Jon Benet Ramsey
The Murder and Subsequent Investigation of a Six-Year-old Beauty Queen
(Due Date with Month, Day, Year)
JonBenet Ramsey
The murder of child beauty pageant winner JonBenet Ramsey in Boulder, Colorado has not yet been solved despite years of investigation on local, state, and even federal levels (Allen 2010). The six-year-old child's murder has never been forgotten. She has spurned debates over child abuse, the sexualization of minors, of the impropriety of child beauty pageants, and the frustration over unsolved murders of young people in the United States. It has been the subject of news program, documentaries, books, and television movies. Suspects have been named and hounded in the attempt to elicit confessions. Most of the general population came to believe that the murderers were John Ramsey and/or his wife; a belief based on the media attention given to the case and to the impropriety of declarations of investigators and not on any real facts. People have been cleared; some have died while still trying to clear their names. Still the crime goes unsolved more than fifteen years later.
Established Facts:
On December 26th, 1996 police were called to the home of John and Patsy Ramsey to investigate a possible kidnapping. During the day of the 25th, the Ramsey and their two children attended a Christmas party at the home of family friends Fleet and Priscilla White (Henry 2013). The children reportedly fell asleep on the car ride back to the home and were carried to bed by their parents at approximately 9:30 PM. Mr. And Mrs. Ramsey were taking the children on a family vacation to Michigan the next day and had planned to wake up early on the 26th. At 5:00 A.M. Patsy woke and while walking down the stairs found a note of several pages which claimed JonBenet had been kidnapped. The note claimed she would be returned in exchange for $118,000 (Bardsley & Bellamy 2013). Handwriting experts later determined that neither John or JonBenet Ramsey 3
Patsy's penmanship was on the note but the paper was confirmed to have come from the house. Patsy woke her husband up and looked in the child's room but she was not inside. When they could not find her, Mrs. Ramsey called 9-1-1 at exactly 5:25 A.M, and officers arrived seven minutes later.
Eight hours after JonBenet was reported missing, her lifeless body was found under a blanket in the wine cellar which was part of the basement of her Boulder, Colorado home. The father and a friend had been ordered by police to search the house. The pair started with the basement where JonBenet's body was located by her father John (Bardsley & Bellamy 2013). His finding of the body added to the suspicions of the police about the unusual circumstances surrounding the death.
Physical evidence gathered at the crime scene by police included: unknown pubic hair, bondage devices, duct tape, hair that was proven to be from a beaver and other animals, a boot and palm print, a mark from a stun gun, and DNA from an unknown male suspect (Henry 2013). Duct tape was covering the child's mouth when her body was found. In addition to this, a cord was wrapped around the child's neck which was attached to a wooden garrote. Her hands were bound and placed over her head. Experts on the devices concluded that the slipknots and the garrote used by the killer were a type of bondage device which gave complete control to the perpetrator. This led to the determination that the killer had to be an expert with knots and bondage materials. The materials used were not found to have sources in the Ramsey home. It was also found that the duct tape was not connected to any tape found in the house. The autopsy of the body indicated that the child had suffered a severe blow to the head at some point shortly
JonBenet Ramsey 4
before her death. A forensic pathologist determined that marks on the side of JonBenet's face were consistent with injuries acquired by a stun gun being used on the victim. Unknown DNA and trauma to the child's genital area, including blood, showed that she had been sexually assaulted shortly before death. There was no scarring or evidence of previous sexual abuse as had been alleged by the media against Mr. Ramsey (Bardsley & Bellamy 2013). Undigested pineapple was also found in the child's stomach although neither of the Ramsey's had given it to her. The official cause of death was listed as asphyxiation due to strangulation and craniocerebral trauma.
A neighbor claimed...
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