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To: Scotswife

Steve Thomas believes that Patsy Ramsey is responsible for the death of her daughter, JonBenét, Christmas night 1996. As a key member of the team assigned to investigate the murder of the 6-year-old girl, the former detective knows the facts of the case as well as anyone, and the conclusion he draws is convincing and clearly presented. And, as it turns out, his theory about who may be guilty of the crime is just one of the shocking revelations in JonBenét: Inside the Ramsey Murder Investigation.

From the outset, it was a textbook example of how not to run an investigation: JonBenét’s body was moved from where it was discovered before clues could be gathered, evidence was mishandled or removed altogether, the coroner failed to conduct routine procedures to determine time of death, and the crime scene was not sufficiently sealed off for hours after Patsy Ramsey’s 911 call first summoned the police. In all, the initial response was inept, and it served to undermine the entire investigation; the utter lack of cooperation with the police on the part of John and Patsy Ramsey then compounded the difficulties. Within hours of the murder, the Ramseys had their own team of high-priced lawyers, who effectively insulated them from any direct contact with detectives. Nearly four months passed before police were able to question the parents at length, and only then on the condition that the Ramseys be given full access to police reports and evidence prior to the meeting. In essence, they behaved like suspects, and when Thomas and other detectives tried to determine the Ramseys’ guilt or innocence, they were stymied every step of the way by Boulder County District Attorney Alex Hunter and those under his direction.

The hostile relationship between the police and the D.A.’s office slowed the investigation to a crawl, and, in Thomas’s eyes, proved the principal reason an arrest was never made. Despite copious evidence against them and glaring inconsistencies in their testimonies, particularly Patsy’s, the Ramseys were not even officially listed as prime suspects until March 1998 because the D.A. would not permit it. All the while, Thomas alleges, Hunter was leaking sensitive information to tabloid journalists and allowing the Ramseys’ lawyers to dictate the direction and scope of the investigation. Thomas eventually resigned from the police department after exposing the D.A.’s mismanagement of the case, and a grand jury was called. But the grand jury investigation was ultimately undermined by the D.A.’s refusal to hear the testimony of several detectives closest to the case.

Somewhere in the midst of the politics, the legal wrangling, and the in-fighting between the D.A. and the police department, the central focus of this case was lost: justice for an innocent 6-year-old girl. Steve Thomas has returned that fact to the fore in this important book. —Shawn Carkonen —This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review
“From my investigation of the Ramsey murder, Steve Thomas was the lead detective on the case from the beginning and may know what happened better than anyone.” —Lawrence Schiller, New York Times bestselling author of Perfect Murder, Perfect Town


52 posted on 01/19/2009 1:38:32 PM PST by kcvl
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To: kcvl

Steve Thomas may be correct - or he may not.

Or - he may have an agenda too -seemingly like most of the characters in this sad story.

It all comes down to that dna.
Whose dna is it?
Can Thomas answer that?


55 posted on 01/19/2009 1:41:59 PM PST by Scotswife (GO ISRAEL!!!)
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To: kcvl

You were saying — “In all, the initial response was inept, and it served to undermine the entire investigation; the utter lack of cooperation with the police on the part of John and Patsy Ramsey then compounded the difficulties. Within hours of the murder, the Ramseys had their own team of high-priced lawyers, who effectively insulated them from any direct contact with detectives. Nearly four months passed before police were able to question the parents at length, and only then on the condition that the Ramseys be given full access to police reports and evidence prior to the meeting. In essence, they behaved like suspects, and when Thomas and other detectives tried to determine the Ramseys’ guilt or innocence, they were stymied every step of the way by Boulder County District Attorney Alex Hunter and those under his direction.”

Here is a defense attorney (a professor) and a police investigator (both talking to a group of law students) about why one should *never* talk to the police. Both the police investigator and the professor agreed on that...

Interesting... (about the Constitution and the 5th Amendment)...

Talking to the Police by Professor James Duane
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8167533318153586646&hl=en

Even if you’re not interested in this for the purposes of this article above, everyone should be aware of what is in this video. Very informative and useful for personal use...


75 posted on 01/19/2009 3:13:22 PM PST by Star Traveler
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