Morbid - Episode 367: JonBenet Ramsey Part 2

Episode Date: September 21, 2022

6 year-old JonBenet Ramsey was murdered December 1996 in her home in Boulder, Colorado. Her death remains a mystery to this day with various theories and suspects floating around, but never c...aught. Who killed this beautiful little girl? Who wrote the staged 2.5 page ransom note found in her home? When will answers finally arrive from a crime scene that was outrageously contaminated from the start? In part two we’ll discuss the pineapple of it all, the various theories that have been brought forth over the years and discuss the suspects that go along with those theories.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, Prime members, you can listen to morbid, early, and ad-free on Amazon music. Download the app today. You're listening to a morbid network podcast. Whether you're running errands on your daily commute, or even at home, you can enjoy all your audio entertainment in one app, the Audible app. As an Audible member, you can choose one title a month to keep from the entire catalog. This includes the latest bestsellers and new releases. Plus get full access to a growing selection of included audiobooks, audible originals,
Starting point is 00:00:30 and more. If you've been wanting to form good habits, break bad ones, and improve motivation, atomic habits written and narrated by James Clear is a great lesson. It'll reshape your mindset on progress and success by helping you develop strategies to transform your habits. New members can try audible free for 30 days. Visit audible.com slash wondery pod or text wondery pod to 500-500 to try audible for free for 30 days.
Starting point is 00:00:52 That's W-O-N-D-E-R-Y-P-O-D. Audible.com slash wondery pod or text wondery pod to 500-500 to try audible for free for 30 days. Angie has made it easier than ever to connect with skilled professionals to get all your home projects done well. Whether it's routine maintenance and emergency repair or a dream project, Angie lets you browse home on her reviews, compare quotes from multiple local pros, and even book a service instantly. So the next time you have a home project, just Angie that and start getting the most out
Starting point is 00:01:23 of your home. Download the free Angie mobile app today or visit Angie.com. That's ANGI.com. Hey weirdos, I'm Alena. I'm Ash. And this is morbid. Well, Wayne is getting better and not getting sick. But Ash doesn't tend to lose her voice. No, I'm not. I'm not really like a little mermaid kind of girl. Yeah, she's not going to lose her voice to a sea witch anytime soon. I don't think mine's coming back. So that's that because King Trinon under your curse.
Starting point is 00:02:20 There you go. I heard a little snippet from my think it was like the New England, which is episode. And I was like, oh, man. I heard a little snippet from my think it was like the New England which is episode and I was like, oh, bad. I know. It's so funny because I feel like I always tell you when you're sick. I'm like, it's really not that bad. Me, do you always tell me that?
Starting point is 00:02:33 And I really, like when I'm listening to you, I'm like, no, it's really not that bad. Like, you know, it sounds so terrible. And then I hear it on the podcast, like if we're editing or something. And I'm like, oh my god. I'm like, oh, that was really bad. I think the microphone makes it sound worse or something. I don't know. I mean, this time it was definitely bad because there was a few days where I'm like, oh my God. I'm like, oh, that was really bad. I think the microphone makes it sound worse or something. I don't know. I mean, this time it was definitely bad
Starting point is 00:02:48 because there was a few days where I just couldn't speak at all. Yeah, yeah. So those days were, those were rough days. But those were bad. But there were a couple meetings where I just had, oh, it had to type and I literally had to translate what you were saying.
Starting point is 00:03:00 Literally. Because you could not speak it. It sounded like that. Yeah, it was rough. It was so bad. And the more I tried the worse it got, but we're on the other side of that. And I'm coming out of it.
Starting point is 00:03:11 It's coming back. A few more days. I'll be good as new. But yeah, so we are in part two of our redone Jean-Banet Ramsey case. Because you know, like things have happened since we recorded it at the first time. So this is a good little update, I think. And we've grown.
Starting point is 00:03:30 We've grown. I think everybody's grown at this point. We're all grown. And I have, I know what I, what I think happened. What? I know what I think happened here. I'm not gonna say what I think happened here because no one's been arrested and no one's
Starting point is 00:03:46 been charged with this. Yeah, so that's like dangerous. So I'm not going to do that because people, you know, people get mad about that. And understandably. So, you know, but he's not time to get sued. Yeah, and like, there's really no reason for it. So I'll just keep it to myself and everybody can have their own opinion about what happened here. Yeah. I'm just going it to myself and everybody can have their own opinion about what happened here.
Starting point is 00:04:05 Yeah, I'm just gonna give you the facts So and again like I did in the first in the first part I will give you as much of a fully fleshed both sides meant like multiple sides and true to theory and side theory as I possibly can and when we left you we you know, we found we told you about the whole crime the autopsy some of the strangeness involved, and we left off with the Boulder Police Chief, Tom Coby at the time, telling the public that there was no threat to them,
Starting point is 00:04:36 and that this was a completely isolated incident. Which makes no fucking sense. Yeah. It's a, like, what you're trying to say happened is a random human being snuck into this house, somehow broke into this house, even though there was no sign of forced entry, but there was open windows and then closed windows and then broke windows and then undisturbed windows. But either way, somebody somehow got into this house, took a baby out of her bed and lured her into a basement where she was brutally murdered. And you're telling me that I shouldn't be concerned
Starting point is 00:05:07 about my family? That's the thing. What? And then they went and then like, Patsy and John Ramsey went on an interview and she looked into the camera and it's like really harrowing like how she said that she says like, you know, like hold your baby's tight because there's someone out there. Yeah. And it's like, hold your baby's tight
Starting point is 00:05:25 because there's someone out there. Yeah. And it's like, that's contradictory to what the police are telling us. So like, which is it? Is there this crazy person out there killing babies or is it something else? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:38 And what's the deal? And I think there's so much conflicting information. And from what we'll see, there was a lot going on behind the scenes of this investigation that we still don't know, everything. But there was a lot of political stuff, there was a lot of money stuff going on, there was a lot of people not looking at actually serving justice and instead trying to get this out of the papers. And I don't know what the actual say, like it is obscured the actual perpetrator of the case
Starting point is 00:06:12 so much that it's like, in the big picture. I don't know what they need. It can be solved. I fully believe that. Yeah, definitely. But it's like what is something needs to happen here. Something very new needs to happen here. Well, and how do you just like politicize
Starting point is 00:06:27 a six year old's murder? I don't understand how you do that. And we'll actually, we're gonna be starting off pretty quickly with a resignation of one of the detectives who he also asked that like how is it that this happened? And so one of the last, I just wanted to mention another piece of evidence that was kind of a big deal
Starting point is 00:06:47 that they've really never been able to answer is there was a boot print found next to her body and it was made by a, it was called the high tech boot like it had the words high tech. In a hand print, like a partial palm print was on the door frame leading into that wine cellar and it didn't match any of the Ramzis or any other boots.
Starting point is 00:07:07 Okay. So there is that, nothing that was in the house that they could find. So that's interesting. But in the summer of 1997, the Ramzis, I think I mentioned this in the last episode, they did get out of Boulder. They moved to Atlanta where I think we talked about how John was on the phone after Jean-Banet was found trying to get a plane to Georgia. Yeah, and they were like, you could not do that.
Starting point is 00:07:34 And he was like, well, I have a meeting that I can't miss. And they were like, I don't think you need to take that meeting. Yeah, they were like, you know what, you can miss this one. Yeah. So they ended up moving there. They moved right across to Atlanta. By August of 1998, Detective Steve Thomas resigned
Starting point is 00:07:52 from the police department over the way the case was handled. Wow. And he was, he was one of five detectives that was leading the case. He wrote a very long resignation letter laying it out. I'm going to read some of the portions of view of it here because it's pretty like shocking. And it only came out like kind of recently. This was written on August 6, 1998. He says chief beckner. On June 22,
Starting point is 00:08:19 I submitted a letter to chief Kobe requesting a leave of absence from the Boulder Police Department. In response to persistent speculation as to why I of absence from the Boulder Police Department. In response to persistent speculation as to why I chose to leave the Ramsey investigation, this letter explains more fully those reasons. Although my concerns were well known for some time, I tried to be gracious in my departure, addressing only health concerns. However, after a month of soul searching and reflection, I feel I must now set the record straight. The primary reason why I chose to leave is my belief that the District Attorney's Office continues to mishandle the Ramsey case.
Starting point is 00:08:53 I have been troubled for many months with many aspects of the investigation. I'll be at an uphill battle of a case to begin with. It became a nearly impossible investigation because of the political alliances, philosophical differences and professional egos that blocked progress in more ways, and on more occasions than can be detail in this memorandum. I and others voiced these concerns repeatedly. In the interest of hoping justice would be served, we tolerated it, except for those closed door sessions when detectives protested in frustration, where fists hit the table, where detectives demanded that the right things be done. It's not that we're not in a state of the state of the state of the state of
Starting point is 00:09:26 the state of the state of the state of the state of the state of the state of the state of the state of the state of the state of the state of the state of the state of the state of the state of the state of
Starting point is 00:09:42 the state of the state of the state of the state of the state of the state of when we should have shouted. And again, this isn't the entire thing, but I'm reading you portions. The Boulder Police Department took a handful of detectives days after the murder and handed us this case. As one of those five primary detectives, we tackled it for a year and a half. We conducted an exhaustive investigation, followed the evidence where it led us,
Starting point is 00:09:59 and were faithfully and professionally committed to this case, although not perfect cases rarely are. During 18 months on the Ramsey investigation, my colleagues and I worked the case day and night. And in spite of tides hands, on June 1 and 2, 1998, we crunched 30,000 pages of investigation to its essence and put our cards on the table, delivering the case in a formal presentation to the District Attorney's Office. We stood confident in our work. Very shortly thereafter though, the detectives who knew this case
Starting point is 00:10:31 know this case better than anyone were advised by the District Attorney's Office that we would not be participating as grand jury advisory witnesses. Like, what? 30,000 pages of documents and you're like, sorry, you're not invited to the grand jury. Oh, yeah. What?
Starting point is 00:10:46 And he says, the very entity with whom we shared our investigative case file to see justice sought, I felt, was betraying this case. We were never afforded true prosecutorial support. There was never a consolidation of resources. All legal opportunities were not made available. How were we expected to, quote unquote, solve this case when the District Attorney's Office
Starting point is 00:11:05 was crippling us with their positions? I believe they were literally facilitating the escape of justice. During this investigation, consider the following. He lifts a ton of shit. I'm only going to list a few of them that really caught my eye, just so I don't read the entire thing.
Starting point is 00:11:20 Sure. Because you can find it online. It says, during the investigation, detectives would discover, collect, and bring evidence to the District Attorney's Office, only to have it summarily dismissed or rationalized as insignificant. The most elementary of investigative efforts, such as obtaining telephone and credit card records, were met without support.
Starting point is 00:11:41 Search warrants denied. The significant opinions of national experts were casually dismissed or ignored by the District Attorney's Office. Even the experienced FBI were waived to side. The FBI, the experienced FBI, they're just like, ooh, go over there. Denny says in a departure from protocol,
Starting point is 00:12:00 police records reports, physical evidence, and investigative information were shared with Ramsey Defense Attorneys. What? police records reports, physical evidence, and investigative information were shared with Ramsey defense attorneys. All of this in the district attorney's office, quote-unquote, spirit of cooperation. I served a search warrant only to find later defense attorneys were simply given copies of the evidence that I yielded. He also says I was advised not to speak to certain witnesses and all but dissuaded from pursuing in particular investigative efforts.
Starting point is 00:12:29 Polygraphs were acceptable for some suspects, but others seemed immune from such requests. What? He says I was told by one of the district attorneys, one in the district attorney's office, about being unable to, quote, break a particular police officer from his resolute accounts of events he had witnessed. In my opinion, this was not trial preparation. This was an attempt to derail months of hard work. That's what it sounds like.
Starting point is 00:12:56 Also, there's evidence that was critical to the investigation that this day was never collected, because neither search warrants nor other means were supported to do so. Not to mention evidence which still sits today untested in the laboratory, as differences continue about how to proceed. How do you have differences on how to proceed? Like, to test it. He says, While investigative efforts were rebuffed,
Starting point is 00:13:21 my search warrant affidavits and attempts to gather evidence in the murder investigations of a six-year-old child were met with refusals. And instead, the suggestion that we quote, ask the permission of the Ramzis before proceeding. And just before conducting the Ramzis interviews, I thought it inconceivable I was being lectured on building trust. What the fuck? Yep. This whole time, I'm just like, why? Oh, it gets worse and worse.
Starting point is 00:13:48 So there's just a couple more things in here. I believe the District Attorney's Office is thoroughly compromised when we were told by one in the District Attorney's Office months before we had even completed our investigation that this case, quote, is not prosecutable. We shook our heads in disbelief. A lot could have been forgiven, the lesser transgressions ignored for the right done.
Starting point is 00:14:10 Instead, those in the district attorney's office encouraged us to allow them to, quote, work their magic, which I never fully understood. Did that, quote, unquote, magic include sharing our case file information with the defense attorneys, dragging feet in evidence collection, or believing that two decades of used car dealing style
Starting point is 00:14:28 plea bargaining was somehow going to solve this case. Right and wrong is just that. Some of these issues were not shades of gray. Decisions should have been made as such, whether a suspect a penniless indignant with a public defender or otherwise. Unmistakably, and worst of all, we have failed a little girl named John Bene,
Starting point is 00:14:47 six years old. Many good people, decent innocent citizens, are forever bound by the murder of this child. There is a tremendous obligation to them, but an infinitely greater obligation to her, as she rests in a small cemetery far away from this anomaly of a place called Boulder. He said, I just want justice for a child who was killed in her home on Christmas night.
Starting point is 00:15:08 And he ends this with saying, as a now infamous author, panicked in the night once penned, use that good Southern common sense of yours. That is from the ransom note. And he said, I will do just that. Originally from a small southern town where this would have never been tolerated, whereas respect for law, norther and traditions were instilled in me, I will take that murderous author, this murderous author's out of context advice and use my good southern common sense to put this case into the perspective it necessitates. A precious child was murdered. There needs to be some consequence to that. At 36 years old, I had no idea he was only 36. Oh my God.
Starting point is 00:15:50 I thought my life's passion as a police officer was carved in stone. I realized that although I may have to trade my badge for a carpenter's hammer, I will do so with a clear conscience. It is with a heavy heart that I offer my rising nation from the Boulder Police Department in protest of this continuing travesty. Wow. That is like, first of all, are you an author? I know, that's a little bit of a sign to also become an author. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:15 I know that that's a big piece that we did not hear about before. He clearly thinks that something is happening. It sounds like some kind of cover-up. Some people are being protected that they are not looking at all of the evidence. And like the fact that they're sitting there saying, we're gonna work our magic to make this happen. Work your magic to solve the death of a six year old
Starting point is 00:16:42 who again, like he stated, was murdered on Christmas night in her own home. Yep. No matter who did it, she was murdered on Christmas night and she's six years old. Oh, yeah. So work your magic to figure that out. Well, and in September of 1992, Lou Smith, who's another detective on the case, he also resigned. Really? But he said, and he said the same thing that he was very unhappy with the way
Starting point is 00:17:06 that the department was handling the Ramsey's case. He made it clear though in his letter that he didn't believe that Patsey and John Ramsey murdered their child. But he felt justice was not being served either way. Yeah, it was not being done to the best of their ability. And he said the department was catering to other whims and other powerful entities instead of simply doing the right thing. So some things
Starting point is 00:17:29 have messed in there, and it's the District Attorney's Office. Now, crazily, in 2013, court documents were released that showed the grand jury had voted to indict John and Patricia Ramsey on two cases each in 1999. One on child abuse resulting in death and another on accessory to a crime. Now the way the charges are worded say basically that the parents knowingly placed John but into a situation that resulted in great injury or death. But Alex Hunter, the GA at the time who they are all talking about, decided to just ignore that and wouldn't sign on the indictments. Why?
Starting point is 00:18:11 And what's crazy is, in a CNN article on this, they spoke to several former DAs and experts in the field, and a former chief deputy DA for Denver, that was a DA for over 16 years. Craig Silverman said it was, quote, exceptionally rare for a DA not to go with the grand jury's charges. He asked, he actually said in the article, why would a DA have a grand jury deliberate and vote if he's not going to pursue the charges that they bring back? Exactly. I would be like, why did you just waste my fucking time? Exactly. And then he said, and did the grand jury come up with those charges on their own? No way. One of the DAs had to provide that verbiage. Right. So what the fuck happened here? So did Alex ever come out and say why that decision was made? No.
Starting point is 00:18:55 Just not enough. They said not enough evidence to prosecute, but wouldn't go any further than that. Wow. Now, a CNN legal analyst, Jeffrey Tuben, said the indictments basically show that the majority of the grand jury felt there was probable cause to indict the parents, but it is not proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. That's what they would be tasked with doing. And the fact that it was not brought, that he didn't sign off on it, likely meant that he believed he could not, this could not be proven beyond a reasonable doubt that they had anything to do with it. So there is like that part of it.
Starting point is 00:19:31 But it is the fact that they wanted to indict them is pretty intense. Yeah. But I didn't realize that. I don't think I've ever heard that. But again, it was not signed off by the DA. It was not, it did not happen. And legal analysts do say it is likely that there it wasn't a strong case.
Starting point is 00:19:50 And that they didn't feel like wasting taxpayers' dollars to do this with the knowledge that it likely wouldn't be a winning case wouldn't be in their best interest. Okay. So it's one of those things that it's like, you can look at it many different. Yes What makes a person a murderer? Are they born to kill or are they made to kill? I'm Candace DeLong and on my podcast killer psyche daily Which you can find exclusively on Amazon music?
Starting point is 00:20:24 I share a quick 10-minute rundown every weekday on the motivations and behaviors of the criminal masterminds you read about in the news. I have decades of experience as a psychiatric nurse, FBI agent, and a criminal profiler. On Killer Psychy Daily, I'll give you my expert perspective on cases like the mysterious New York City drugings, Raking Down Vallow, a.k.a. Mommy Doom stays motives, and what drove Caitlin Armstrong to murder? I'll also bring on expert guests who add even more insight into these criminal minds. I promise you won't regret adding these 10 minutes to your morning routine.
Starting point is 00:21:02 Hey, Prime members, listen to the Amazon Music exclusive podcast Killer Psychie Daily in the Amazon Music app. Download the app today. Hi, I'm Lindsay Graham, the host of Wondery's podcast American Scandal. We bring to life some of the biggest controversies in US history, presidential lies, environmental disasters, corporate fraud. In our newest series, we look at the Kids for Cash Scandal, a story about corruption inside America's system of juvenile justice. In North Eastern Pennsylvania, residents had begun noticing an alarming trend. Children were being
Starting point is 00:21:35 sent away to jail in high numbers, and often for committing only minor offenses. The FBI began looking at two local judges, and when the full picture emerged, it made national headlines. The judges were earning a fortune, carrying out a brazen criminal scheme, one that would shatter the lives of countless children and force a heated debate about punishment and America's criminal justice system. Follow American scandal wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen ad-free on the Amazon Music or Wonder App. podcasts. You can listen ad-free on the Amazon Music or Wonder App. I mentioned in the first part that I was going to talk about the pineapple. I know a lot of people who have ever looked into this case, you definitely have read about, heard about
Starting point is 00:22:17 seeing the pineapple. It is a big thing in this case along with that flashlight. Now, what the pineapple is, is was at the crime scene, there was a bowl of cut up pineapples on the kitchen table. This bowl had Burke's fingerprints on it, it also had Patsy's fingerprints on it. The Ramzys claimed, so John and Patsy both said, we did not put that pineapple there. We did not put that pineapple,
Starting point is 00:22:44 they, it's to this day, did not put that pineapple there. We did not put that pineapple. They, it's to this day, did not put that pineapple there. Right. We don't know how it got there. And then Burke said, he didn't remember. Oh, okay. And I thought he didn't. He just simply didn't remember. He didn't think he did. Okay.
Starting point is 00:22:59 So Burke was, they also claimed and Burke claims that he was asleep this entire night. He did change that story a little bit later, but everything, so somebody had to be awake and somebody had to have pineapple. It wasn't like it had been sitting rotting on the counter for days, like it was pretty fresh pineapple. Right.
Starting point is 00:23:17 I'm not trying to say that, like the intruder cut up some pineapple for themselves. Well, that's, okay, so this is what gets confusing because he theories get a little funky as they trail out. Yeah, of course. Now, it's a bowl of pineapple, cut up chunks.
Starting point is 00:23:31 It has a giant like table spoon in it. Yeah. Like, one that you would not use to eat that, but would be something that like a kid. Definitely not us. We love a small spoon. We love, I'm a very, like, I've seen people mention this and I'm glad
Starting point is 00:23:44 there's other people. Oh, it's a thing. They're that have a very specific kind of spoon that they use or fork. I always use the same type of spoon. We have this like one brand that I always use, and those are my spoons. That's how I am, and I need a small spoon.
Starting point is 00:23:56 I need a small fork. Yeah, that's it. I can't use anything else. It's, I get it. And you have a small mouth. Yeah, it just makes sense. I know this is a huge spoon. It's something a kid would use. I've seen my you have a small mouth. Yeah, it just makes sense. I know this is a huge spoon It's something a kid would use. I've seen my kids grab a giant tablespoon out of those silver Which are to like eat their cereal and I'm like that's insane
Starting point is 00:24:12 But that's just like a kid thing that would that they would do so it makes sense that if Burke woke up He made himself a treat. Mm-hmm. He probably would use that giant spoon Now or you know jé, she was six. That could have happened. It's just simply that her fingerprints were not on the bowl. They were not on the bowl. Or the spoon. Or the spoon.
Starting point is 00:24:32 Like they weren't on anything. There was also an empty glass of what was iced tea next to this bowl. That glass had only Burke's fingerprints on it. So this would indicate that Burke was likely awake at some point during the night when Jean-Bene was either kidnapped already or dead or not or right before it or he was awake at some point because all the Burke's, all the Ramses say we did not feed them that. So it must have happened after. Like, we didn't do that. Now, he told Dr. Phil when he did that interview in 2016, and it was the first time he had ever
Starting point is 00:25:13 really, like, spoken about this. Burke. Burke told Dr. Phil later that he was awake during the night because he wanted to play with a toy that he had gotten for Christmas. He wanted to put it together. And so he was excited. We've all been there as a kid. Like, you want to to play with a toy that he had gotten for Christmas. He wanted to put it together. And so he was excited. We've all been there as a kid. Like you want to play with your shit, it's Christmas. And so he said, I woke up and he said, it was after everyone had gone to bed. And I wanted to play with this toy.
Starting point is 00:25:36 He cannot remember where the toy is. There's no pineapple involved. We can't figure out where this pineapple came. And it's just like someone did that. Like there's no way that this person, this intruder theory, if the intruder came in, made a pole of pineapple, and somehow only Patsy and Burke's fingerprints are all over it. Right.
Starting point is 00:26:01 And brood some iced tea. Like, so the whole thing is, that's weird enough on its own, that there's that. Nobody can claim why that was there. Because the thing is, too, I just want to point out, even if the intruder was wearing gloves, we would assume that they had eaten a piece of the pineapple and some kind of DNA would have gotten onto that spoon and something, right?
Starting point is 00:26:19 It would just also just why. Yeah, it doesn't make any sense. I mean, we have covered cases in the past where people eat in the home, but it's usually when they've murdered everybody in the home. Exactly. Or they've subdued everyone in the home. Right. This was already a very lengthy in the middle of the night scenario to make a snack in the
Starting point is 00:26:41 middle of it is pretty wild. But the thing is, Jean-Bene, during her autopsy, it was found that in her digestive tract, she had fresh pineapple chunks that she had probably likely consumed a few hours before she was killed at the very most. And she did not have it at the Christmas party. Her parents said they never saw her pineapple
Starting point is 00:27:01 at the Christmas party, no, what Burke's like, I don't remember having it at the Christmas party, no, it burks like I don't remember having it at the Christmas party. So this was and it likely happened in the night, you know? I mean the bowl of pineapple is right there. Exactly. It's pineapple in a star. It's there.
Starting point is 00:27:15 And it was fresh cut, it matches. So that was weird because then they're like, okay, so did you feed her pineapple before bed? Like she, she get a snack. John and Patsy said, no, she was carried in sleeping. We put her right to bed. Why would we tell you? And John Ramsey says at one point, he's like,
Starting point is 00:27:34 if I gave her pineapple, why wouldn't I tell you that? I gave her pineapple. Yeah, like it doesn't, like it wouldn't matter that much. I wouldn't be hanging on to this so hard that I didn't give her pineapple if I, that really doesn't matter That's not a damning part of this. No kids have snacks before beds all the time Like snacks get left out even, you know
Starting point is 00:27:52 Yeah, so he's like I genuinely am telling you I didn't now later the prosecutor for the district attorney's office trip to Mewse He asked Patsy Rambeo Ramsey at one point can you also understand that the only people that could have done it, Fed Jombini, the pineapples, are either yourself or the whites, like you, someone in your house or the whites where you are at the Christmas party. And she says, or whoever killed Jombini, right? And then she said, I mean, there was somebody in our home that night, besides my husband, my son, and my daughter, myself, that killed our daughter. You know, could they have fed Jean-Bene Pynapple?
Starting point is 00:28:32 To which I say, okay, here's the thing, I understand she's trying to come up with like, she didn't feed her pineapple. Yeah, she's trying to come up with an alternate theory of where the hell she got this pineapple. So, okay, so a that her came into her bedroom, woke her up without any screaming or sounds made. Yep. Somehow got her into the kitchen, in which by the way, there's also a lot of online sources
Starting point is 00:28:55 that I found her like really false, if you look at the police report, that say that there were fibers found in her bed that are consistent with the ropes that were on her. So people are like, oh, she was subdued in the bed and tied up. No. The things found in her bed, the fibers, they were olefin fibers and the cords were made from nylon. So they are not the same fibers that doesn't prove anything. But so she was not tied up in bed or at least there's no scientific evidence to back up that she was tied up in bed.
Starting point is 00:29:25 So now, we know you somehow taken out of that bed without a fuss. At least not a fuss enough to wake anyone else in the house up. She's six. I have six-year-olds. They make noise just going to the bathroom. I hear them no matter what they do.
Starting point is 00:29:40 They also walk like elephants. Like, it's, they make a lot of noise. They're loud. If someone was in our house and came into their room, they would scream enough to make the, wake the entire neighborhood up. Yeah. Somebody in a neighboring country would hear
Starting point is 00:29:54 my children screaming. Absolutely. But this leaves us with the idea that there also may have been a stun gun used because we talked about how there was, there was those two marks. I think on like, on her side and on her back, they look like two circles that are next to each other. They do look slightly like they could be burned marks from a stun gun probe.
Starting point is 00:30:13 But they've never been able to conclusively say that's what it they're from or when they were really done to her. Yeah. So that is also a theory though. Was she hit with a stun gun and then carried downstairs? And then she's a tiny little thing. And then she's a theory, though. Was she hit with a stun gun and then carried downstairs. And then she's a tiny little thing. So she would probably go, she might go out for a stun gun carrier downstairs. That's the thing. So it's like we can get to that point with that theory.
Starting point is 00:30:38 Yeah, but then you're like, okay, so how did the pineapple happen? Right. That's the only way we could have conceivably got her downstairs. Unless it was somebody she knew was that she's exactly it. If we're talking about an intruder, that she doesn't know, that's not happening. What if it's an intruder that she does know?
Starting point is 00:30:55 That's the thing. So that's the alternate series. This is someone who she felt comfortable with, but it would still be a little strange, but it absolutely is possible. Now, what Patsy said was that the kidnapper could have fed Jean-Bene. I don't know if she can honestly believe that. I wouldn't honestly believe that, because it's like a kidnapper, Trudeau Keman, took her from her room, or she went willingly, then she sat quietly while they fixed a bowl of pineapple.
Starting point is 00:31:25 How did they even know that pineapple was in the house? How did they know where to find all the bowls and spoons? And then he cut up pineapple, put it in a bowl with milk, gave her a giant spoon and then fed her some and also brewed a glass of iced tea. Right. And then brutally assaulted and murdered her. And also wrote that, what was it, 20-something minute?
Starting point is 00:31:45 Yeah, like 21-minute ransom note. And also, no sounds were happening here. And then somehow the only fingerprints on that bowl of pineapple are Berks and Patsy's, not even Jumonays. Because that's the, that is the main thing is that Jumonays finger prints are nowhere on that bowl of pineapple. So to me, it doesn't make sense that she sat down with that bowl. That's the thing.
Starting point is 00:32:09 And it's like, I'm not saying that the pineapple is evidence of murder here. Like the fact that Patsy and Burke's fingerprints are on there is evidence that they must have murdered their sister and child by no means. But the fact that everyone is acting so weird about it and not claiming it and suggesting that the killer fed her pineapple is like kind of outrageous. It's like, like, monstrous. Just who gave her pineapple? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:32:34 Someone gave her pineapple or she took pineapple from someone. Right. And yeah, it's just very strange to me. And the thing is the fingerprints. Okay. So, Patsy was a stay-at-home mom. And John worked a lot and was like off on business a lot. So she likely did a lot of the housework as well.
Starting point is 00:32:52 Yeah, I'm sure she put those bowls back. They're tops from our fingerprints came from. That's probably where her fingerprints. I'm sure my fingerprints are likely all over the bowls. John's are probably all over the bowls. Yeah. And then if she made that bowl for Burke, or not even, like she didn't even have to make it for him.
Starting point is 00:33:09 Yeah, her fingerprints are already on those bowls. So if he took it down to make himself something, then his fingerprints are on it now. He bruised himself on nice colds, glass a tee. His fingerprints are on the glass. Yeah, that's fine. It's fine if you ate a snack in the middle of the night. Just say it, man. Right. But again, and then again, it's like. It's fine if you ate a snack in the middle of the night, just say it, man.
Starting point is 00:33:25 Right. But again, and then again, it's like, now we're how far long into this. It's like, one, I sure who knows what you would remember from that day and two, you can't really change the story now, because it's like that. That's that. But it's also like, maybe the pineapple is where it all started.
Starting point is 00:33:43 Yeah, that's the thing. So again, did the kidnapper, if this was an intruder, take the time to brew himself a nice cool glass of iced tea, I don't think so. I just don't understand why nobody is just being like, oh shit, yeah, that was my pineapple. Like, because I think like they asked Burke about it
Starting point is 00:34:02 and were like just during his like psychology sessions like when he was a child. So this was very closely after that happened and he they were asking him you know did food sit out on your counter a lot for a long period of time and he was like no. And then they were like so things got cleaned up pretty quickly and he was like yeah and so they were like so that would that pineapple really be sitting there for that long and he was like, probably not. Right. And it's like, bro. And it's like, when he was little, so I'm like, you remember if that was yours now. Yeah, absolutely.
Starting point is 00:34:31 It was only like 13 days ago. Like, they'd definitely remember that. I think it has a lot to do. But I don't know. Maybe do with where things start. I think it's, I think it's a source of contention. And I think it's now been denied so much that even if it's something very innocuous, you can't go back on it now.
Starting point is 00:34:50 It's just only going to get people talking more. So it really is one of those things that it's like, I just want to know who's fucking pineapple though was. But what's weird to me is also that people want to theorize, like I've seen some theories like Patsy and John staged to the pineapple. Like they wanted police to wonder whether an intruder fixed her pineapple.
Starting point is 00:35:12 That makes zero sense. Like zero sense. I know, I don't see that. I think, I do think what happened is that Burke fixed himself a snack and they forgot it was there. They didn't think it was gonna be pertinent. Who knows if Burke even told Patsy that Jambanay,
Starting point is 00:35:30 maybe Jambanay woke up when he was eating his pineapple, she snagged a piece of pineapple or was eating it with him, just like taking pieces. Yeah. Who knows if Burke even told Patsy that Jambanay had eaten some. Right. So she might have no knowledge of that. I feel like it was that that was something that I think
Starting point is 00:35:51 Burke was eating the pineapple. That's just like, and I think he doesn't maybe doesn't remember, or maybe he was told, don't tell anyone you ate the pineapple. Right. Or it could be something else. Right. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:36:02 But that's just what it looks like. I think the reason to avoid it is because then it leads to questions of, oh, so were you awake at the same time in the middle of the night? And then you only go further down that path. Well, and that's exactly it. Because if he, it would be easy for him to say sure. Yeah, like, because he said, I woke up,
Starting point is 00:36:19 I was trying to put together a toy. Yeah. And if he says, oh, you know what, yeah, I did eat, I did eat some pineapple and I had it. I must have forgot to put it away. I went if he says, oh, you know what, yeah, I did eat some pineapple and I had it. I must have forgot to put it away. I went to bed and I just didn't want to say. That's one thing. You go, cool. Okay, that makes sense. That's fine. That's very innocuous. That's fine. But I had it getting Sean Benay's stomachs. So she was awake. Right. And he would have to go, oh, yeah, she was awake for a little while. What time was that
Starting point is 00:36:40 at? Right. And then you start going down that room. And then it starts, and even if nothing happened here, which I am not claiming that anything happened here, but even if something happened here, a fight and sued, she was bonked on the head with something accidentally. Even if that's the case, you can't, you just can't even begin that path because it's like, because it's going to's gonna open a whole dress box. And it's like, you can't do anything with that. So this is something that I think is going to be a bone of contention for a long time
Starting point is 00:37:15 because we don't really have an answer for it. She had the pineapple in her stomach. We have the prints, we have people denying it, and that's all we got so far. Yeah. So moving away from the pineapple because that is basically where we are right now is... That's all we got. That's all we know. Hopefully that'll move forward at some point. The flashlight. The flashlight, it's a mag light flashlight that is found, was found in photographed on the counter of the Ramsey's kitchen that morning. It has become a huge thing.
Starting point is 00:37:46 Yeah. The flashlight, the flashlight is still a thing of hot debate among theorists and really the press. Oh really? First, there were press outlets saying that there was actually two flashlights and one was missing. Okay. Then it was that the flashlight photographed on the counter was never taken into evidence and they believed John Ramsey hit it away
Starting point is 00:38:05 while police and people were at their home before Jean-Bene was found. And then there is the department's official statement saying that there was only one, that it was collected from the home right after the crime, and then it was immediately sent to the Colorado Bureau of investigation for testing, and then it was sent back to Boulder Police
Starting point is 00:38:23 and it sits in evidence. Okay. When it was sent back to Boulder police and it sits in evidence. Okay. When it was sent back there, apparently there was no prints on the inside batteries or on the outside of the flashlight. That sounds impossible. A lot of people look at that as it sounds like it was wiped clean. Yeah. So there's that.
Starting point is 00:38:40 But then at the same time, and I think we said this last time, um, Fleet's wife, right? Yeah. Was cleaning. fleets wife was cleaning. Exactly. She was cleaning everything. Right. And also, I saw that somebody had said in an article that wiped clean is not necessarily what it is when it comes back with no fingerprints.
Starting point is 00:39:02 It could mean that there's no fingerprints that they could actually lift. Like, it could be like even like a smudgy, they were not just a shitty one. They're just not discernible. Got it. Now, there was all this stuff too, like who owned the flashlight,
Starting point is 00:39:15 because at first, I guess the Ramzys were shown a photo of the flashlight, but it was after the fingerprint dust was put all over it. So this black shiny flashlight was now gray and like matte looking. Yeah. And it was like dusty and dirty looking and they were like no. And they both were like, that's not our flashlight ours is like shiny and black. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:34 And they were like, okay. And like they never informed them like that's that's the evidence dust. But yeah, and they were like, so there was all that thing where it came out that they were denying that it was theirs, but in reality, I think they just didn't know that that was theirs because they didn't look like theirs. Because I think John was like, oh, that one's dirty, ours isn't dirty. Yeah. And it's like, okay, but it was basically confirmed to be their flashlight according to former
Starting point is 00:39:57 housekeeper Linda Pugh and the family friends, the furnies. Now, then Patsy finally confirmed saying, yes, that is our flashlight on the counter. That was taken in. Saying it was given to John last Christmas or last birthday or something like that by his son, John Andrew. Okay. Now, John was always, John Ramsay was always a little black and forth about whether that really was their flashlight. In all the police officers on the scene, because it's a mag light, it looks like it could be a police officer's flashlight.
Starting point is 00:40:29 Yeah. But all the cops, they were like, this is not our flashlight. They all had theirs. That's not ours. So it was not claimed by anybody in that house. It had to have either been brought into that house by an intruder and left there on the counter, or it was already in the house and somebody used it.
Starting point is 00:40:44 Right. And if so, why was it on the counter? Because John Ramsey was like, we did not use that flashlight any recently. So why was it on the counter? Right. It doesn't make any sense. You can see in the pictures. And they all said, we didn't use that flashlight this morning. We didn't use it the evening before. They said it's usually kept in a drawer by the bar area, which sits by the spiral staircase where the ransom note was found. Okay. When they looked in that drawer, it was, there was no flashlight in the drawer and the
Starting point is 00:41:12 drawer was kind of halfway open. Well, there you go. So, to me, that's the flashlight from the drawer. You would think. But now the question is, who put that flashlight there? No one will claim that. So it's like, okay, intruder. Is the only theory that makes sense?
Starting point is 00:41:26 Or somebody in the house that used it, put it on there, and just refuses to say that they did. Yeah, I like the pineapple. Exactly. And I'm so, so the spiral staircase is what leads to upstairs. Yeah. So somebody coming downstairs, if it was dark, might know that that flashlight is their open thing, use the flashlight to guide their path into the kitchen and maybe grab a snack. Exactly. Hypothetically. No, exactly. Now, what's crazy too is that Warner Spitz reviewed the autopsy, and we mentioned him before, and it showed a quote, perfectly rectangular defect in Jambanese skull.
Starting point is 00:42:00 That's where it was cracked. And they seem to think that that flashlight could have made that perfect effect. It was an 8.5 inch below to the head. And if you look at the top of the flashlight, a hit to the head with that could definitely match it. Now, this is where everything gets even stranger about the flashlight. Because Burke told Dr. Phil in that interview that when he woke up in the middle of the night, the night Jean-Bene was killed, he said again, you wanted to put together a toy. But when he was asked if he used a flashlight, he said he didn't remember.
Starting point is 00:42:33 But the way Dr. Phil asked the question started with, so your dad said he used the flashlight that night when he put you to bed. Oh. And Burke agreed to bed. Oh. And Berk agreed to this. Oh, no. Could it be a slip? Whoops. We just fucked up our stories. Or could it mean that he didn't mean to answer
Starting point is 00:42:53 that part of the question with, you know, you mean like a, yeah. He asked kind of a two-parter question. Yep, which came in on. It was a little difficult. So maybe he meant to answer one part of it. One part of it. And it could have gotten a little confusing.
Starting point is 00:43:04 Could mean a lot of things, but it's definitely interesting. So, it was kept in that specific drawer. It's seen in the crime scene walkthrough video. The drawers have open. The Ramsey's confirmed that they kept that flashlight in that drawer. So, if anyone came into their home that didn't know them, they would not only have been able to find a legal pad and a pen and spend 20- one minute's writing
Starting point is 00:43:26 that weirdly long of his rants of note, but they also had to have known where this flashlight was or looked around in very random drawers looking for this flashlight until they found it. And then if the pineapple was not claimed by anybody there, also got pineapple and a bowl and spoons and a glass, which is crazy. But then again, if we're going with the theory
Starting point is 00:43:47 that this might be someone she knows, that's an intruder. Possible. And not necessarily the Ramsey's or anybody in the Ramsey family. Possible. If you look at it as like this all kind of likely, no, possible.
Starting point is 00:44:02 Yeah, sure. I don't know if you have the answer to this question, just popped into my head. Did they say that they had ever given a key to anybody? Like, you know, yes, the housekeeper. Oh, a key. And we're actually gonna mention her at some point. She was cleared, but she was questioned.
Starting point is 00:44:19 Because she had a keys. Now we're going to talk actually now about suspects and theories. I'm going to touch upon each of the theories, including the Ramzis. This is not me staying that they did it. No, this is just the theories that came forward and them being part of that investigation. Now the first one is Patricia Ramsey. This is a theory I don't agree with. This is the whole like she snapped because Jean-Benei wet her bed and she got mad and like threw her into a drawer and then covered it up. I don't see that at all. Yeah. I don't see this. It doesn't feel right.
Starting point is 00:45:03 I don't see it happening. It honestly doesn't make a lot of sense They were known to even have that relationship either. No, in fact Burke later said about his mother in an interview We didn't get spanked nothing of the sort nothing close nothing near laying a finger on us let alone killing your child Mm-hmm, and he was adamant. They did not believe in corporal punishment. They didn't hit us. We they didn't life-ingers on us. Yeah. And he said, and he answered too. He said, I never saw my mom like lose her mind to angry. And he was like, she, of every parent gets annoyed and frustrated and can get mad. But he was like, she didn't scream and yell. She didn't throw things. She didn't hit anybody. Yeah. didn't happen. Good.
Starting point is 00:45:45 That's what Burke says. And so, and again, Patsy was distraught in all of these interviews. You can tell she's distraught. Yeah. Like people, it's easy to pick a part, an interview, and to look like we do with Burke's, you know, and to point at these little things.
Starting point is 00:46:01 And I'm not saying anybody's right or wrong, because I do the same thing when I look at an interview. Yeah, everybody does. And some of these interviews have me quirk in my brow a little things. And I'm not saying anybody's right or wrong because I do the same thing when I look at an interview. Yeah, everybody does. And some of these interviews have me quirk in my brow a little bit. Definitely. But I can't imagine being in that position. I really can't. So it's like, but then the other theory with Patricia is that she helped to cover it up possibly for her son Burke, who accidentally might have heard John May. That is a theory, allegedly. Now, John Ramsey is the other portion of this, obviously. People point to the fact that he started in the basement to look for clues when Detective
Starting point is 00:46:36 Arnt sent him in Fleet White to search the home from top to bottom. To be honest, the more I thought about it, I might have started at the bottom, too. Honestly, I was kind of thinking about it yesterday. And I was like, I don't know, that's not really a lot to point at. No, it's like, it's one of those things that's easy if you look at it quick and you go, well, she said go top to bottom
Starting point is 00:46:57 and you went right to the crime scene. It's like, yeah, that's easy to be like, why'd you do that? You're still searching top to bottom no matter where you start. That's it, and it's like, yeah, I do that? You're still searching top to bottom, no matter where you start. That's it. You know? Yeah, I can't say whether I would go to the bottom
Starting point is 00:47:08 of the top, but I definitely wouldn't say that I wouldn't go to the bottom. No, so that's a theory. I put a lot of people point to that, obviously, as being strange. And did they, sorry, have a finished basement, you know? Their basement was strange as hell. There was parts of them, that parts of it
Starting point is 00:47:22 that were kind of finished. And then there were like the wine cellar, which was like a dirt floor kind of thing. And then there was like, like I think people said when they, in fact, one of the grand jurors, when they said they got a tour of the home, they said that when they went down into the basement,
Starting point is 00:47:40 they said it was like very strangely laid out. They said it was like very complex down there. They said it was like very complex down there. It wasn't like an open basement. It was like turns and corners. So you could look at that and say, did he go into the basement because it is so complex and she could have been hiding anywhere down there like kind of what we were saying the other day.
Starting point is 00:47:57 Exactly. She hiding. Yeah. Exactly. And there's a lot of places to look down there. So maybe he wanted to start with the most complex. Yeah. Because I know if that was what my basement was, I would probably do that because I'd be like, let's get the annoying part out first.
Starting point is 00:48:10 Yeah. The second and third floor are gonna be much easier because it's like closets under beds and, you know, yeah, easier to find someone. But if basement, that complex and that like, like, labyrinthian would be harder. Now, Fleet White saying saying they also point out that fleet white says that John Ramsey yelled, oh my god, before the lights were on and that tests were
Starting point is 00:48:33 done that said you could not have seen her before those lights were on. There's that. That's like hearsay though, like we can't prove that. It is a compelling sure. Yeah. Is it compelling that there's people they did tests and said you would not have seen her. It's not a thing that would have happened, but it's one of those tests that you're like, but everybody has different eyes, so I don't know I can't.
Starting point is 00:48:55 Yeah. Sure, does it seem likely that you would have seen her? No. Does it seem impossible? No. Some people can see better in the darkness. Could he be looking? Like timing be off? Possibly. Like, were you staring at the light switch that intently? Yeah, it's
Starting point is 00:49:10 dark. You don't even, you don't even know, you know? So to me, that, that seems pretty like that, that was weird to me when I read it that like he said before the light went on and it's still weird to me. But I can also see that that is not impossible. And that, that is not a reason to call him somebody who knows anything to do with this game with what happened. People also point out that he like ripped off the duct tape and ripped off the cords. That's just fatherly shit.
Starting point is 00:49:34 I'm not even touching that one. I would have done the same exact thing. I will not fault him for that at all. And I don't think if he has nothing to do with this, then I don't think that was him intentionally like, or, you know, I mean, like I don't think he was intentionally trying to destroy evidence or something with that. I think he wanted to see his baby's face. Exactly. And you'll see her in that exact state. There's the arranging to leave town right afterwards. That's weird. That was a matter of which way you cut it. That's fucking weird, in my opinion. I got nothing for that.
Starting point is 00:50:05 That one's a weird one. Major look real shady. That's that, sorry, that's just the way that is. And I know it was like you said you had a meeting, but still, yeah. I don't know why that would be on your mind. And we talked about the different things like John Ramsey leaving the room where the telephone was, the tap telephone waiting for the kid in the app or to call for the ransom. That wasn't that one.
Starting point is 00:50:25 You were not talking about it at first. I was like, that's weird. Why wouldn't you want to be in the room? Too much pressure. When we talked it out, I'm like, I can't imagine. So it's like, I can't imagine being able to sit still and just staring at this phone and thinking all your thoughts that you're thinking.
Starting point is 00:50:38 And then, you know, Pat's not getting up right away when she heard somebody yelling for an ambulance. That's still weird to me to be quite honest. I don't have an answer for that one. But then we said that she had to be carried into the room with Jean-Minev. Maybe she literally couldn't move. She might have been like, catatonic and I have to move. Like I've been in shock before and I like, you can't move.
Starting point is 00:50:57 So there truly is with a lot of these things to look at. A way to look at and go that shady and then another way to go, well, I guess not. Like, you know, so it's like, that's why this case is so convoyed. Yeah, because it really is like, it's horrible that you can look at this, what happened to this family and wonder whether they had anything to do with it
Starting point is 00:51:19 and that there is like evidence that you're like, oh, and then like you look the other side though and you're like, intruder does kind of fit here, in different ways. So you can see both ways. And you don't wanna sit here and put this on one side or the other
Starting point is 00:51:33 because we don't have the final answer. Right, and there's so much different evidence. And this all brings us to Burke Ramsey, of course. Now, people point to the fact that Jean-Bene was kind of the star child a little bit. She was in the pageant. She got a lot of attention. A lot of time goes into pageants.
Starting point is 00:51:50 So, you know, and John Ramsey worked a lot. So he was likely kind of going, and he said he went to these pageants with them and everything. Yeah. This was the thing. But in his interviews, he says that he was used to it. He was used to the attention that John Maynard got, which is kind of sad. Like it's just like him being like,
Starting point is 00:52:12 I was just used to not getting as much attention. Right. But, you know, does that equal murder? No. He did have some troubling behavior when he was nine and a little before that He was in this phase of smearing feces on things He would smear it on jambanese things as well. They did find evidence that day
Starting point is 00:52:42 That the a box of candy she had gotten for Christmas. There was so that is pretty recent. Yeah But that's also like he was clearly a troubled kid. Yeah. If there was stuff going on that I don't know if they were taking care of, who knows? I don't know if they were trying, thinking about taking care of it. Obviously, this whole thing would have changed their trajectory of what they were planning to do. But the theory that is most prevalent is that maybe Jean-Bonnais snatched a piece of pineapple out of that bowl when he was eating it in the middle of the night. He got angry. He had the flashlight on the counter with him because he had taken it down there to not wake anyone up by turning on lights.
Starting point is 00:53:18 That maybe he hit her on the head with the mad light. He didn't mean proven. And right now, can't be proven, but hopefully someday we will know whether or not that is like, absolutely not the case or whether it is. Burke is adamant that is not the case. He has adamantly said he did not hit her with the bag light. Okay. But there's also, and they brought this up to him as well, that the stun gun marks that they're not positive or stun gun. adamantly said he did not hit her with the bag light. Okay, but there's also, and they brought this up to him as well, that the stun gun marks, that they're not positive
Starting point is 00:53:49 or stun gun marks, also fit pretty perfectly with the prongs of his toy train set. That was downstairs in the basement. Okay. So they wondered, did he hit her with the flashlight? Didn't mean to kill her. She would have gone unconscious from that hit. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:54:04 Maybe he took the train set, or took the train tracks, and like poked her to see, she would have gone unconscious from that hit. Absolutely. Maybe he took the train set, or took the train tracks and poked her to see if she would wake up. Okay, I could see that. That's a very juvenile thing to do. It is a very kid thing to do. It was brought up to him. And that's absolutely not.
Starting point is 00:54:18 And he also said, I don't really understand even how I would do. He was kind of confused by that. And I was like, I don't even understand, I would poke her with the confused by that and was like, I don't even understand, like I would poke her with the train track. Like he was like, I don't get that. So he seemed very confused by the whole thing, said he absolutely did not do that.
Starting point is 00:54:34 And he said, I don't find it confusing, but yeah, he said he couldn't understand like poking someone with a toy train set. So I was like, okay. And again, he says that didn't happen. So that is the official statement that that did not happen according to him. But Chief Beckner and Detective Steve Thomas believed that the voice at the end of that night, one call, they believe it's Burke. And they believe it's Burke asking, what did you find? Burke denies he was even awake at this time.
Starting point is 00:55:05 John Ramsey denies he was awake at this time. Patsy denied until her death in 2006 that he was not awake at this time. Okay. So they all claim he was not awake at this time. He was in his room asleep. I'm just saying that Chief Beckner, in Detective Steve Thomas, fully believed
Starting point is 00:55:22 that is Burke on the end of that thing. But again, we Detective Steve Thomas, fully believe that is for our company, end of that thing. But again, we cannot prove it, unfortunately. The doctor Phil interview with him, again, they brought out like his childhood interviews with psychologists to like right after the crime and in the years leading after. He had never even seen these tapes. Oh wow, that must work.
Starting point is 00:55:44 So traumatic. Yeah, and it was weird to watch him watch it. Yeah. Because tapes. Oh, wow, that must work. So traumatic. Yeah, and it was weird to watch him watch it. Yeah. Because it's like, that would be weird trauma. But in one of them two weeks after, and actually not even two weeks, 13 days. So I think it was. So it was about, he was asked to draw a photo of his family by a psychologist. And he drew himself, he drew his mother, Py and his father John and he did not draw John
Starting point is 00:56:07 Vanay. Now this is a tough one. A lot of people said this was an obvious sign that he was moving on like and he said himself, he was getting on with life even at nine years old, he said I'm getting on with life. Okay. And people said maybe this is him being very indifferent to the entire thing, because maybe he knows what happened. That's what people fear. Well, you know, maybe, because again, like we don't know what happened, maybe he, even if he had nothing to do with it, maybe he was getting on with life, they didn't seem to get along.
Starting point is 00:56:39 And exactly. You know? And kids are weird. Kids have different minds. It's like they just do. One, if kids are not attached to somebody, they don't give a shit whether they come around. No, and it's like, maybe that was a coping mechanism.
Starting point is 00:56:55 Yeah, I could see that. Don't draw in because you're on the next chapter. I can't, I don't wanna dwell on this. To me, I would expect him to be more conditioned to draw her, just because he had had six years with her, and this is only 13 days of being without her. So I would think your mind would just be conditioned. Here's my family.
Starting point is 00:57:17 For six years, it's been all of us 13 days, you're already like, unconditioned to drawing her in a picture. Well, and then you and I were talking about this earlier too. And I was kind of saying, just like from my expectation, I would expect a kid to maybe draw like, and then because I think he had said like dad told me Jambanae was in heaven. Yeah, and they were religious.
Starting point is 00:57:38 Yeah, and they were religious. So in my assumption, I would think maybe he would draw her like up in the sky with like an halo or angel wings or even just up in the sky. You just say, like, Jominee lives in heaven now. Yeah, that's where she is. She's my family, but she's in heaven now. Because that's the thing, it's like she's still your family. Right.
Starting point is 00:57:54 Like, she didn't stop being your family. Right. And I was thinking about it, and it just made me think of a recent thing that happened with my kids. And they're six, not nine. But they came home from school and they had to do this whole thing,
Starting point is 00:58:06 like how many brothers and sisters do you have? And they had written all these things and when I looked on the paper, it said how many pets do you have? And they wrote one, cry, and we don't. And so they were so conditioned to saying that they had Baba, that they just drew Baba in there. Like that Baba's part of the family, she's my pet.
Starting point is 00:58:25 Yeah. Even though she's not here. And it's like so I thought of that. And that's about a lot of 13 days. Exactly. So that was strange to me for sure. Doesn't make them a murderer by no means. But it was also brought up that when they were both younger,
Starting point is 00:58:38 Burke had hit John Bane in the head with a golf club. Oh. But they claim it was an accident. It was hard enough to cause a scar under her, I think, right eye. And Patsy had also tried to consult plastic surgeons like that's, so it must have been a pretty good drunk. Yeah. But they claimed it was all an accident. I to give it the devil's advocate of that, like I or to like go for this really, I, I've seen that happen, like our neighbors actually had happened recently, like last summer. Oh, really?
Starting point is 00:59:13 We're like one of the little like, oh yeah, yeah. I don't know, like, how old, like five or six year olds was like swinging a bat and donked the two year olds in the head. And it was a total accident. It was just because she ran in front of it and he was in the middle of a swing. By no means was it like an intentional I want to hurt her? No.
Starting point is 00:59:32 And so like that can happen. But then you pair it with like smearing shit on her Christmas gifts and her having like blunt force trauma to the head. Yeah. So it's like that is a very, you know, can it happen with little kids? Happens all the time.
Starting point is 00:59:47 It gets get hit in the head accidentally. And again, I'm not saying like you pair it with the shit and like obviously he did this and we saying that's- Yeah, you pair it with that and that's what it could look like. Exactly. And you pair all those things there. That's why the theory emerges. That's-
Starting point is 00:59:59 I'm not saying that's what we're going to be very. We're like, I'm not saying. I'm not. Just to be clear, I'm not saying it. I'm trying to say, we're like, I'm not saying. I'm not. Just to be clear, I'm not saying it. I'm saying this is where the theories come from. This is how they get burst. But again, he claims it was a complete freak accident. Now, when the doctor asked how he thought his sister died
Starting point is 01:00:17 when he was a little, he was asked this. He said, he thought, quote, probably a hammer hit her in the head with it. Oh. So, that's a weird one. I guess I can say that in the beginning of this, he starts off by saying, I don't know. Yeah. She was killed.
Starting point is 01:00:39 And then they kind of push a little further and she's like, and he's like, I am her. But that's like, but the hammer really on the nose. And the hammer is the first thing you go through. That's the thing. Actually, the first thing he went to was a knife. He thought she got, walked with a knife and he did a banging like a stab motion. And then he went to a hammer.
Starting point is 01:00:58 She got hit in the head with a hammer. Okay. So there's that. And as an adult watching that, he said, they, I thought they were asking me to theorize, because I initially said I didn't know and they kept asking me. So I was like, okay, I'll just come up with something. Okay, I mean, yeah. So that's something.
Starting point is 01:01:18 The reports from when he was interviewed by psychologist as a child, like the reports that came out of these things, did say that he was strikingly unemotional, very detached, that he had trouble opening up around about his family, and that that indicated to them that it was typical of a kid who was hiding something about his family. Okay. Now, these are just reports. Yeah, and they're not from us.
Starting point is 01:01:42 But they are reports from psychologists. Now, he says in the Dr. Phil interview that his mother and father loved his sister a lot. Not we loved her a lot. Yeah. Which he's a very awkward guy. Yeah. This could mean he did not love her by all means,
Starting point is 01:01:59 or it can mean that he is very awkward and he just said the wrong thing. Yeah. Well, and one of the, I think we were watching the Dr. Phil interview together and I think it was Dr. Phil that said it. He had, before he did this interview, had been like out of the public eye for, at like a recluse.
Starting point is 01:02:14 Yeah, he was, yeah, he had totally isolated himself. He was even working remotely. He still does. I was just gonna say, like working remotely. He wasn't around kids when he was little. He wasn't around adults when he's an adult. So he is a very socially awkward man just watching that interview.
Starting point is 01:02:30 And you assume that somebody would be if they're removed from the public and peers for that long. Exactly. And it's like, so you can look at that and say, like, oh my gosh, that behavior so strange. He's smiling through that whole interview. Like, he, you could say, he must have done it.
Starting point is 01:02:44 But then you can look at the other side of it and say he's been away from the public for so long. He's been under scrutiny his entire fucking life. And now he's on national television. And no television, I think he's just feeling a little nervous. It can, you can see it both ways for sure. Yeah, I can see merits to both sides of this. And also, if you look at photos of Burke as a child
Starting point is 01:03:03 coming out of the funeral, Jean-Benaise funeral, he's smiling and he's doing the same smile that he does as an adult. So maybe that's what he does when he's uncomfortable. And of course, like you're gonna look at it and say, that's weird, why is he smiling? And it is. At first glance, you're like, that's weird. Yeah. That looks weird.
Starting point is 01:03:20 But it kind of indicates that this is just his default uncomfortable face. Like just the fact that I saw it coming out of the funeral, I was like, that's the same smile he was doing in the doctor. But it's the same exact one. It really is. She showed it to me. And it's like, so I think that might be his default uncomfortable face. If it's either it's either his default uncomfortable face because he had nothing to do with this.
Starting point is 01:03:44 And it's just uncomfortable to be accused. Doesn't know how to react to all of this and like is answering pretty intense questions. Or did he fall to uncomfortable face because he knows more? Mm-hmm. Who knows? We don't know. He claims he does not. Now, the next we're going to get away from the Ramsey family now. We've discussed what people think why they were thinking about them.
Starting point is 01:04:21 Let's go to the intruder theory. Okay. Now, the first one I'll mention, and I'm just going to do this briefly because this was kind of like sensationalized and crazy, was Alexis Carr. She was a former teacher who was arrested in Bangkok, Thailand, 10 years after the crime, because she claimed she was with Jambane when she died, and it was an accident. Okay. Bazaar confession by a very bizarre person, but they also gave very graphic and horrific account of the murder when they confessed,
Starting point is 01:04:50 and they found a ton of child sexual abuse images on their computer at their home. Oh, okay, pretty sick human. They were cleared from everything, be it like DNA excluded them. Yeah. And then they kinda like withdrew that. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:05:04 And often do a scary thing they went. But that was a weird one. I remember they kind of like withdrew that. Yeah. And often do a scary thing they want. But that was a weird one. I remember that one being all over the news. I vividly remember that. And people thinking this is it. Unfortunately, I don't think it was. Now the next one is Gary Olivia. He's a known sex offender and like registered sex offender who lived very close to the Ramsey. He's a convicted pedophile and child rapist now and his high school friend received a call from him on the evening of December 26th. So the day after, job when they was found?
Starting point is 01:05:35 Yeah, the day she was found, actually. The night after she was found. And he was sobbing and said he had heard a little girl. But he wouldn't give any details, but he said he was sobbing and said he had heard a little girl. But he wouldn't give any details, but he said he was in Boulder. This friend called the police the next day when news of Jean-Benaise murder went public and he told them everything was like,
Starting point is 01:05:54 this guy might have done it, like he called me and literally confessed and was like, by the way, he's also like a sex offender. So take that. And they said they would get back to him and they never did. And he followed up like two weeks later So, take that. And they said they would get back to him and they never did. And he followed up like two weeks later.
Starting point is 01:06:08 And he said they never responded, never got back to him, didn't even answer the phone. He had to leave a message. They never called him back. What? In 2016, Gary Olivia's name came back into the picture only because he was arrested on another charge. And when they arrested him, he had a stun gun on him.
Starting point is 01:06:26 Oh. And he had cutouts of Jean-Benae from a magazine in his backpack. That's so close. And a poem he had written about her called ode to Jean-Benae. What? Ew, that's just fucking disgusting.
Starting point is 01:06:39 He also admits that he was obsessed with her. Thinking about a grown man. Like when you really actually think about that, what the fuck? I can't even think far into that. That's the most foul of human beings. Oh. Now the Ramsey's private investigator felt
Starting point is 01:06:56 that he was a pretty good suspect. I mean, yeah, but DNA ruled him out. Okay. But he did send a written confession to this same friend that he called that night. Because this friend said that they stayed in touch with him, even in prison, hoping someday that he would confess to them.
Starting point is 01:07:13 I remember reading a people magazine article about them. Really? And in the article, he said, I never loved anyone like I did Jambanay. And yet I let her slip and her head bashed in half and I watched her die. It was an accident. Please believe me.
Starting point is 01:07:30 She was not like the other kids. I don't know. I think he's just a very sick individual. He's a monster. He also made confession similar to this in the past. Like, he's just disgusting. Yeah. And he's a disgusting, like, petified.
Starting point is 01:07:44 That's all he is. Shit. And he's a disgusting petabyte. That's all he is shit. So he was excluded via DNA. The next one that came about was Michael Helgoth. He was an electrician who worked near the home and he worked at an auto salvage yard and he also did work at the Ramseys before. Also, what a fucking last name, Helgoth. Like why is that not your last name?
Starting point is 01:08:04 I know that's a pretty crazy name. Now someone who worked with him before said that he believed that he was responsible for the crime. And he said about a month before Jean-Benaise Death, that Michael had told him, quote, he and a partner were going to make a great deal and they each will bring in around $50,000 or $60,000. Now if you remember, the ransom notes at $118,000.
Starting point is 01:08:27 Right. Split in half, that's pretty close. Close, but no cigar. But no cigar. But he also remembers him saying at one time that when they were walking into the Ramsey residence to do some electricity work, he said, I wonder what it would be like to crack a human skull.
Starting point is 01:08:43 Oh, all right. Yeah, that makes me never want to hire anybody to do what I like. Exactly. I got my whole never again. There was an alleged property dispute with the Ramzis as well that he had gone involved in. In two days after the press conference about the case where officials claimed they were closing in on the murder, he killed himself.
Starting point is 01:09:03 Alex Hunter, who was the DA, had said in the presser, this list of suspects narrows, soon there will be no one on that list but you. And then two days later, he killed himself. And perhaps that's why the police said there's no threat to the public. Perhaps. So there's that maybe he also had similar boots to the ones frowned at the crime scene the high tech boots He was cleared through DNA though That DNA excluded him. All right. It's excluding everybody There's also the next one that came about was the housekeeper Linda Pugh Linda Hoffman Pugh She was the Ramsey's housekeeper and her husband was actually a handyman who would come to the house
Starting point is 01:09:42 They both headkeys like we mentioned She said later that she thought Patsy had accidentally killed Jambanay. Oh. So I don't think they go along. Patsy claimed that she had asked her for money and Patsy was told, had said that she was willing to give it to her. That was brought up I think as a little kind of like tit for tat like you say this. I say this kind of thing. She had allegedly though mentioned once that Jambanene was so pretty and had asked, Patsy, aren't you worried someone might kidnap her? Jesus Christ.
Starting point is 01:10:11 Which I'd really get the fuck out of my house immediately. Immediately. But she also brought a slander in libel suit against John and Patricia Ramsey when they wrote their book. Cause she claimed that they were kind of insinuating that she had something to do with it. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 01:10:29 So, it doesn't look like there's a whole lot of meat to this theory at all with her. No, it kind of sounds just like more like they didn't really get along. The keys, that's about it. Yeah, like that's really it. And she was also cleared. What a weird thing to say though.
Starting point is 01:10:44 I know it's just, I'm gonna kidnap your kid. No matter what cleared. What a weird thing to say though. I know it's just, I'm gonna kidnap your kid. No matter what, it's a weird thing to say for sure. But I mean, I guess when you put it in the context of like she's going to all these pages, you know, maybe she was just literally asking, like, are you nervous? Yeah, but I'd be like, you need to leave.
Starting point is 01:10:57 But the last one that I'm gonna mention is the Santa theory. Mm. This is the one where we talk about Bill McRenalds, who was a family friend who dressed up like Santa, did it like years for the family Christmas parties. And was he at the party that they were at that night? He was not at the one that that was that night,
Starting point is 01:11:15 but he had been at a party a couple of days before. Dressed as Santa. People claimed that he paid too much attention to Jean-Banay. He actually, he was the one that we mentioned. She had given him like a glitter vile. Yeah. And she said it was like stardust. And he took it with him into heart surgery.
Starting point is 01:11:34 And then he later said that when he died, he wanted it to be mixed in with his ashes. All right. Intense, like for sure. Yeah, it's a lot, but you also like, people are just weird sometimes. Yeah, it's like, I don't think we can really call him a murderer. No.
Starting point is 01:11:50 And what might be like, like he might have thought that was just like, a beautiful thing to do, you know, like, to each their own when it comes to something like that. Yeah, exactly. That's one of those things that it's really hard to like, to me in my, in my personal opinion, that's a little weird,
Starting point is 01:12:04 but like I don't think he murdered her. But not like murderous or weird. No. No, there were also rumblings that Jean-Benae had told people that Santa promised to make a special visit to her after Christmas. OK. So there was that.
Starting point is 01:12:16 But that could also be like he was going to leave her like an extra gift, you know? And people thought this may have been like he was going to come to the house and like break into the house. Yeah. The police said they never considered him or his wife serious suspects. He actually died in 2002 of a heart attack
Starting point is 01:12:31 at 72 years old. That's really sad. Now in 2006, Patsy Ramsey passed away from ovarian cancer. She was only 49 years old. That's terrible. Yeah, I had no idea she was that young. She's buried next to Jean-Bene, and Jean's daughter Elizabeth and Marietta Georgia.
Starting point is 01:12:49 Unfortunately she died before there was any resolution to this case, which is upsetting, either way. Yeah. Now, DNA evidence found in Jean-Bene's underwear again was found in, this was like a recent thing, was found not to be connected to anybody in the Ramsey family, and it has an unidentified male. I hate that so much. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:13:13 Now again, and I'm just going to point to another one, another intruder theory point that I didn't really think of, was John Ramsey suggested that maybe someone broke into their home while they were at the Christmas party at the Whites. Okay. And that maybe they were waiting in the home until nighttime. Maybe that letter was written then and they were able to get the layout of the house while they were gone. I mean, boo.
Starting point is 01:13:34 And I was like, that's a pretty good theory. Well shit. But I was like, I did not think of that. And there was the broken window. But then again, undisturbed. Yeah, that's the only, that's the thing. Had they get in? But then there was that open window. Yeah. And it's the only, that's the thing. How'd they get in? But then there was that open window.
Starting point is 01:13:46 Yeah, and it's like, was it open at the time or was it not? We don't know. It went back and forth like 10 times. And do you remember if the open window, like that area was disturbed at all? I don't think either. I think it was disturbed. Yeah, I don't think they found any kind of disturbance in there, but it's a theory, and it gives, it gives meat to the intruder theory for sure.
Starting point is 01:14:07 Or maybe one door was just left unlocked and they didn't realize it. And they locked up before they went to bed. Yeah, that could absolutely be it. So it's one of those things. This case is a lot. There are a lot of theories and wrong information and confusing information and weird interviews and kind of damning interviews and like interviews with the like my parents that will make you go what's the use of Burke that will make you go what and interviews that you'll be like wait a second, help like it's just like and there's so much and I know what I think happened. No one's been arrested or charged with this so so I'm not gonna put it out there,
Starting point is 01:14:45 but I'm interested to hear what everybody else's takes are. They feel like sharing it. But this is one of those cases that I think you have to look at every couple of years and you might change your mind. Like you might, or you might at least get like a little bit of like new. Huh, like that's a possibility.
Starting point is 01:15:02 Like cause things keep little tiny things keep coming out that will make you go like, wait a second. I mean, one of the main things, because I, you know, I have my thoughts, but one of the main things that kind of throws me off of my personal thoughts is that, that boot print. I know, that's, that's a strange one. And the partial palm print that didn't match anybody
Starting point is 01:15:21 in the house. And then the DNA, that doesn't match anybody in the house. And then the DNA, that doesn't match anybody in the house. Yeah, it is weird. And if you go, you know, thinking about this family doing this to this child, just, this is really horrific. It's really horrific. They don't come off like a family that would do that. You know, I don't know what family does. I was gonna say, I don't know how you would come off like a family that would do that. You know, I don't know what family does.
Starting point is 01:15:46 I was gonna say, I don't know how you would come off as some but like, you know how sometimes so you're like, oh. You know, it's true. You're just like, oh. But I think it's more just like, and I know parents do fucking terrible things to their kids all the time.
Starting point is 01:16:00 Like it's a fucking terrible world we live in. Where many people shouldn't have kids. But this is just like, if you go with the theory where it was like a cover up and they were trying to protect their other kid, wow, they went to great lengths and like really made it way worse than it needed to be. If that was the case, like I don't know. It's hard to wrap your brain around, but it's hard to wrap my brain around any fucking person doing this to a six year old baby.
Starting point is 01:16:32 Like I can't wrap my brain around the fact that this happened to her at all. That somebody came into her house and did these fucking atrocious things to her body. Like I can't. So I don't understand, I don't, I'm not putting my thoughts out there right now because they've, they've, they've mutated a little bit as I've gone through it again. Yeah. But yeah, it's a wild case. And I just, I really hope that someday we get,
Starting point is 01:16:59 this is always the case I cite when anyone else, me if you could have one case solved, it's this one. This in the West Memphis 3, I want to know what happened. I know, honestly. I got to know what happened. That one's a little more obvious, but. Well, that's the thing. It's like, I feel like I know what happened in both the cases. I just need someone to confirm it with, like, scientific evidence.
Starting point is 01:17:16 Yeah. I would say that the West Memphis 3, like, has the scientific evidence already, actually. Yeah, they just need to, like, say it. Yeah. Just say it. Put the charges down. Right. But this case, I agree. I hope that I do for some reason feel like in our lifetime, it will be solved. I have hope. Yeah, I really do. I hope for it. Every case is solvable. Yeah, it's no different. Look at what happened when the golden state killer.
Starting point is 01:17:41 Yeah, I think it could happen. I really do. And they're pushing to get the DNA retested. And I hope I can independent do this. And I hope that it points to a specific person. I really hope so. Just for even like John. And you know, like John to have closure, which again, it's like a shitty thing to say, there's not a better word to say.
Starting point is 01:18:00 No, there really is. So we can have some kind of peace. And you know, for Burke's name to be cleared, because his name really does come up in this a lot. Of course it does. A lot of people just cite him as the one who did it. And it's like, if he didn't do it, then damn. Like that, that is awful.
Starting point is 01:18:17 It reminds me of like the Lizzy Board in case, how it's like, yeah, yeah, like maybe she did it, but like also there's a possibility that she didn't, and then she spent the rest of her life being tormented about the brutal murder of her parents. And it's like so, we don't know. Yeah, so I just don't know. I guess just keep listening and hopefully someday we'll know.
Starting point is 01:18:37 Yeah, I hope so. So we hope that you keep listening. We hope you keep it. We're not enough to tell you not to keep it this way. Hopefully. So fucking wild. Oh, yo, keep it weird. I don't have to tell you not to keep it this weird. Hopefully. It's so fucking wild. Hey, Prime Members! You can listen to Morvid, Early, and Add Free on Amazon Music.
Starting point is 01:19:20 Download the Amazon Music app today, or you can listen ad-free with Wondery Plus and Apple podcasts. Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wondery.com slash survey.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.