I think the problem is there is no such thing as a handwriting expert. It's junk science. |
Patsy’s favorite childhood movie used the word attaché and she used “and hence” in a Christmas card to a friend. The words “attaché” or “and hence” or even “foreign faction” are not words an actual foreign faction would ever when pulling off a heist. Why didn’t these intruders tie up the entire family and put the gun to Johns back to go the bank and get the $118,000? These were the worst intruders on earth if they didn’t even get the money or take the kid away in a kidnapping. It’s obvious the letter was written by the Ramseys |
WOW thats so convincing! ![]() |
That train room in the basement was Burke’s stomping grounds and favorite room in the house. Patsy told cops the pineapple dish and milk belonged to Burke. I believe Patsy wrote the ransom note because she believed Burke killed his sister |
Patsy had parenting books particular to Burke’s troubles and said she was at wits end with Burke many times. A housekeeper reported seeing Burke playing doctor with JonBenet weeks earlier in his room with her pants down. Patsy knew Burke was troubled and he’d hit JonBenet in the face with a golf club before. Even if an intruder loon did kill JonBenet, Patsy still assumed Burke did it and HENCE she wrote the ransom note |
Post a link then. Because this is wrong. 6 actual experts- including those hired by the prosecution-said it was unlikely or definitely not her writing. A few Randos who were discredited said it was her writing. Two of those randoms had even tried to align with the Ramseys initially |
lol |
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/ramseys-pass-private-polygraphs/ Polygraphs are not admissible in court but they wouldn’t take the FBI boulder test. They took a private test and passed |
You post a link. You’re the one making all these wild assertions. |
I remember that. There is zero doubt. One simply doesn't need to go further than the letter to know they tried to cover for whoever killed her. |
The Ramsey's own document examiners couldn't exclude her. She found the note, it was written from her pad, the handwriting matches her, AND the language and style of writing matches Patsy. All a ploy to deviate from the family. |
The “Listen carefully!” In the note definitely came from a woman. The “Victory, SBTC” sign off is also interesting. Does that mean saved by the cross?
During Patsy’s initial 911 call to report the note and JB being missing, it sounds like the operator asks “Does it say you took her?” Patsy freaks out and asks WHAT? Super defensively before the operator repeats “Does it say who took her?”. For a split second, Patsy thought the 911 operator had figured this out |
That's your own interpretation. And, no, Listen Carefully isn't something only women say. Why are you so desperate about this? |
. A man would say listen up. The letter was rambling and overly detailed with fits with Patsy’s perfectionist personality. An attaché, 118,000, a “rough draft” ransom letter scratched out and restarted. This intruder cared more about penmanship and writing a nice note than actually getting the money. |
Utterly implausible an intruder wouldn't have written the note in advance rather than hanging around in the house for an even longer time. Plus "they" put the notepad and pen neatly back in their correct spots. Just like any intruder would do, right? ![]() |