RedHanded - FROM THE VAULT - Episode 126 - Who Killed JonBenét Ramsey?
Episode Date: November 22, 2024With Netflix releasing a brand new documentary on the tragic and suspicious death of JonBenét Ramsey, we thought it would a good time to have a little recap on the case that shook the nation.... So here's us from way back in December 2019...When 6 year old beauty queen JonBenét Ramsey was found dead in the basement of her family’s mansion on Boxing Day 1996 - it sparked a relentless mystery that still endures 25 years later.Leave what you think you know behind and join Hannah and Suruthi to try and sort fact from fiction...Happy Christmas.Exclusive bonus content:Wondery - Ad-free & ShortHandPatreon - Ad-free & Bonus EpisodesFollow us on social media:YouTubeTikTokInstagramXVisit our website:WebsiteSources available on redhandedpodcast.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hello, and you may have noticed that Netflix are once again
digging into the true crime goldmine that they discovered about four years ago,
and they are releasing a brand new documentary
on the murder of JonBenet Ramsey.
From what I can see, the Ramseys
appear to be quite front and centre. And there's quite a lot of focus on the media storm and how
everyone hated the Ramseys, etc, etc, etc. I've had a check. There is no new evidence.
There are no new leads. So if you would like to remind yourself of the evidence,
you can listen to this episode, which we released many moons ago as a Christmas special,
on the murder, well, the disappearance and the murder of JonBenét Ramsey.
And you can make up your own mind, but my mind is made up.
It was Burke. Have fun.
Today is going to be a lot, so prepare yourselves.
I mean, as if this week wasn't already a lot for Reddit,
we are recording this on the morning of a brand new Tory Britain.
And it's Friday the 13th.
And it's a fucking full moon. It's a joke, mate.
Hannah is in full-on meltdown, so I don't know if I'm ready.
Are you guys ready? Because I don't think you're ready for this jelly.
And by jelly, I mean the tragic murder of a small child.
Because that's what's going to happen.
Fucking hell, it's a lot.
On that note, it's Christmas time.
So let's get fucking festive.
And it's the only way we know how to get festive.
And it turns out that that means looking into the murder of a six-year-old girl
that has been unsolved for decades.
And it's also the case where so many true crime aficionados earn their stripes.
You already know what it is, but let's just pretend we don't.
Let's pretend we know nothing.
I think that's important, actually, with this one.
You know in Killing Eve, which I'm re-watching right now,
Bill, in the first season and they start this like crack team
to try and find this assassin.
And he's like, oh, but you,
you're just assuming that they are all the same person.
You don't actually have the evidence.
So if we go into this case,
assuming that we know what happened,
we're doing it wrong.
So try and forget everything
that you have already decided about Sean Benet Ramsey.
I think that is the best advice that we can provide.
Go into this with a fully
open mind about what happened, who happened, what went down. I would say the best pairing for this
episode, because Hannah and I spent pretty much like a good few hours yesterday talking about
this case. Sounded like we were fucking high, I have to say. We'll give you the transcript,
have a listen, have a read. And the best pairing is probably a big fat joint
because it's the only case
where the more you dig into it
the less it makes any sense
is all I'll say
also not condoning druggies on the airwaves
no, maybe we should leave that out
a big fat something
that we won't mention
I don't even fucking smoke weed man
let's transport ourselves with our clear minds to A big fat something that we won't mention. I don't even fucking smoke weed, man.
Let's transport ourselves with our clear minds to just before midnight on Christmas night, 1996,
on 15th Street in Boulder, Colorado.
A woman heard a scream.
And she was sure of two things.
Firstly, that the scream was coming from the house across the road.
It was a big old faux Tudor mansion. You know exactly what I mean, and it belonged to the Ramsey family. The second thing our anonymous neighbour was sure of was that the scream was that of a small child and she
thought it was most probably a little girl. After the scream, the neighbour woke her husband and
they both heard a loud crash that sounded like metal hitting concrete.
The neighbor decided not to call 911 because she knew that the Ramseys would be home and was sure
that they were more than capable of dealing with the situation on their own,
and no one likes a nosy neighbor. As we all know, the Ramseys had a little girl.
Her name was Jean Benet, and on Boxing Day, she would be found dead in her own home.
JonBenet's parents had married each other in 1980.
John Ramsey was a successful businessman.
His company was called Access Graphics, and in 1996, it was valued at $1 billion US dollars.
That's right, $1 billion with a B.
Fucking hell, that's a lot of money and they had so much money that the family had not only a 30-foot yacht but two private planes why do you need two
there's only four of them exactly like does the plane need a friend to hang out with do they get
lonely like is that it's like when people can only get maybe they're like guinea pigs where you have
to have two of them and i think like billion dollars, that's an astonishing amount of money.
And I think that Bill Gates might be the exception here,
but I'm not sure that anybody builds a company that is worth that much by being a nice guy.
Surely.
Warren Buffett, he's a very nice man, I think.
There's also a couple of others, maybe politically charged,
and then people will come for us if we name them.
But I did actually read some interesting stuff about this this that a lot of research has been done and actually they found
that there is like a direct link between niceness quote unquote and financial ruin what because you
just so nice and you give all your money away i think because you're so nice apparently you know
like the big five personality traits. Yes. Yeah.
One of them is agreeableness and agreeableness and financial ruin is apparently linked to
the level that people with higher levels of openness up to 50% more likely to declare
bankruptcy or to default on payments and things.
Isn't that interesting?
Wow.
That is interesting.
Yeah.
I'm a really open person.
I need to keep a hold on my fucking financials. No, no. It's, sorry, agreeable. Not the open. Oh. Oh, Yeah. I'm a really open person. I need to keep a hold on my fucking financials.
No, no, it's, sorry, agreeable, not the open.
Oh, yeah, I'm not that.
I think you've probably got a shit on some people on your way up to the top.
And according to the people who worked for John Ramsey, that is exactly what he was like.
Access Graphics was, quote, an evil empire.
That's a direct quote from an employee.
Hostile takeovers and a hostile work environment
were pretty run-of-the-mill.
Yeah, I mean, you have that whole thing of, like,
if the CEO is a psychopath, the business is psychopathic.
And I'm not saying John Ramsey was a psychopath,
but somebody who works for you calling the business an evil empire
doesn't paint you as much less than like Darth Vader, does it?
That's exactly what I thought, fucking Star Wars motherfucker.
In 1980, John married Patsy,
who was a whole 14 years younger than he was.
When they got married, John was 37 and Patsy was just 23.
Patsy was also a former Miss West Virginia. John had three children from
a previous marriage and soon after they got married, Patsy and John had two additional
children of their own. Burke, who in 1996 was nine, and JonBenet, who was six. JonBenet was
in the pageant system just like her mum. And the pair even looked very alike.
And they sang together all the time.
There's a really weird thing in one of the books that I read this week
where apparently one of the songs that was played at JonBenet's funeral service
was a song from Gypsy, which is a musical in which a mother has two daughters and one of them goes on to be like a burlesque performer and the other one goes on to be like an incredibly successful vaudeville actress.
It's like a very odd choice to have at your six year old daughter's funeral.
I just I don't understand so much about Patsy Ramsey.
I don't think she's dumb, though.
Like, I think a lot of people are just like, oh, like she's a trophy blah blah she had a degree in journalism no less um and i don't think she was a
doormat no i think it was more just like because she's and we obviously talk about later but like
she's from you know she's like from that pageantry world i think she's probably just like quite a
theatrical person like that song and everything like i don't know I have feelings about the whole pageant situation oh I have many feelings I do know a bit more about drag queen pageants than I do about
kid ones and I but I imagine the basic principle is the same and my like fully grown woman
pageant knowledge is almost exclusively linked to drop dead gorgeous and dumpling but as I
understand it this is what happens you dress up in several different kind of outfits
and then you walk around and you answer questions and then you perform your talent not necessarily
in that order but that's as I understand it what happens for children and women and drag queens
alike that is quite a lot to ask of a six-year-old but JonBenet was very good at it she won a lot
and later on people namely her mother would claim that JonBenet's involvement in pageants
was just a bit of fun and it only took up the occasional Sunday.
Patsy makes quite a big deal about JonBenet only entering nine pageants.
She was six. Nine is quite a lot, I think.
And presumably she wasn't doing baby pageants, where she just gets wheeled around in a pram.
Because even if she's been doing them just
from like say the age of four that's a lot of pageants to have done in two years or whatever
prep for a pageant is serious business and there is video footage of JonBenet at pageants in all
sorts of different things from like a Copacabana-esque feather contraption to like a cowgirl
outfit like that's expensive that's money and also to get six
year old john bonet's talent to an adequate standard that's at least an hour of practice
every day like that's what you get told when you you learn a musical instrument that's the
fucking minimum and if she's winning she's good like she's not just like getting up and like murdering fucking Amazing Grace on the violin.
She's winning. So obviously it's a lot of work.
Patsy is like a terrifying sequined tiger mum.
She is like, this is what's happening. Get on board.
Is how I envision it happening.
Oh, completely.
Have you ever watched Toddlers in Tiaras?
Oh, have I? Yes, I have. I am obsessed. happening oh completely have you ever watched toddlers in tiaras oh have i yes i have i am
obsessed i also watched a great uh show called blinging up baby wow oh yeah oh yeah that's that's
a thing it's a thing this is a thing that's happening it's absolutely terrifying and i just
feel like we don't have we don't have pageantry here basically at all like the only thing I can think of is the Rose of Tralee,
which is like an Irish competition.
That's not even, doesn't really happen here.
And that is televised and that is a big deal.
But it's not like there's a bajillion of them.
And it's not like, oh, what's your hobby?
Oh, I do pageants.
It's just, it's weird.
I don't know.
Maybe somebody listening used to do pageants as a kid
and they can tell us all about it on the Facebook group. it I entered a lot of competitions as a kid but like they were never to do with me
wearing a feather boa no I did a taekwondo and I got as far as like an orange belt and I was like
no more I'm done I'm bored of this I don't know I was never a very graceful child though I don't know. I was never a very graceful child, though. I don't think I would have been a
successful pageant tier. That's for sure. I sort of did. I just feel like I did the sort of talent
segment of being a pageant child, but I didn't do the fucking bikini bit, you know?
No, no, no, no. I think that's the bit best of what we did. I wouldn't even let my mum brush
my hair, so she just cut it all off. I spent the first like six years of my life looking like a little boy. I even used to brush my hair into
a little side part, so I actually looked like a boy. So Patsy, John, Burke and Jean Benet were a
popular little family unit. They attended parties at their neighbours' houses, and they very often
threw their own. And they were excellent hosts, and they'd often threw their own and they were excellent hosts and they'd
actually hosted one of their little soirees for the neighborhood just three days before christmas
things had gone a little bit awry and the police actually ended up being called to the house
but the whole thing was ironed out as a drunken misunderstanding or perhaps even more like a
drunken prank and no further action was taken. These are adults.
Why are you prank calling fucking 911 at your Christmas party?
What the fuck is wrong with you?
They're rich people.
They're rich drunk people.
Let's see how quickly we can get those policemen out here.
Bets.
I'll put a private plane on it.
Like, who knows what rich people do, man.
I plan on finding out.
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But at 5.52 a.m. on Boxing Day 1996, another 911 call came from the Ramsey house,
but this time it was no joke at all. Panicked Patsy Ramsey told the dispatcher, We have a kidnapping. There's a note left, and our daughter is gone. The 911 operator, whose name was Kim Archuleta,
listened as Patsy Ramsey described her daughter as being six years old and blonde.
When Patsy was assured that the police were on their way,
she hung up the phone.
Or at least she thought that she had.
Actually, there are about six seconds on the end of the 911 call
where Kim could hear voices in the background.
Voices who didn't think that they were being listened to.
And Kim, years later, would claim that she had stayed on the line because she felt like something wasn't right.
As a 911 operator, I expect that's a feeling she had quite a lot. I'm also like if you call 999 or 911 or whatever
don't they usually not let you put the phone down until you can see the emergency services like
until they're in your line of sight? I think it depends but you would think if your daughter had
just been kidnapped you'd kind of want to stay on the phone surely. I don't well I don't know I've
never been in that situation but it doesn't seem, I think you'd want to stay connected with the help that was coming.
It doesn't seem like you'd just be like, hey, reported, job done, tick, I'll put the phone down and go back to something else.
It does seem weird that Patsy tries to put the phone down.
And Kim also claimed that she heard Patsy say, quote, we've called the police, now what?
Kim was never interviewed by the police in relation to the death of JonBenet Ramsey, so her testimony was never heard anywhere. Arguably the most famous documentary on this
case is the one produced by CBS in 2016. It's called The Case of JonBenet Ramsey.
And essentially what happens is a team of crime experts who are not offensive looking. They're
like fine looking enough to be on TV, I think seems to be like the
only criteria for being on that team. And basically these experts get together and they solve the
mystery of who killed JonBenet Ramsey. And this documentary is responsible for a lot of people
having a quite stark opinion on what happened to little JonBenet. And I used to be one of them,
but I've got to say now I'm not so sure. And here is've got to say, now I'm not so sure.
And here is one of the many reasons why I'm not so sure.
In the CBS documentary, they take the 911 call and run magical noise reduction on it, and then they claim that they can hear three distinct voices.
Honestly, it's so funny.
The first time I watched that documentary, I knew nothing about sound.
I knew nothing about audio work.
But when they're running this noise reduction, they're all sitting there with their headphones on and it's
literally like on CSI when they're like enhance enhance it's exactly like that and then they turn
this little knob on the soundboard and I'm like that's doing fuck all to do with noise reduction
that's literally just like but they make such a big deal putting it in the shot there's that
magical thing that we can't understand is like just tv watches maybe it's because it's too boring
to show them like select the section of silence and then go to noise reduction in audacity and
remove it and then listen back i'm sure they weren't using audacity just turn this knob and
everybody looks surprised by what has already been done so after they've run this magical
fucking pretend noise reduction the cbs team claim that they can hear John Ramsey saying,
we're not talking to you.
Patsy Ramsey saying, what did you do?
Help me, Jesus.
And then they claim that they can hear Little Burke saying,
what did you find?
Go and watch it and make your own mind up.
But I cannot hear a single fucking word of that.
I can't hear any of it,
even when they impose the Mandela effect on
it and they give you the writing underneath of what you're meant to be hearing. I literally
could not hear anything. It's very much like about suggestibility. They're just like putting
the captions on underneath. They're telling you what you're hearing. And of course, therefore,
you hear it when you listen to these muffled voices. The only thing i can remotely hear is i can believe i can hear patsy
saying help me jesus but like her kid has just been disappeared so like that's not the weirdest
thing and she says that quite a lot i'm just not convinced that they can hear three distinct voices
and i'm not convinced they can no no no i don't think you can hear three distinct voices and i
don't think you can really pick up on the tone of voice, which is what the CBS documentary also makes a big deal about.
So then after they've decided that's what they've heard on the call,
Scotland Yard trained Laura Richards and her team of criminology masterminds
use this piece of evidence, which in my opinion is a pretty flimsy piece of evidence,
to conclude that at the time the 911 call was made, all three remaining Ramseys,
so that's Patsy, John and Burke, were all
awake. But Patsy would tell a very different story to police officers when they arrived at her house
at 5.59am. She opened the door wearing the same clothes that she had worn to the party that they
had attended the night before. In between the 911 call and the officers arriving, Patsy also called two friends and the family's pastor,
all of whom made their way to the Ramsey mansion as soon as they could.
I think they only hang out with married couples. So they'll say like, oh, we called the whites,
or we called the like glins or whatever. So I think it's two sets of people. It's like a couple
that show. So there's five people that show up at the house.
Why is my question. You've called 911.
You've reported your daughter missing.
Why in the early hours of Boxing Day morning do you call your family friends and the family pastor and tell them to come over?
I don't understand why you would want those people to be necessarily around you in that time.
I don't get it.
But again, I haven't been in that situation.
Yeah, I mean, maybe you just sort of want the support. around you in that time i don't i don't get it but again i haven't been in that situation yeah i
mean maybe you just sort of want the support they think the house well whether they think this or
not they think that nothing's going on in the house so they would be like well why would it
be a crime scene because she's gone arguably well if she is gone and she's not in the house
spoilers it's still a crime scene true she was true. She was abducted from the house.
I mean, again, like we know that they're not, well, we don't know that they're not thinking about it like that.
We don't know what the fuck they're thinking, but this is what they do.
Anyway, that's the best I can give you.
This is what they do.
Patsy told the officers that the night before, the whole family had attended a party at one of those friends' houses.
So at one of the friends' houses that so at one of the friends' houses that is
now currently at the Ramsey house. She told them that they had then left and driven home, and as
they did, that Jean Benet had fallen asleep in the car. She said that when they then got home,
John Ramsey had carried Jean Benet upstairs and put her to bed. Then they had all gone to sleep,
and that no one had woken up in the night. Patsy had then got up before
dawn because she needed to get everybody ready for a flight that the family were taking to Michigan
because the Ramseys had a holiday home in Michigan overlooking a lake and they planned to see in the
new year together there. Now the first time that Patsy told this story she said that she had gone
into Jean Benet's room and realized that she was gone but the second time she told it she said that she had gone into Jean Benet's room and realized that she was gone.
But the second time she told it, she said that she had gone downstairs to make coffee
and at that point found a three-page handwritten ransom note on the stairs. After seeing it,
reading it, she had then gone to check Jean Benet's room and realized that her six-year-old
daughter was missing. So she either finds that she's gone
first or she finds the note first. She tells both versions of that story. And like, obviously,
she's distressed. It's pretty important detail, though. It is an important detail. And the fact
that she's confused around that particular very binary thing, like it's either one or the other,
like, did you find the ransom note first or not? And I feel like it's either one or the other like did you find the ransom note first or not and I feel like it's quite a memorable thing it's not like the kind of thing that we normally say
where it's like poor eyewitness testimony did they see this thing here did they say like did you find
the ransom note and rush into Jean Benet's room in a panic or did you casually go in there to
check on your sleeping daughter like it's a big thing to misremember. But one thing that Patsy is sure of, and this remains in both of the stories that she told,
Patsy claimed that her son Burke was sound asleep.
And when officers arrived at the house, they conducted a superficial search,
but nobody thought to look in the basement.
And this is a proper rich person basement.
It's got doors and lights and corridors and everything,
but no officer thought to look, at least not at
first. The mates that Patsy had called and the pastor were allowed to wander around the house
freely. No part of the house was secured by law enforcement as a crime scene, and we will never
know what evidence was lost that morning. At ten past eight, Detective Linda Arndt showed up to the
already ruined crime scene. When she arrived, Patsy was crying in an armchair.
Or rather, she was making crying noises.
And no actual tears were falling.
And you look out for that in any footage you see of Patsy.
She does that quite a lot, particularly at press conferences.
And John Ramsey was pacing.
When children disappear, there is roughly a 12 to 1 chance that the parents are involved.
But despite those odds, not a single
officer separated the Ramseys for questioning to see if their stories correlated. Instead,
they focused on bonding with the Ramseys. The Ramseys refused to give interviews to the police
claiming that they were too distraught and medicated. Despite that, the officers managed
to glean that all of the doors were locked when the Ramseys woke up and the only sign of forced
entry was a few pry marks on the kitchen door. They weren't obvious they just looked newer
than the rest of the marks on the door there's no way of knowing whether it actually happened
that morning or not. And could we say that this whole sort of because it's clear to say that
that morning it's quite piss poor police management of a crime scene how they're managing this I think
is it because you said that Boulder Colorado hadado had like a ridiculously low murder yeah what a year just
not experienced yeah but like come on you may not have the experience but like you will have had
training and how to sort out this situation absolutely no i'm just trying to give like
play devil's advocate so if we say a, they absolutely were not super experienced in terms of homicides,
given that they were dealing with roughly one a year. Secondly, also, I think it's in the CBS
documentary that they say, also, generally speaking, around Christmas time, you're not
going to have the best police officers slash detectives working. B, so maybe they didn't have
the very best people come to deal with this scene originally. Maybe that's
unfair. I don't know. I think it was in the CBS documentary that they say that as a potential
reason for why it was so poorly handled. I don't know. But a walkthrough of the exterior of the
house that the police did do revealed that there was a broken window leading to one of the many
basement rooms. John Ramsey claimed that it was actually him that
had broken this window when he had locked himself out of the house the summer before,
and he simply said that he had never got around to fixing it. Many people, due to another documentary,
think that this broken window was the entry point for an intruder, which of course it totally could
be. But the crime scene footage shows an unbroken cobweb in the corner
of that window so of the broken window and it's a bloody small window it's really hard to believe
that an adult would have been able to squeeze their way through that window and leave that
cobweb completely undamaged it doesn't make any sense. And in the CBS documentary, they must have spent
a fucking shitload on that because they like rebuild the Ramsey house. Oh yeah. Fucking loads
of money in that documentary. Unbelievable. Oh yeah. Yeah. They like recreate the window. They
recreate the cobweb, everything. And then Laura Richards recreates the kind of theory that
somebody climbs through this window. what we do learn is that she
can't do it without disturbing the cobweb what we also learn is that laura richards is fucking
strong as fuck who is your trainer laura she just crawls out of it she lifts herself up like you
know how like gymnasts just like can lift themselves she literally puts her puts her
hands out the window and then she
pulls herself up slowly and controlled until her waist is out of the window just using her arms
it's madness it is madness and she's a tall lady she's like not you know petite lady she's like a
tall lady and she just pulls herself like really elegantly out of that window i was like what the
fuck i don't know it's crazy but also like if laura richards can't do it as elegantly out of that window I was like what the fuck I don't know it's crazy but also like if Laura Richards can't do it as elegantly as she did it without disrupting that
cobweb I think we can pretty much say that it probably wasn't the entry point for any kind of
intruder and what I find odd so obviously the Ramsey's story at this point is they're like
someone was broken into our house and they've taken our daughter why then at the only entry point is john saying oh no i actually broke that
window that was me the only way i can sort of get around that is maybe so he obviously broke the
window to let himself into the house so in theory the intruder puts their hand through the thing and
then opens the window from the inside and gets in that way i suppose but i just don't know why
i mean obviously if he's telling the truth then he's got nothing to hide and why
wouldn't you be like oh I actually did break that but it does mean they could have got in without
using the door it just seems odd is that glass because if he broke it the summer before I mean
he didn't get around to fixing it but presumably you didn't just leave a load of smashed glass
lying around inside the basement so maybe it didn't look like a fresh good point if you see what i mean so they had to be like oh that window
was already broken but it does mean that somebody could have seen that and used it to get into the
house but if we like fine leave aside the cobweb maybe this person was like a tiny little eel of
a person that crept through without and didn't want to, you know,
destroy this poor spider's buffet in the corner. Who knows? The thing we can say is that there were no footprints in the snow. So how could somebody have walked around the house to get to that broken
window that led into the basement? There are no footprints in the snow that lead there. So again,
even if you
can accept that somebody came in that way, it doesn't look possible that somebody walked around
to that window that night. So that's a pretty big eh-eh for that being the entry point. So I think
Hannah and I, having gone through this research, having discussed it, there's not 100% of things
that we're sure on. But if there is one thing we're pretty certain of,
it's that all of the proverbial calls are coming from inside the house. This is like a locked room
mystery. There's four people in this house. One of them dies. There's no real other opportunities
for other people to get in and out of the house. So it kind of feels like it was one of them.
It's Cluedo.
Yeah, it's Cluedo.
And although the police did a shit job of the rest of the crime scene,
they did manage to capture video footage of the Ramsey house that day.
And in one of the shots, a black torch or flashlight is clearly visible on the kitchen counter.
But this was dismissed by the crime scene unit and not collected as evidence.
The three-page handwritten ransom note, which we will get into in great detail later, don't panic,
instructed John Ramsey to withdraw $118,000 from the bank and wait for a call between 8am and 10am.
The Ramseys, the Ramseys' mates, the Ramseys' pastor and the Boulder Police Department
all waited patiently for this call.
It never came.
Detective Linda Arndt then suggested that John and his friends
search the house starting from the top and working their way down.
John ignored this instruction and headed straight for the labyrinth basement.
He went into a particularly small basement room
and screamed as he saw a white blanket on the floor.
He picked up this white
blanket and the little figure that was wrapped up inside it. Some say that he started to scream
before he'd even turned on the light, so how could he possibly have known that a blanket on the floor
in a dark room contained the corpse of his daughter? But he was right. It was JonBenet,
and she had been lying almost exactly under the spot where her mother had been sitting and making crying noises for hours.
JonBenet had duct tape over her mouth.
A white cord was wrapped around her right wrist over her pyjama top.
The other end of the cord was loose, as if it had once been tied around her left wrist.
Her hands were over her head, not as one might expect behind her back.
And also, her right hand was tied with a slipknot.
So if she wanted to get it off her hands, she would have been able to do it incredibly easily.
There was also a white cord around her neck that had been tightened by a small piece of wood
to make a sort of makeshift garrotte.
And this piece of wood would later be identified as having been broken off one of patsy's paintbrushes the white cord would later be found to be an exact match for one that was
on sale at an army shop right around the corner from john's office at access graphics it's not
that difficult to assume i think therefore that everything found on john bonnet's body was already
in the ramsey mansion and not to go on about police deficiencies in the handling of this crime scene,
but also kind of yes, because that's why we're here.
But why does the detective tell John Ramsey to search the house?
The statistics are so clear when a child goes missing or something happens
that the parents cannot be ruled out as suspects.
They're in the fucking house and she lets them search the crime scene, potentially disposing of evidence, fucking with shit.
Even if they were innocent, why are they allowed to search the fucking house?
It's so bizarre.
You can either take two lines of thought on it.
You can either be like, oh, they just wanted to keep him busy so they could speak to patsy without him being there possibly or they showed up to the ramsey house that day
with the assumption that the ramseys couldn't possibly be involved and therefore they're
allowed to do what they want because their daughter's missing and they're distraught
it's either or yeah i mean i think it's probably the latter if you want to keep him busy give him a fucking
rubik's cube or something i don't know lock him in a corner like don't give him the most
destructive task which is trampling he's also allowed to leave the house for over an hour and
he goes on his own this is what i mean there are so many holes the reason we will never have a
conclusive answer to this story without a shadow of a doubt is because
I believe of the fuck upery that happens in the first few hours when the police arrive at the
scene like it's unbelievable and also so suspect that he goes straight to the basement I think he
was like fucking we called the police we've set up her body downstairs obviously I'm giving away
what I think happened the police don't even go check the basement. He's like, for fuck's sake. Okay, I'm just going to go do it. Oh, she's here. I found her. Sob, sob, sob. So after he found her
body, John ripped the duct tape from his daughter's mouth. Again, he's just allowed to fucking handle
this body. That is the main piece of evidence now is Jean Benet's corpse. Drips the duct tape
off her mouth. And then he picks her up
carries her out of the basement and lays her on the living room floor for all of those assembled
to see it screams to me of like almost exhibiting it's like here you go i didn't have anything to
do with it yeah and why are you lying her on the floor unless you know she's already dead yeah
why doesn't he immediately start, trying to resuscitate her
or doing something in the basement?
Picks her up and carries her to the living room and just lays her on the floor.
I mean, obviously we weren't there, so we can't tell exactly how this went down,
but the fact that he was A, allowed to,
and the fact that he does these things just seems very odd.
Detective Linda Arndt gave the following description of the condition of
Jean Benet. Quote, the girl's lips were blue. She had rigor mortis. She was not breathing.
Her body was cool to the touch. There was a red circular mark in the front of her neck,
about the size of a quarter, at the base of her throat. She had an odor of decay to her,
and she had dried mucus from one of her nostrils.
So it was quite clear to the trained eye that JonBenet had been dead for quite some time.
Patsy, with her distinctly untrained eye, collapsed on top of her daughter, declaring,
Jesus, you raised Lazarus from the dead, raise my baby. Again, they're allowed to just like,
touch the body again. Then everyone in the house prayed
together over little Jean Benet's blanket clad body, further disturbing all of the evidence.
Now we're unsure why the police's first priority was communion with God and not preservation of
the site of a homicide. But then again, we've never been to Colorado.
At what stage in a murder investigation is the police detective like,
OK, let's just have a little pray and then we'll figure it out?
I really think it ties into what you said.
I think they went there.
They arrived there.
They see a hysterical patsy, a pacing John.
I think they immediately read the situation they
profiled this rich couple as not having had anything to do with their daughter's murder
they just immediately decided that then when they find the body i think they just are like
this poor poor family we better let them do what they need to to grieve because this horrible
tragedy has happened to them and the investigation investigation, unbelievably, came second to that.
I really feel like that's what I have to hope it is. Because if it's not that,
it's a massive fucking conspiracy of a cover-up right from the start.
JonBenet's body was carried out of her home at 10.45pm that evening in a body bag. And Jon,
Patsy and Little Burke never returned to their home. They stayed with friends for
a really long time before they moved somewhere else. And so the question that has plagued true crime fans for the past 25 years
was formed. Who killed John Bonnet Ramsey? Was it an intruder or something a bit more sinister?
Initially, the press was sympathetic towards the Ramsey family and the whole affair was painted as
a tragedy. But that narrative didn't last very
long. Assistant District Attorney for Boulder Bill Wise was the very first bright spark to realise
that kidnapping victims don't usually show up in their own homes. Suspicion around the family grew
and this was not helped by their refusal to be interviewed under oath and on video by police.
And it was double not helped by their decision to hire a PR team
and many top-notch defense lawyers.
Their superstar dream team included Big Dog attorney Hal Haddon,
who had managed former Senator Gary Hart's political campaigns.
Their spokesperson was Patrick Corton,
who they flew in all the way from D.C.
and he made himself famous by his defense of Oliver North.
And they also had a retired FBI
agent in their employ. So John argued that he assembled this team because he wanted the best
minds in the country on the case. But to everyone else, it looked like he was trying to wage a spin
war. The Ramseys appeared on CNN before they allowed themselves to be interviewed on video by the police.
Which, if you haven't done anything wrong, seems like an odd move to make.
And in the CNN interview, John and Patsy talk about finding who was responsible for JonBenet's death and why they did it.
Surely speaking to the police would speed up that process more than just going on CNN.
But also, if they did do it, they did get away with
it. So it did work. Like they just are so obsessed with the public perception of them, that that's
the thing that is the priority rather than talking to the police. Yeah, I agree. And they did get
away with it, but not successfully enough that, you know, 25 years later, that people are still
like, they fucking did it. Like, they go and they act so suspiciously in these interviews and I know we've spoken about this time and time again that you
can't judge how somebody behaves immediately after a tragedy because like people respond to grief and
things like that in a very different way that is absolutely true but there are like odd things that
they do do like watch that documentary watch the interview. Patsy does a lot of like
shaking her head the wrong way. And she is completely doped up. Like you can tell she's
on a lot of medication. And the CBS documentary does point this out, so I can't take credit for
it. But I do think it's interesting that they say, we want to find who did this Dijon Benet,
but we're not angry. We just want to know why.
What? If somebody had done this, or I was pretending that somebody had done this,
somebody had broken into my house and murdered my six-year-old daughter,
angry would be a pretty key word in how I was feeling. I'm not angry. I want to know why.
And it's literally, it's about two weeks after she dies, they do this CNN interview.
And in the CBS documentary, they make an important point about this.
When you say, I'm not angry, I want to know why,
does that not sound like a parent talking to a child who's done something wrong?
Yeah.
Enter Burt Cramsey.
It's a very weird phraseology and words matter.
When they were on this cnn interview they also announced that they would offer a hundred thousand dollar reward for anyone with
information fifty thousand of which they had donated themselves which again of course this
is a usual thing that happens but it does seem odd in this case because they were being the most
obstructive force in this case how How can you ask the public for
information when you yourself are refusing to give any? It's strange. And despite their selective
interview choices, as the investigation into the death of Jean Benet raged on, the press stuck
to the Ramseys and their friends like glue. One journalist even joined the same church as the Ramseys
just to get a closer look.
He claimed that he had never seen anyone pray for their soul
like Patsy Ramsey prayed for hers.
Public opinion on the Ramseys was somewhat split.
Some saw them as good, God-fearing people
who had been incredibly unlucky.
Others thought them entering their six-year-old child into beauty
pageants and dressing her up like a woman, dyeing her hair, putting makeup on her was perverse.
I do think the hair dyeing is quite extreme. Yeah, but like when I was however old, six or
seven, I went to a Spice Girls concert, dyed my hair black for that. Six? You dyed your hair at
six? I think I was six or seven, yeah. Oh, yeah oh wow but i don't know is it because like dyeing your hair black you can do it with
like packet color but like dyeing your hair blonde from being darker that's bleach yeah true very true
but patsy and john had moved to boulder from atlanta georgia and apparently pageanting is a
much bigger deal in georgia and when they had had moved themselves, many Boulderites just saw it as not particularly Colorado appropriate.
So I think there is some cultural issue here.
Oh, totally. I can't remember in which bit of the many clickable links that will be below.
But I read an interview with a Boulder native and they're saying that I'm not
going to phrase this very well but they sort of said people who live in Boulder have ideas about
themselves and pageantry doesn't fit into those ideas you're right it's a cultural difference
it's just not as prevalent as it would have been in Atlanta when I watched like toddlers and tiaras
and stuff like that I think it's more of like a southern thing and then when they moved out of
there it was kind of maybe looked upon as being quite a strange thing to do.
Harvard is the oldest and richest university in America.
But when a social media-fueled fight over Harvard and its new president broke out last fall,
that was no protection.
Claudine Gay is now gone. We've exposed the DEI regime,
and there's much more to come.
This is The Harvard Plan,
a special series from the Boston Globe
and WNYC's On The Media.
To listen, subscribe to On The Media
wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Jake Warren,
and in our first season of Finding,
I set out on a very personal quest
to find the woman who saved my mum's life.
You can listen to Finding Natasha right now exclusively on Wondery Plus. In season two,
I found myself caught up in a new journey to help someone I've never even met. But a couple of years
ago, I came across a social media post by a person named Loti. It read in part,
Three years ago today that I attempted to jump off this bridge,
but this wasn't my time to go. A gentleman named Andy saved my life. I still haven't found him.
This is a story that I came across purely by chance, but it instantly moved me and it's
taken me to a place where I've had to consider some deeper issues around mental health.
This is season two of Finding, and this time, if all goes to plan,
we'll be finding Andy.
You can listen to Finding Andy and Finding Natasha
exclusively and ad-free on Wondery+.
Join Wondery in the Wondery app,
Apple Podcasts, or Spotify.
But nonetheless, clouds of suspicion
had started to gather over the Ramsey family.
FBI profiler John Douglas interviewed the
Ramseys and said, quote, if they're responsible for the killing, they are tremendous liars.
And he said that after he'd spoken to them for a couple of hours. He claimed that he didn't believe,
quote, in his heart that they were responsible for John Bonet's death. You are an FBI profiler.
Should you not be using a little bit more than your heart here and also another well
not a lesson but had some this has been really hammered home this week one man's fbi profiler
is another man's fbi bullshit artist you can find an expert to say literally whatever you want john
douglas is interesting because he's the inspiration for both silence of the lambs and mind hunter and
he had just written his fourth book and he he had to stop off in Boulder to promote
it. And this is obviously incredibly cynical of me, but I think he just sort of wanted to cause
a stir. Like, John Douglas seems very switched on and very smart. And in making a comment on
the Ramsey case that goes against what everyone else thinks, that's going to get you in the papers.
John Douglas didn't help them that much. The Ramseys were certainly under suspicion
and the police had absolutely nothing to go on.
But the Ramseys did give them handwriting samples
and hair samples and stuff like that,
but they did consistently refuse to be interviewed
under oath and on video.
The police were stumped.
Months of investigation revealed no smoking gun
in the 700 crime scene photos
and the 10,000 pages of investigative material and
850 tips from the public, there was nothing. The Ramses fantasy football legal team,
pitted against the local Colorado authorities, was a David and Goliath match, and the Ramses knew it.
The autopsy of JonBenet's body was released in three stages, but we've collated all of it here
and hope to give you a clear overview. But there are a lot of differing opinions with this. All of the direct quotes we
have from the autopsy are from a book called Who Killed JonBenet Ramsey? And the conclusions that
you're about to hear are from the co-author of that book, whose name is Dr. Cyril Wecht.
Now, they are not everyone's conclusions, and this case has
really made us question who to trust. It seems that you can find a leading expert in whatever
industry to say whatever you like. Dr. Wecht is a special kind of forensic pathologist, though,
in that he also had a law degree. When Who Killed Jean-Bernay Ramsey was published, he had performed 13,000
autopsies and consulted on 30,000 more. So it's safe to say he's incredibly experienced and chucking
the law degree. He can look at this from multiple angles, so he's a good witness or a good expert,
you could say. The autopsy was released eight days after JonBenet died,
and it concluded that JonBenet died from asphyxia,
from strangulation, from the garrote around her neck.
She had also sustained a serious blow to the head,
and this was clear from an eight-inch crack in her skull.
The base of this break was almost perfectly rectangular and smooth,
like she had been hit with a heavy object that had a larger top than bottom
and smooth edges like a golf club or a flashlight.
Her temporal lobe also showed damage consistent with shaking.
The CBS documentary claims that the break in JonBenet's skull
was an exact fit for the black flashlight that had been visible on the kitchen counter in the crime scene video footage.
They even do this very, like, macabre little, like, experiment where they get a kid about Burke's age at the time, so nine years old, to hit a skull with a flashlight.
And they find that the same kind of skull splitting
damage could be done. But the problem is that when the police returned to try and collect the
flashlight as evidence, they couldn't find it. So I'm not exactly sure how the CBS crack team
could have possibly known the exact flashlight measurements. The CBS team say that the torch was, quote,
not claimed by either police nor the Ramseys.
But I've also read in other places that it was not found at all
and it just totally disappeared.
I do not know who to believe on that.
But if you watch the CBS documentary,
the way they talk about the flashlight is so vague.
Watch again with that in your mind that actually they never found it
and it disappeared and you will be a bit more suspicious of it i think however it's completely possible that the
source who says the flat flashlight completely disappeared is not telling the truth either like
it's a complete den of fucking lies you can say we know that the torch existed at one point because
it's in the video footage from the crime scene. And maybe they could get the measurements from the video footage, like a good enough guess, and the shape could be
seen and it could be matched that way to the skull cracking. I mean, possibly, but you can't call that
an exact match. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And again, the fact that the torch did go missing, is it a
coincidence? It just got moved around in the chaos?
Or did it get disposed of?
Like, we just don't know.
When was the video footage taken?
We know that fucking John Ramsey was allowed out of the house.
Did he take it, dispose of it?
They had days to dispose of it because the police didn't come back for it for ages.
It wouldn't have even had to have been that morning.
So I think this is the thing, I mean mean we've been struggling with most of all but i
think what it comes down to is this where you stand on what happened to john benet ramsey really
depends on whether you think it was the blow to the head or the asphyxiation that killed her cbs
want you to believe that she was struck on the head and then strangled a little bit to make it
look like a kidnapping but crucially it was the blunt trauma to her head that finished her off. Dr Wecht disagrees. What CBS don't tell you is there's actually a lot of
evidence to suggest that JonBenet was sexually assaulted. CBS deny this totally they just skip
right over it but here is the evidence as it was laid out in her autopsy. So there was an abrasion
inside of JonBenet's vagina and her hymen contained what they call epithelial erosion
with underlying capillary congestion and that is it's irritation it's a sign that something has
gone on there. Her vaginal walls showed signs of chronic inflammation we're talking about
inflammation that was 48 to 72 hours old whatever caused it happened before Christmas day. Foreign
material was also found in JonBenet's genital area.
There were numerous traces of dark fiber and particles of something like talcum powder.
All of these things seem to point towards some kind of penetration. And where do you find talcum
powder? You find it on latex gloves. So is it possible that someone had digitally penetrated
JonBenet wearing a medical glove? Or is it a little bit more innocent than that?
JonBenet's paediatrician reported that he had never suspected
that JonBenet was being subjected to any form of abuse, sexual or otherwise.
JonBenet had suffered from occasional discomfort while urinating and vaginitis.
And these can be caused by loads of things.
A reaction to bubble bath, for example.
I just don't think it's impossible
that JonBenet
couldn't have inflicted
the vaginal abrasion
on herself
if she was uncomfortable.
It's possible.
Kids do shit like that
all the time.
And we do know also
like she was in
all these beauty pageants
like maybe Patsy
was just like spraying her
with loads of perfume,
loads of bubble bath.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
Got an irritation
and she's like
scratched herself
like, God,
it's uncomfortable. Vaginitis isn't great. So she's a six herself like god it's it's uncomfortable
vaginitis isn't great so she's a real kid like she has a scratch like maybe it was that yeah
if you're itchy you're gonna scratch it there was also some blood found in jamboné's vagina but
again that could be down to all sorts of things there was no bruising or tearing in the genital area. So if sexual abuse
was happening, penile penetration looks pretty unlikely. Obviously, that's not the only form of
abuse, but that's what the evidence suggests. Of course, it's not the only sign of abuse. But if
they're making a case for sexual abuse, like there is evidence that there was something,
but not necessarily clear cut, she was being sexually abused but it is weird that
cbs are just like nah and i also think like it comes from the the strangulation thing being
associated with autoerotic asphyxiation i think if you think that the strangling of her was a sexual
thing all of the other sort of symptoms of sexual abuse seem a lot more significant but if it wasn't
that you could
probably explain them with, you know, bubble bath. Exactly, because the strangulation could have been,
as you said, sort of autoerotic asphyxiation, or it could have just been strangulation and
a coincidence that it happened to be the type that it was, which we'll talk about now.
But before we do that, let's come back quickly to the question of the talcum powder. Jean Benet's bladder, when she died, was empty. Was it possible that she had wet the bed and that
the talcum powder had been administered by John or Patsy in some sort of cleanup effort? Maybe,
like when you wet yourself, even if she's been washed, you know, she's got some sort of vaginitis,
like maybe some talc to, you know, stop some chafing or something. I don't know. I don't
have kids, but you put them on babies, don't you? Yeah, definitely. You put talc to you know stop some chafing or something I don't know I don't have kids but you put them on babies don't you? Yeah definitely you put talc on kids all the time
yeah. Exactly so had the vaginal abrasion been a result of something like vigorous wiping by a tired
and or irritated parent? We don't know. There was also pineapple found in Jean Benet's digestive
system and it was estimated that she had probably consumed it about two hours prior to her death.
Dr. Cyril Wecht poses the following theory, assuming that Jean Benet was being sexually abused.
He says that she was strangled by her abuser in an attempt to induce autoerotic asphyxiation, and that the intent had never been to kill her.
He assumed this because there was almost no damage to JonBenet's neck. The strap muscles
on either side of her neck were undamaged, so no great force at all had been used. But he also
hypothesized that the garrotte fashioned from the white cord and Patsy's broken paintbrush
accidentally pinched JonBenet's vagus nerve. And that's the nerve that runs from the white cord and Patsy's broken paintbrush, accidentally pinched Jean Benet's
vagus nerve. And that's the nerve that runs from the brain down the neck. The vagus nerve is in
charge of regulating major organs, especially the heart and lungs. When messages from the vagus nerve
are therefore interrupted, the body enters what is called electrical death and breathing can stop.
JonBenet's eyes exhibited hemorrhaging indicating that she had still been breathing
and her heart had still been pumping blood as she was being strangled.
Wecht argues that JonBenet was already circling the drain, so to speak,
when she suffered the head injury,
because the subdural hemorrhage was recorded as containing
only seven or eight centimeters of blood. That's less than two teaspoons. If she was not already
almost dead from the trapping of her vagus nerve, there should have been a lot more bleeding than
this from that head injury. And this stage is called perimortem. Jean Benet's brain was also
swollen. It was 15% heavier than it should have been.
Wecht uses this as further evidence to support his theory
that her brain was starved of oxygen before the blow had cracked her skull.
If the head injury was the thing that had killed her,
Jean Benet's brain would not have had time to swell that much.
So you do have to ask, if the abuser was strangling JonBenet
with no intention of killing her, why is the head wound inflicted when she looked like she was
already dead? Dr. Wecht argues that perhaps someone had been trying to protect JonBenet
and the blunt object blow had been meant for the perpetrator but had accidentally landed
on the victim. It's complicated because obviously Dr. Wecht is, you know, this incredibly experienced
guy, but then so is the autopsy man that they have in the CBS documentary, and he says basically the
opposite thing. So it's so difficult to know. JonBenet's body also exhibited abrasions to her
right cheek, her right shoulder, and behind her right ear. Wecht argues that these happened as
she was squirming against the wall or the floor during her sexual abuse. There were also two marks found on JonBenet's body
that some claim are consistent with those left by a stun gun.
The CBS documentary claimed that they are actually from a toy train track
that JonBenet had been poked with after she died.
How hard do you have to poke someone with a piece of toy train track
to leave a mark?
Fucking hard, I think.
Yeah.
Hard enough that the mark could be confused
with that from a stun gun you're giving him a proper jab with that i'm not even sure i would
be able to inflict that much force with it because it's not a it's an awkward thing to be holding
it is not that i'm gonna go and start battering people with train track now just to find out but
like well also the thing that they do in the CBS documentary that I thought was a bit suspect so she has two sort of what look like punctures the bit of train track they show so they're
arguing that it's like the connecty bits of the train track that have poked her the bit that they
show has three prongs and they don't show it for very long but it like it has three connecty bits
and I'm just a bit like that kind of I think I guess we were talking about
this yesterday and what I would say about the CBS documentary is like most true crime documentaries
yes absolutely we all watch them they're all there but bear in mind that nobody really likes telling
a story that's just like oh we don't really know what happened here's some things that happened
here here's some things that happened here off you go some things that happened here. Off you go. These things are usually built with some form of agenda attached to them. And really what they're doing
is what we see in court. What a good prosecution would do is build a narrative using the evidence
that points towards a presupposed theory. They had this theory, which we'll talk about, and I'm not,
you know, I'm not saying it's wrong at all. But they leave out the information that
doesn't fit it and they build a really strong case around the stuff that does. That's what
they're doing. And it's very compelling. Don't get me wrong. The first time I watched it, I was like,
fuck, that's it. But let's leave the autopsy for a while now and have a look at the infamous ransom
note that Patsy claims to have found on the stairs. And here it is in full.
Mr. Ramsey, listen carefully!
We are a group of individuals that represent a small foreign faction.
We do respect your business, but not the country it serves.
At this time, we have your daughter in our possession.
She is safe and unharmed.
If you want her to see 1997, you must follow our instructions to the letter. You will withdraw $118,000 from your account. $100,000 will be in
$100 bills and the remaining $18,000 in $20 bills. Make sure that you bring an adequate size attache
to the bank. When you get home, you will put the money in a brown paper bag.
I will call you between 8 and 10 a.m. tomorrow to instruct you on delivery.
The delivery will be exhausting, so I advise you to be rested.
If we monitor you getting the money early,
we might call you early to arrange an earlier delivery of the money,
and hence an earlier delivery, crossed out, pickup of your daughter.
Any deviations of my instructions will result in the immediate execution of your daughter.
You will also be denied her remains for proper burial.
The two gentlemen watching over your daughter do not particularly like you,
so I advise you do not provoke them. Speaking to anyone about
your situation, such as police, FBI, etc., will result in your daughter being beheaded.
If we catch you talking to a stray dog, she dies. If you alert bank authorities, she dies.
If the money is in any way marked or tampered with, she dies. You will be scanned for electronic devices,
and if any are found, she dies. You can try to deceive us, but be warned that we are familiar with law enforcement countermeasures and tactics. You stand a 99% chance of killing your daughter
if you try to outsmart us. Follow our instructions and you stand a 100% chance of getting her back. You and your family are under constant scrutiny, as well as the authorities.
Don't try to grow a brain, John.
You are not the only fat cat around, so don't think that killing will be difficult.
Don't underestimate us, John.
Use that good southern common sense of yours.
It's up to you now, John!
Signed off, Victory! SBTC.
Pretty long-winded for a ransom note, isn't it?
Just a bit. It's very, like, theatrical, overly descriptive, I would say. A C-.
And that's not the only thing that's strange about it. Obviously, you've just heard it,
but when you see it written down, quite a lot of other things become apparent the pen and paper on which the
note was written with and on came from patsy's notepad that she kept by the phone both pad and
pen were found in the same places that they always were the pad also exhibited two practice notes
one of them so it's not like she just left them there, but it was like in the indentation of ripped out pages.
And one of them had started, so that one obviously starts Mr. Ramsey,
the one that had been written and didn't make the cut said Mr. and Mrs. Ramsey.
So whoever wrote it, it was Patsy, takes Patsy out of the situation.
It's very weird to write a very weird ransom note, but even weirder maybe to write one to yourself.
So she's like, I'll take myself out of this this situation and I just love that you know it was her you know
it was the mum because she puts the notepad and paper back in the place that they're meant to be
exactly no one else does that if we believe that someone broke into their house and left this note
we have to believe that one they knew where to find the pen and paper two they were kind enough
to put it back when they were finished and three they had time to find the pen and paper. Two, they were kind enough to put it back when they were finished.
And three, they had time to write three pages and two false starts,
all while the remaining Ramses were all asleep upstairs.
If a small foreign faction were planning the kidnap of a kid,
why would they not bring their own ransom note?
They just got there and they're like, oh shit, I forgot.
Especially one that is so descriptive.
They're just like, it's fine. We've shit, I forgot. Especially one that is so descriptive.
They're just like, it's fine.
We've got this six-year-old that we've kidnapped and her whole family is asleep upstairs.
We're just going to chill out here while I write this note.
And what is this person just like?
You know I've always wanted to be a writer.
Just let me have this.
You've said that if I came along that you would let me write the ransom note.
Stop interrupting me.
We've already fucked it up twice.
What is happening?
The note borrows extremely heavily from similar ransom situations in the films Dirty Harry, Ransom and Speed.
John Ramsey was a very wealthy man.
Why would they ask for 118,000 when they could have had millions?
Is it worth noting that 118,000 was almost the exact amount that John Ramsey had received as a bonus from his company that year i find this hilarious why would a foreign terrorist organization not say who they
were and why would they give a shit about a graphics company let alone respect their work
and also why would a foreign terrorist organization care about southern common sense like i think the
only people who say things like that are people from the south. Oh, absolutely.
And just the weirdness of, like,
almost stroking John's ego,
almost while they're saying all this derogatory stuff,
like saying, like, we respect your business.
You're not the only fact.
Like, what?
It's like, why are you saying that
when you've kidnapped his fucking daughter?
Just get to the point.
Very strange. Very strange.
The ransom note also displays pretty basic spelling mistakes. kidnapped his fucking daughter, just get to the point. Very strange, very strange.
The ransom note also displays pretty basic spelling mistakes.
For example, there are too many S's in business.
That's a pretty, that's a pretty like strange mistake. Especially when you consider that more complicated words like countermeasure are spelled correctly.
And all the mistakes appear in the first paragraph,
almost as if the person who wrote it was trying to make it look
as if the person who wrote the note was not a native English speaker
and then forgot to keep up the mistakes.
So yeah, the misspellings of like business happen in the first bit
and then whoever's writing it forgets to misspell
or remembers how to correctly spell
business later on while they're writing this massive ransom note. The notepad also showed
seven sets of prints. One belonged to a police sergeant. Why are you picking up notepads without
your, where are your gloves? Where are your gloves? And one to a forensic examiner. Again,
where are your gloves? And all other five prints belonged to Patsy Ramsey.
More forensic handwriting experts have looked at that note than you can shake a stick at.
And like everything else in this case, it is so hard to know who to believe.
The handwriting experts that the Ramsey hired say that there is no way
that either of the Ramseys wrote the note.
I wonder why they say that.
Others ruled out John,
but not Patsy. Others say that it was definitely Patsy, just using her left hand.
And we've seen examples of Patsy's writing, and I do have to say that it does look incredibly similar to the handwriting in the ransom note. But having said that, she does have pretty bait
handwriting. There's nothing particularly special about it for example your handwriting and my sister's handwriting are identical oh really yeah whereas my handwriting
because I like learn to write in like a really ridiculous way is very distinctive I just think
that the way Patsy writes I'm like I probably know about seven people who I would mistake that
handwriting for yeah I think the handwriting analysis is like it's an interesting thing but
like you said everybody says something different to me more what sticks out is just the weird note
itself more than it and the fact of like it having been written in the house yeah it sets off alarm
bells and in one of the documentaries that we've listed below patsy's interviewed about her
handwriting and asked to compare it to the ransom note and so she's given like words or like letters
and it's in her handwriting and then it's the one that's on the ransom note.
And she is so evasive when she's asked to point out the similarities between these letters.
And she's like, they're both Gs.
She just like will not give an inch on it.
It's really quite astonishing to watch.
She just refuses to say that there are any similarities at all between the letters when they are the same. And same and they're like patsy did these look the same to you and she's like no
and i was like are you yes yes they are so whatever happened to john bonnet i don't know
who did it but i am certain that patsy ramsey wrote that ransom note and that's something that
most sources who weren't hired by the Ramsey family tend to agree with.
Now we have to deal with the issue of the pineapple in Jean Benet's stomach.
As we said earlier, it was not fully digested, so it means that she ate it sometime in the night before she died.
Even though, according to her parents, she was sound asleep. Police called to the crime scene reported that there was a bowl of pineapple and milk next to a glass of tea on a table in the house. The bowl and glass
displayed Patsy's fingerprints and Burke's fingerprints. Based on this, the CBS team
hypothesized that Burke was given this food by his mother and JonBenet came down the stairs
and nicked a bit with her bare hands and that this made Burke so
angry that he hit her on the head with the flashlight, accidentally killing her and then
Patsy and JonRamsay covered up the whole thing and staged the kidnapping. Which is a great theory.
If you ignore certain things, like for example, the bits of evidence that do suggest that there
may have been sexual abuse, doesn't necessarily mean that that makes that theory impossible, but it is interesting that CBS completely disregard it. But
I guess it's because, like we said, if you were building a case against this and that was your
narrative, this would lead people on a side path that they don't want you to go down. There is video
footage of an 11-year-old Burke, and this is a big bit of the case that the CBS documentary used,
because there is video footage of an 11-year Burke being questioned about the pineapple and he doesn't right away say
what it is but we've seen the picture and no I wouldn't know what that was I think like they're
like showing the photograph and they're like what's's that? And he's like, a bowl? But it's not cereal, is it?
And then he sort of, they sort of lead him to it.
And you could take that two ways.
But like also the photograph just isn't that clear.
Like it looks like lumps of like matter.
I will agree that it's not 100% clear.
But what I would say is when you watch him being interviewed,
I think it's like by a psychiatrist or a psychologist,
and they're showing him all of these different photos.
He seems very comfortable.
And again, this may have just been the way that CBS edited it and cut this footage together.
But it seems like he's very happy and comfortable in answering, oh, that's this, that's this, that's this.
And when it gets to the pineapple, his body language seems to change.
And then he's like, he doesn't even say he doesn't know.
He says he doesn't know for ages and he seems very on edge.
My only thing is if he had been behaving like that the entire interview, okay.
But because his behavior changes, and also we could be like, it's not that clear.
It is his bowl and his pineapple.
If he showed me a blurry picture of something I own, I'd probably still be able to tell you what it was.
But again, you could honestly take this in either direction.
I could argue both
sides all day long. So it doesn't help. And also you could say he could just be uncomfortable
because he's a kid on his own in a room with a stranger, just questioning him constantly.
CBS also claimed the DNA evidence found on JonBenet's body, specifically in her underwear,
was of no forensic value. And I think I agree with them there. JonBenet's body was moved around so much that she could have picked up literally anything. But I just don't
think we can totally rule out sexual abuse. Burke Ramsey is now a grown-up and he recently settled
a $750 million defamation lawsuit against CBS. His lawyers argued that the accusations of murder
against Burke Ramsey were based on, quote, a compilation of lies, half-truths, manufactured information,
and the intentional omission and avoidance of truthful information
about the murder of John Benet Ramsey.
And I have to say, I think there's some truth in there.
Even on the 911 call alone, which is what they build their whole case around,
I just don't hear what they're hearing
like they're just like this is what it is the 911 call I disagree with I don't think that would be
like an impactful piece of evidence for me because I don't I really don't hear what they're saying I
don't think you can tell tone and I don't think you can distinctively hear three voices at least
I personally can't I don't think you can rule out sexual abuse, but to me, I don't feel like there's enough evidence of it that it would make me feel like
there was definitely abuse going on. And we're certainly not trying to catch a lawsuit here,
but that's not really to say that Burke couldn't have been responsible for JonBenet's murder.
If we accept the autorotic asphyxiation slash sexual abuse argument, which we might not,
but let's pretend for a second that we are, it have been him he slept in john bonet's room sometimes and we have
no idea of knowing how innocent that was and maybe the whole thing was just a game gone wrong maybe a
parent rushed in saw the strangulation and the blow to the head was meant to for burke or maybe
it was an intruder but the problem we've got with that argument is the lack of dna evidence no signs
of forced entry and the fact that every piece of evidence connected with this case was already inside the Ramsey house and all of the
doors were locked all night. So what it comes down to is which expert you believe and whether you
think the head injury or the asphyxiation was the thing that killed John Bonnet. In 1999, the case
was put before a grand jury and this grand jury voted to indict both Patsy and John Ramsey on
child endangerment and the obstruction of a murder investigation. And this is very important because
the grand jury did not move to indict them on murder charges, no matter what the CBS documentary
may imply and have led you to believe. But it doesn't matter either way because the prosecutor
felt that there was not enough evidence to support either of these indictments beyond a reasonable doubt. So nothing happened.
The Ramseys were never prosecuted for the murder of Jean Benet or for any connected charges. They
were never even formally named as suspects in the murder investigation. In 2008, they were actually
cleared entirely by the Boulder District Attorney's Office. And by they, we mean all three
Ramseys. They were announced completely cleared and the DA's office even apologized for their
treatment over the years. This absolution was allegedly given on the basis of new DNA evidence.
But what evidence that was, I have no idea. Surely their DNA was all over the place it was their house and we have read in some places that
this evidence was a new found DNA profile that was found in the house that matched blood on
JonBenet's clothing how are you ruling people out just because even if you have found a new DNA
profile that could have literally come from anywhere but they do apparently and also given
the fact that she was moved around so much like like we said, it's hard to know where this could have come from. But this clearance sadly came a
bit too late for Patsy Ramsey, who died of ovarian cancer in 2006 at the age of 49.
But it is so far from being over. In 2010, the case was officially reopened.
Further testing of DNA samples has been conducted, but no real conclusions
have been made. But that hasn't stopped people confessing to the crime. People who lean towards
the sexual abuse argument often cite JonBenet's pageant participation as being overly sexualized,
and that might be true. There's some claim that JonBenet would have been a prime target
for paedophiles. There are a lot of pictures of her everywhere. Gary Oliva was a
registered sex offender who was in Boulder the night of JonBenet's murder, and he confessed to
killing JonBenet accidentally. He wrote his confession in a letter to a friend while he
was serving 10 years in prison for possession of child pornography. He told his pen pal,
I never loved anyone like I did JonBenet, and yet I let her slip and her head bashed in half and I watched her die.
It was an accident. Please believe me.
She's not like the other kids.
And then the pen pal claimed to have received a distressed phone call from Oliva that fateful boxing day in 1996.
And apparently he told her through sobs that he had, quote, hurt a little girl.
The Boulder Police Department became totally disinterested in Gary's confession
when they couldn't find any of his DNA at the scene.
Are you stumped?
Well, so are we.
And we've been staring at this fucking rabbit Warren case all week.
And before we let you know our final thoughts on this true crime treasure trove,
we've picked out the greatest hits of the internet sleuth theories.
Bill McReynolds was hired by the Ramseys to play Father Christmas at the Ramseys Christmas party
three nights before Jean Benet was killed. And he gave her a card that said, you will receive a very
special gift after Christmas, 22 years before his own daughter had gone missing on Christmas Day.
Now, tempting as that one is,
McGranald was cleared by DNA testing and died in 2002.
A liberal activist group called the Asia-Pacific American Coalition
were also kicking around Colorado University in 1996,
and some have speculated that the ransom note was put down to them
and that the $118,000 that they demanded was actually JonBenet's time of death.
This group disbanded shortly after that Christmas.
This wouldn't be a conspiracy theory roundup without some aliens.
So some people think that the foreign faction part of the ransom note
was actually code for extraterrestrial beings who
were so jealous of john bonnet's beauty that they killed her and as you'll remember there were no
footprints in the snow because aliens float and don't need to use our stupid doors and windows
to get in places another conspiracy theory classic from the 9-11 was an inside job collection
is this one and it says that john ramsey was targeted by the canadian air
force because he refused to help in the orchestration of the destruction of the twin
towers and building seven and last but not least this is my personal favorite some claim that john
benet never really died at all and the whole thing was an elaborate hoax so that she could
eventually re-emerge as chart-topping pop princess Katy Perry. Because nothing means anything anymore.
Yeah, they even say that Patsy looks the same as Katy Perry's mum.
And if you look at a picture of Katy Perry and you look at a picture of JonBenet,
they do look pretty similar.
Their eyebrows are basically the same.
I highly doubt it.
I think it's like the extent of you saying that your sisters and my handwriting look the same.
Like, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Just two white girls who could look like they were the same.
I don't know.
I just like, well, I do know.
Of all the things I know, I don't think that Katy Perry is JonBenet Ramsey.
All right.
Okay.
Fun time over.
Down to crunch time.
What do we think really happened to JonBenet Ramsey?
I do think that her death was an accident.
I agree.
But whether it was part of a sex game or maybe a more innocent game even between brother and sister,
I don't know, maybe she was being abused by one of her parents.
And if we accept that it was the garrotte that had killed her
rather than the accidental bludgeoning because of the pineapple stealing then the strangling kind of
cover-up thing is out of the question if we believe dr wex brain inflammation argument
then the strangulation is key it makes more logical sense that you're like oh she accidentally
gets whacked on her head with this torch and then they strangle her a bit to make it look like an accident.
That seems to make more logical sense.
But that becomes problematic if you believe what Dr. Weck's analysis of her brain was
and if it was the strangling that killed her, that's a whole other kettle of fish.
It is. And I also think I had a problem.
My biggest hole or my biggest issue with the whole CBS theory
was I can buy that Bert got angry and smacked her over the head.
The number of times my
brother and I punched each other in the head, I'm surprised one of us isn't dead. But what sort of
parents, and I don't think this is the type of parents that John and Patsy necessarily were,
could just be like, oh, okay, well, we just better garrot her a bit. That's bizarre to me that
doesn't fit at all. I personally think it is the pineapple thing,
that she comes down, steals a piece of pineapple, puts it in her mouth.
JonBenet and Burke have a tumultuous relationship leading up to this anyway. He gets pissed off and
he garrots her because he's made a little garrot with white cord and his mum's paintbrush. And I
think he probably already had it because maybe he was just a weird kid. He her he starts choking her I quite like the theory that one of the parents walked
in on it because Patsy sounds like she was still awake because she's in the same clothes she was
in the night before she comes down here's the chaos tries to get her son off JonBenet whacks
him with a torch or tries to and ends up hitting JonBenet and that's what finishes it off maybe
I kind of like that one because like what
you were saying yesterday about you know if it was John Ramsey who'd killed her I don't think
Patsy would cover for him but I think she would cover for herself and her son I yeah I agree thank
you for bringing that up I do think that's a very important point is that would a mother cover up
this hard to cover up her husband's potential abuse and murder of their young daughter, a daughter that she seemingly absolutely adored.
I don't think so.
Like, would you do it for your kid?
More likely.
And I also do think that allegations of, like, Burke not necessarily liking Jean Benet
does seem like they spent a lot more time and effort on Jean Benet.
A lot of her pageantry time took up a lot of the time.
And also, the name even.
Jean Benet was named after her dad her dad's middle name is bennett john bennett ramsey jean benet ramsey like come on
i just think burke felt like ostracized he was a bit of a weird kid he fucking choked her maybe
please don't sue us can we tell the americans what what Burke means in rhyming slang? What Burke means in rhyming slang?
You do it.
Go for it.
It means the C word.
It's an unfortunate name.
And maybe he came across that and he was like, you named me Burke and you named her after yourself.
This is outrageous.
I'm going to garrot her.
Maybe.
That's what happened.
Please don't sue us we'll
just keep saying maybe maybe maybe allegedly possibly but almost definitely not i think one
of the members of the family was responsible for her death and the cover-up was certainly
orchestrated from inside the house and what reason would they have for protecting anyone
but themselves the only thing i've come away with this
week feeling very strongly about is be careful what you watch in documentaries they often have
big budgets and points to prove exactly and also no one is ever pointing a finger at them in the
first instance the police are like treating them like they are not at all even suspects but they
like fucking go full force into defense why you're right they're protecting themselves and they
wouldn't protect anybody else that hard so that's it it. That's Jamboree Ramsey. Merry Christmas. Don't
take any shit. Challenge things. Look out for floating aliens. Have a lovely time off and we
will see you in 2020. I think that should just be our generic motto for our listeners. Don't take
shit. Look out for aliens. challenge things and look out for floating aliens
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