2024 JonBenet Documentary

Anonymous
It’s possible the parents were mortified by Burkes cavalier reaction to his sister being found dead and assumed Burke was lying when they asked if he killed her so they staged the scene
Anonymous
The ransom note used the words “and hence” which Patsy used before in a Xmas card to a neighbor, and the word attaché which is not a commonly used word especially from a foreign faction. However, it appears in Patsy Ramsey’s favorite movie The Prime of Miss Jean Browdie
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The broken window is really weird. Who keeps a broken window for 7 months? Why didn’t any snow track inside with the snowy Colorado winter? They certainly had the money to fix it. It surprises me such a perfectionist and type A parent like Pat Ramsey would forget that detail. Wasn’t she showing off the house for the annual Christmas house tour (She gave a tour of that house the day before Christmas to neighborhood admirers)


The broken window was less than 2 inches, which is probably why they didn’t bother to fix it. Also, it was covered in undisturbed spider webs that the police observed.

No one went through that broken window.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The broken window is really weird. Who keeps a broken window for 7 months? Why didn’t any snow track inside with the snowy Colorado winter? They certainly had the money to fix it. It surprises me such a perfectionist and type A parent like Pat Ramsey would forget that detail. Wasn’t she showing off the house for the annual Christmas house tour (She gave a tour of that house the day before Christmas to neighborhood admirers)



The broken window was less than 2 inches, which is probably why they didn’t bother to fix it. Also, it was covered in undisturbed spider webs that the police observed.

No one went through that broken window.


+1 and the perfectionism was mainly for show. That house was a disgusting mess. Poor JB, sleeping in sheets that reeked of urine. I don’t get it, Patsy didn’t work and had a lot of help.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Parents on the top floor



I live in a 7500 square foot home and I wake up every time the kids get up. Most moms do.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Parents on the top floor



I live in a 7500 square foot home and I wake up every time the kids get up. Most moms do.


Keep telling yourself this. How naive.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Parents on the top floor



I live in a 7500 square foot home and I wake up every time the kids get up. Most moms do.


Keep telling yourself this. How naive.


I’m not “telling” myself this? I live there? Keep being asinine
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Parents on the top floor



I live in a 7500 square foot home and I wake up every time the kids get up. Most moms do.


Keep telling yourself this. How naive.


I’m not “telling” myself this? I live there? Keep being asinine


How would you know about the times your kids were up and didn’t hear?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Parents on the top floor



I live in a 7500 square foot home and I wake up every time the kids get up. Most moms do.


Keep telling yourself this. How naive.


I’m not “telling” myself this? I live there? Keep being asinine


How would you know about the times your kids were up and didn’t hear?


They’re little. I know. Stop being ridiculous. You don’t think you would hear someone: get your kid out of bed. Feed them pineapple. In your kitchen. Take them to the basement. We know she was carried down the stairs. Get stuff from her room to redress her. Bang around in the basement. Okay. I strongly disagree.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Parents on the top floor



I live in a 7500 square foot home and I wake up every time the kids get up. Most moms do.


Keep telling yourself this. How naive.


I’m not “telling” myself this? I live there? Keep being asinine


This is exactly what people tell themselves so they never have to think something bad will happen to them. Their kids are never out of their sight, they see and hear all, they never turn their back or get distracted, ever. No, you’ve just been lucky up until now.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Parents on the top floor



I live in a 7500 square foot home and I wake up every time the kids get up. Most moms do.


Keep telling yourself this. How naive.


I’m not “telling” myself this? I live there? Keep being asinine


How would you know about the times your kids were up and didn’t hear?


They’re little. I know. Stop being ridiculous. You don’t think you would hear someone: get your kid out of bed. Feed them pineapple. In your kitchen. Take them to the basement. We know she was carried down the stairs. Get stuff from her room to redress her. Bang around in the basement. Okay. I strongly disagree.


Yet kids have been kidnapped out of their beds at night before. I guess the parents weren’t as perfect as you.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Parents on the top floor



I live in a 7500 square foot home and I wake up every time the kids get up. Most moms do.


Keep telling yourself this. How naive.


I’m not “telling” myself this? I live there? Keep being asinine


This is exactly what people tell themselves so they never have to think something bad will happen to them. Their kids are never out of their sight, they see and hear all, they never turn their back or get distracted, ever. No, you’ve just been lucky up until now.


Do you sleep like the dead? At night in my house, yes, I do think I know.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Parents on the top floor



I live in a 7500 square foot home and I wake up every time the kids get up. Most moms do.


Keep telling yourself this. How naive.


I’m not “telling” myself this? I live there? Keep being asinine


How would you know about the times your kids were up and didn’t hear?


They’re little. I know. Stop being ridiculous. You don’t think you would hear someone: get your kid out of bed. Feed them pineapple. In your kitchen. Take them to the basement. We know she was carried down the stairs. Get stuff from her room to redress her. Bang around in the basement. Okay. I strongly disagree.


Yet kids have been kidnapped out of their beds at night before. I guess the parents weren’t as perfect as you.


I am aware. Nobody is blaming the parents for that. But I don’t believe all of this could go on for hours and nobody would hear anything.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Parents on the top floor



I live in a 7500 square foot home and I wake up every time the kids get up. Most moms do.


Keep telling yourself this. How naive.


I’m not “telling” myself this? I live there? Keep being asinine


This is exactly what people tell themselves so they never have to think something bad will happen to them. Their kids are never out of their sight, they see and hear all, they never turn their back or get distracted, ever. No, you’ve just been lucky up until now.


Do you sleep like the dead? At night in my house, yes, I do think I know.


My kid woke up just last night and came to my room to throw up. I didn’t hear him until he was throwing up. He could have walked all over the house until then, silently. I don’t believe for a second everyone quickly awakes to every slight rustle in their home.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Parents on the top floor



I live in a 7500 square foot home and I wake up every time the kids get up. Most moms do.


Keep telling yourself this. How naive.


I’m not “telling” myself this? I live there? Keep being asinine


This is exactly what people tell themselves so they never have to think something bad will happen to them. Their kids are never out of their sight, they see and hear all, they never turn their back or get distracted, ever. No, you’ve just been lucky up until now.


Do you sleep like the dead? At night in my house, yes, I do think I know.


My kid woke up just last night and came to my room to throw up. I didn’t hear him until he was throwing up. He could have walked all over the house until then, silently. I don’t believe for a second everyone quickly awakes to every slight rustle in their home.

Okay. But this wasn’t a slight rustle. This was someone in their home feeding the kid in the kitchen. Would your 6 year old be totally silent?
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