I read a series of blogsphere opinions about this supposed up and coming freelancer's blog as opposed to expectations of a what a connected, professional investigative journalist's blog ought to look like. And that is where I found Watts' article about tearing it up with Fuhrman.
Many serious crime book reviewers have taken Fuhrman out for what appears to be a self-serving effort from a media-damaged individual, but the guy wants to be heard and is really striving to be taken seriously. He wants to set himself apart as an authority on crime in contrast to crime news as an entertainment money bucket. That certainly appears to be a noble aspiration; experts weighing in on crimes with no entertainment value and no financial reward.
From this angle, Watts isn't helping Fuhman (or himself) out with his image as reliable and credible expert at all - -
"...When Mark and I worked together, we would whenever we could wrap up or weeks with what we called ‘F*@# em Up Fridays. It was the day we would usually confront people, let the police in on something they didn’t know, or just out and out cause some kind of trouble at the end of the week. So, in Honor of F*@# em up Fridays; here’s an excerpt from “The Murder Business.”