Chris Watts’ Neighbor’s Surveillance Camera

18:47 Dragging something heavy

Neighbor’s Nathen camera is able to pull just 3 minutes time frames

Truck was started at 5.18 A.M. and remained at the residence for 27 minutes. He left his residence at 5.45 A.M. He arrived at the oil site after 47 minutes, at 6.53 A.M.

2:56 Truck side lights come up

3:11 Someone comes out of the garage, many think it’s his girlfriend as accomplice. Too dark to tell

3:26 Same frame, second time?, someone is coming out of the garage

3:35 Lights on the truck come out

3.37 Lights on the truck come up again

3:41 Left light (drivers side) is covered and goes out, someone is moving covering it, Watts is probably getting into the truck

3:45 Neghbour’s (?) car is driving alongside the truck, left light on the driver’s side is still covered, he may be standing in front of it, by the truck, opened back door or something else is covering it

3:50 Front light of the truck comes up ( he starts the engine of the truck)

3.51 Side lights come out

3:52 He starts driving, to back the track in front of the garage, front lights and both side lights are on

4:17 Stops the truck

4:26 Watts exits the truck and goes to the garage from the left (drivers) side of the truck

4:24 Watts comes back to the truck (from the drivers side)

5:11 Goes back to the garage (from the drivers side)

5:16 Some lights moving on the street, truck’s side lights are out, something is covering them (both doors are opened?)

6:30 Truck’s lights come up -it’s the first frame again

6:41 Someone is coming out of the garage, it’s the first frame again

6:57 Left light is covered and goes out, someone is moving covering it

7:00 Neghbour’s (?) car is driving alongside the truck

7:33 Stops the truck in front of the garage

7:41 Exits the truck and goes to the garage

7:50 Comes back to the truck, from the driver’s side

8:16 Something is covering the right side light of the truck, goes out, maybe back door, the bush, maybe him

8:26 Returns to the garage, from the driver’s side

8:32 Lights are moving, truck’s side lights are out (doors are opened?)

Everything is completely still around the truck for 10 minutes. We are led to believe that at this time he was preparing his wife’s body with his children running around in the house

18:37 Some light flickering-movement, truck’s side lights are still out

Everything is completely still around the truck for about 10 minutes, this may be previous frame repeated

31:25 Shadow appearing from the driver’s side moving to the truck, truck’s side lights are still out

31.34 Side lights appearing (door is opened)

31.41 Watts returns to the garage, from the driver’s side

31:57 Shadow appearing. Watts is dragging something heavy

31:59 Right side light goes out, Watts is probably covering it, standing in front of it

32:30 Left side light goes out, both lights are out

34:41 Shadow moving, lights are out

34:50 Opens door, side light appearing

34:56 Goes back to the garage

35:13 Shadow appearing. Watts is dragging something heavy, both side lights burning (doors opened?) same frame as the previous one

35:14 Right side light goes out, Watts or accomplice is probably covering it, standing in front of it

36:10 Shadow moving, right side light appearing, Watts returns to the garage

36:35 Right side light goes out

36:37 Shadow moving, left side light goes out, both are out

39:02 Left side light is on

39:26 Watts goes back to the garage, both side lights are on

39:49 Right light goes out

39:50 Left light goes out

39 :51 Shadow moving

49:03 Shadow from the left side of the truck, lights are out

49:14 Lights turned on

49:15 Right light flickering, someone is moving around the passenger door

49:32 Right light flickering, Watts is moving away from the passenger door

49:35 Watts is walking towards garage from the right side of the truck

49:38 Watts is returning back from the right side of the truck bringing the gas can

49:39 He tries to put the can into the back of the truck

49:48 Changes his mind, takes it out

49:49 Starts to walk towards the garage with the can, changes his mind and turns toward the passenger side of the truck

49:52 Stands in front of passenger window, right light flickering. moves away light on

49:57 Covers the passenger side light completely, he’s in front of it

49:59 Left light goes out he’s going around to the driver’s side

50:04 Left lght is still out, something is covering it, Watts tries to put the can from the left side of the back of the truck

50:09 Watts moves toward garage on the left, both lights are out

51:12 Watts is appearing from the garage going toward the driver’s door on the left

51;13 Goes back towards garage on the left

51:28 Shadow moving on the left side, lights are out

51:37 Both light appear

51:38 Right light is flickering and goes out, someone is moving in front of it, stands in front of it

51:47 Right light flickering again, someone is moving in front of it

51:52 Right light appear, flickering

51:53 Watts walks toward garage from the right side of the truck, both lights are on

52:00 Right light is out

52:03 Right light is flickering something is moving around it

52:07 Right light flickering and appearing again

52:08 Watts walking towards garage, both lights on, same frame as the previous one?

52:32 Right light is out

52:33 left light is out

53:38 Watts is appearing from the garage going toward the driver’s door on the left, lights are out

53:45 Lights flickering, left goes on and right goes off

53:57 Right light flickering and appearing again (he closes the back seats door?)

53:58 Watts walking towards garage, both lights on, same frame as the previous one?

54:23 left light is out, then both are out

54:38 Watts is appearing from the garage going toward the driver’s door on the left, lights are out

54:41 Both lights appear

55:03 Watts is appearing from the garage going toward the driver’s door on the left (dragging something)?

55:05 Right light out(opens right side door?)

55:15 Right light appears a bit (moving , closing right side back door?)

55:18 Watts is appearing from the garage going toward the driver’s door on the left (dragging something)?

55:20 Right light out(opens right side door?)

55:39 Watts walking toward garage from the left side, left light on, right out(opened right side door?)

55:53 Watts is appearing from the garage going toward the driver’s door on the left, right light is off (opened door?)

56:50 Left light is slowly going out

56:56 Front lights of the truck are on, side lights are out, some small inside lights are visible

58:12 Small inside light on the left is hardly visible,(something has moved inside?)

58:40 Side light on the left appears shortly

58:47 Watts starts the engine of the truck

58: 57 Stops the truck, exits and walks to the garage

59:11 Exits garage, walks to the truck, both sidelights and front lights are on

59:59 Right side light goes off

1:00:03 Right side light appearing

1:00:16 Right side light goes out again

1:00:17 Truck starts to move forward

1:00:21 We can see the front light and the side light from the right side of the truck

1:00:25 The trick is leaving straight ahead somewhat turning on the left

Peter Hyatt’s Statement Analysis on The Death of Jonbenet Ramsey

Peter Hyatt is a Statement Analyst, Instructor and author. He has worked with law enforcement throughout the country and is a nationally recognized expert in deception detection. He authored the State of Maine’s Department of Health and Human Services manual for Investigations and teaches Statement Analysis and Analytical Interviewing.

His seminars are held in corporate America, teaching Human Resources and internal security how to analyze statements, and how to conduct investigative interviews. His methods reduce shrinkage, theft, fraudulent unemployment claims, as well as fraudulent suits of injury, sexual harassment, discrimination and various other means used to “game the system” and exploit businesses.

His two day seminars are for both law enforcement and corporate America and his most recent book, “Wise As a Serpent; Gentle As a Dove” is available for kindle download.

Besides regular appearances in media, Peter Hyatt authors the Statement Analysis blog at http://www.statement-analysis.blogspot.com, regularly updating it with current examples of deception in today’s news.

Peter Hyatt is available for speaking engagements, as well as his two-day training seminar. Statement Analysis Services provides training as well as follow up support in the seminars, including 12 months ongoing support and training, and MP3 files of the seminar lectures.

Analytical Interviewing is a non-intrusive, non-interpretive legally sound method of interviewing, in which truth is discerned from deception, and missing information is identified.

Peter Hyatt teaches employers how to screen out deceptive individuals even before the applicant reaches the interview stage.

Detective Steve Thomas’s Theory on the Death of JonBenet Ramsey

8

VIDEOTAPED DEPOSITION OF STEVEN THOMAS September 21, 2001 11 9:07 a.m.

s

http://www.acandyrose.com/09212001Depo-SteveThomas.htm

A. “‘I believe she committed the murder’ I told Smit and proceeded to lay out what I thought had happened …”In my hypothesis, and approaching fortieth birthday, the busy holiday season, an exhausting Christmas Day, and an argument with JonBenet had left Patsy frazzled. Her beautiful daughter, whom she frequently dressed almost as a twin, had rebelled against wearing the same outfit as her mother.

“When they came home, John Ramsey helped Burke put together a Christmas toy. JonBenet, who had not eaten much at the Whites’ party, was hungry. Her mother let her have some pineapple, and then the kids were put to bed. John Ramsey read to his little girl. Then he went to bed. Patsy stayed up to prepare for the trip to Michigan the next morning, a trip she admittedly did not particularly want to make.

“Later JonBenet awakened after wetting her bed, as indicated by the plastic sheets, the urine stains, the pull-up diaper package hanging halfway out of a cabinet, and the balled-up turtleneck found in the bathroom. I concluded that the little girl had worn the red turtleneck to bed, as her mother originally said, and that it was stripped off when it got wet.

“As I told Smith, I never believed the child was sexually abused for the gratification of the offender but that the vaginal trauma was some sort of corporal punishment. The dark fibers found in her pubic region could have come from the violent wiping of a wet child. Patsy probably yanked out the diaper package in cleaning up JonBenet.

“Patsy would not be the first mother to lose control in such a situation. One of the doctors we consulted cited toileting issues as a textbook example of causing a parental rage. So, in my hypothesis, there was some sort of explosive encounter in the child’s bathroom sometime prior to one o’clock in the morning, the time suggested by the digestion rate of the pineapple found in the child’s stomach. I believed JonBenet was slammed against a hard surface, such as the edge of a tub, inflicting a mortal head wound. She was unconscious, but her heart was still beating. Patsy would not have known that JonBenet was still alive, because the child already appeared to be dead. The massive head trauma would have eventually killed her.

“It was the critical moment in which she either had to call for help or find an alternative explanation for her daughter’s death. It was accidental in the sense that the situation had developed without motive or premeditation. She could have called for help but chose not to. An emergency room doctor probably would have questioned the ‘accident’ and called the police. Still, little would have happened to Patsy in Boulder. But I believe panic overtook her.

“John and Burke continued to sleep while Patsy moved the body of JonBenet down to the basement and hid her in the little room.

“As I pictured the scene, her dilemma was that the police would assume the obvious if a six- year old child was found dead in a private home without any satisfactory explanation. Patsy needed a diversion and planned the way she thought a kidnapping should look.

“She returned upstairs to the kitchen and grabbed her tablet and a felt-tipped pen,” and flipping “to the middle of the tablet, and started a ransom note, drafting one that ended on page 25. For some reason she discarded that one and ripped pages 17-25 from the tablet. Police never found those pages.

“On page 26, she began the ‘Mr. and Mrs. I,’ then also abandoned that false start. At some point she drafted the long ransom note. By doing so, she created the government’s best piece of evidence.

“She then faced the major problem of what to do with the body. Leaving the house carried the risk of John or Burke awakening at the sounds and possibly being seen by a passerby or a neighbor. Leaving the body in the distant, almost inaccessible, basement room was the best option.

“As I envisioned it, Patsy returned to the basement, a woman caught up in panic, where she could have seen–perhaps by detecting a faint heartbeat or a sound or a slight movement–that although completely unconscious, JonBenet was not dead. Others might argue that Patsy did not know the child was still alive. In my hypothesis, she took the next step, looking for the closest available items in … desperation. Only feet away was her paint tote. She grabbed a paint brush and broke it to fashion the garrote with some cord.” She then — “then she looped the cord around the girl’s neck.

“In my scenario, she choked JonBenet from behind, with a grip on her broken paintbrush handle, pulling the ligature. JonBenet, still unconscious, would never have felt it. There are only four ways to die: suicide, natural, accidental, or homicide. This accident, in my opinion, had just become a murder.

“Then the staging continued to make it look like a kidnapping. Patsy tied the girl’s wrists in front, not in” the back, for otherwise the arms would not have been in” the “overhead position. But with a fifteen-inch length of cord between the wrists and the knot tied loosely over the clothing, there was no way such a binding would have restrained a live child. It was a symbolic act to make it appear the child had been bound.

“Patsy took considerable time with her daughter, wrapping her carefully in the blanket and leaving her with a favorite pink nightgown.” As “the FBI had told us … a stranger would not have taken such care.

“As I told Lou, I thought that throughout the coming hours, Patsy worked on her staging, such as placing the ransom note where she would be sure to ‘find’ it the next morning. She placed the tablet on the countertop right beside the stairs and” put the pen in the cup. While going through the drawers” and “under the countertop” — “While going through the drawers under the countertop where the tablet had been, she found rolls of tape. She placed a strip from a roll of duct tape across JonBenet’s mouth. There was bloody. mucous under the tape, and a perfect set of the child’s lip prints, which did not indicate a tongue impression or resistance.

“I theorized that Patsy, trying to cover her tracks, took the remaining cord, tape, and the first ransom note out of the house that night, perhaps dropping them into a nearby storm sewer or among the Christmas debris in wrappings in a neighbor’s trash can.

“She was running out of time. The household was scheduled to wake up early to fly to Michigan, and in her haste, Ramsey did not change clothes, a vital mistake. With the clock ticking, and hearing her husband moving around upstairs, she stepped over the edge.

“The way I envisioned it, Patsy screamed, and John Ramsey, coming out of the shower, responded, totally unaware of what had occurred. Burke, awakened by the noise shortly before six o’clock in the morning, came down to find out what had happened and was sent back to bed as his mother talked to the 911 emergency dispatcher.

Patsy Ramsey opened the door to Officer Rick French at about 5:55 a.m. on the morning of December 26, 1996, wearing a red turtleneck sweater and black pants, the same things she had worn to a party the night before. Her hair was done, and her makeup was on. In my opinion, she had never been to bed.

JonBenet’s Room, The Red Turtleneck

Back at home around 9 p.m., John Ramsey carried JonBenét upstairs and placed her on her bed, where Patsy removed JonBenét’s shoes. These shoes were found neatly put by the door. Next to the shoes is a paper bag containing something that looks like vaseline or some gel. Patsey Ramsey was usually just dropping clothes on the floor, as she stated herself. The clothes in JonBenet’s bedroom look pretty neatly put away. Shoes were by the door, the vest on the second bed by the window and her black pants on the chest at the bottom of her bed.

Excerpts from National Enquirer book, “JonBenet, The Police Files” by Don Gentile and David Wright

1997 April 30 – Taped Interrogation interview of Patsy Ramsey by Steve Thomas and Tom Trujillo in Colorado

NE Book Page 47:

Tom Trujillo: “Okay. Got home about 8:30, 9:00. What’s the first thing you guys do when you got home that night? Actually, let me step back. Before you got home, you went over to..”

Patsy Ramsey: “Walkers and dropped off a little gift… and Stines and dropped off a little gift and drove home and JonBenet was asleep. She had fallen asleep in the car.”

Tom Trujillo: “Did you have to wake her up to get her inside or..?”

Patsy Ramsey: “Well, she was just really zonked and John carried her up to her room… and, I, uh, you know, ran up behind him and, or in front of him, I can’t remember. Maybe, or it might have been in front of him to turn the bed down. And he laid her down and I got her undressed and put her, I left her shirt on her and, uh, went to the bathroom and tried to find some pajama pants and all I could find was some, like long underwear pants… and put those on.”

Tom Trujillo: “What color of top did she wear to bed that night. What color top was she wearing actually to the Whites’ house like?

Patsy Ramsey: “Well, she wore this little outfit that I had gotten her at the Gap. We had a little, little riff over that ’cause I wanted her to wear, I was wearing a red sweater and I wanted her to wear this red sweater with her black velvet pants, ’cause I was wearing black velvet pants and it was Christmas and all that. And she didn’t want to wear the red shirt just because I was wearing it. She wanted to wear the shirt that went with the outfit which was a Gap out fit that I had bought her when we went shopping for her and it was a little white, kind of neck like this..”

Tom Trujillo: “Kind of a crew neck?”

Patsy Ramsey: “…Crew neck and it had a little, little rhinestone, little kind of sequin kind of star thing on it.”

Tom Trujillo: “Okay.”

Patsy Ramsey: “So I just left that on her.”

Tom Trujillo: “Okay. And I’m sorry. What kind of pants, what color of pants…?”

Patsy Ramsey: “They were black velvet. Black velvet jeans, kind of like, from the Gap. Some little black velvet vest.”

JonBenet’s bed
The second bed in JonBenet’s room
Pink upper clothing, probably? pajama’s she wore the previous night
Media photo of stripped beds, probably ?after the forensic examination

National Enquirer Photograph
JonBenet Ramsey’s Closet

The CSI goes into JB’s room after removing the crime tape and films around the room. There are several things we notice in the room. Captures below are from the police video, 1996

Probably the black GAP vest JonBenet was wearing at White’s party

07-09-1998 A&E Documentary
‘Who Killed JonBenet’
By Michael Tracy and David Mills

Patsy Ramsey: “By the time we got home, JonBenet had fallen asleep in the back seat.”

John Ramsey: “I carried JonBenet upstairs and it was kind of a usual routineI took her shoes off then Patsy would come in and get her ready for bed.”

Patsy Ramsey: “So I undressed her down to her little knit top that she had on and put some long underwear bottoms on her and tucked her in real tight and kissed her goodnight.”

Probably the black shoes with animal print rim JonBenet was wearing at White’s party
Next to the shoes, a paper bag containing something that looks like jar of Vaseline or some gel and other bigger container
Vaseline or some gel

2000 March 18
John and Patsy Ramsey book
“Death of Innocence”

DOI (HB) Page 7:

“She wanted JonBenet to wear a red turtleneck with her black velvet pants so that mother and daughter would be dressed alike, but JonBenet wanted to wear the complete outfit she’d chosen. Finally Mom gave in. JonBenet put on her outfit with her black boots which zipped up the front and had a bit of animal print trim along the top. JonBenet loved to dress up. Burke could care less.”

DOI (HB) Page 8:

On the way home, JonBenet had fallen fast asleep in the back seat. I got her out of the car and carried her upstairs to her room, laid her on the bed, and took off her coat and shoes. I was amazed at how sound asleep she was. It had been a long day for her. Patsy came in to finish getting JonBenet ready for bed.

Probably the black GAP velvet pants JonBenet was wearing at White’s party

Right there on the floor out in the open is a large sized canvas duffel bag (blue or purple depending on lighting accuracy). It appears to be empty, open side down, with the cardboard base liner laying on the floor beside it.

Canvas duffel bag on the floor in JonBenet’s bedroom

Things on the dresser with mirror
Red turtleneck found ‘wet’ (said detective Steve Thomas) by the sink in JonBenet’s bathroom

How did the red turtleneck end up ‘wet’ if it was discarded before the Whites party and not used afterwards? This is one of many misconceptions of the facts. JonBenet didn’t want to wear it and was wearing a white top with silver star she was discovered dressed in. Detective Steve Thomas purported the theory that JonBenet was wearing this red turtleneck and not the white top. This theory was not funded on the actual evidence.

VIDEOTAPED DEPOSITION OF

STEVEN THOMAS

September 21, 2001 9:07 a.m.

//www.acandyrose.com/09212001Depo-SteveThomas.htm

18 Q. Was the red turtleneck taken into

19 evidence?

20 A. I certainly believe it was.

21 Q. Did it have any type of urine

22 stain on it?

23 A. Not that I’m aware of. I never

24 have looked at it personally.

25 Q. Where did you get the statement

1 that it got wet; did you just manufacture

2 that out of whole cloth?

3 A. No, I’m suggesting that that was a

4 reasonable explanation for the final resting

5 place of this red turtleneck of which she may

6 have indeed worn home.

7 Q. But you had no evidence to support

8 that statement about the turtleneck being wet,

9 true?

10 A. No, I don’t know that it was

11 urine stained.

12 Q. Or wet?

13 A. Or wet.

This was shown as not true later with the last photo of JonBenet taken at the White’s party. Other photos from the White’s party were never released.

Image result for jonbenet last photo
Last publicly known photo of JonBenet

The red turtleneck was also mixed up with the red jumpsuit on the photo below

Little red jumpsuit of JonBenet’s over the ironing board

1998 June 25, 26, 27 – Taped Interrogation interview of Patsy Ramsey by Tom Haney and Trip DeMuth in Colorado

NE Book Page 142, 143, 144:

Tom Haney: “So now we are on the second floor, because you’re coming down the stairs?”

Patsy Ramsey: “Right, I am coming down…I had the ironing board somewhere here. And I had – I think I had a couple of plastic bags here somewhere… to take to the lake.”

Tom Haney: “…And you stopped there?”

Patsy Ramsey: “Just momentary. I remember – remember laying the little red jumpsuit of JonBenet’s over the ironing board, because it had a few spots on it, so I was thinking when I came back from the lake I was going to take that to the dry cleaners, and decided to lay that under there somewhere.”

Ramsey’s House Video June 5th, 2000, Floor-plan Of The Ramsey House

“There was not one instance of physical or sexual abuse,” detective Lou Smit, who was played by Kris Kristofferson in Perfect Murder, Perfect Towntold the Denver Post before he died in August 2010.

Image result for lou smit detective

Lou Smit is an crime investigator the city of Boulder hired to investigate the case of the Ramsey’s murdered daughter JonBenet. After a while he quit for the way the Ramsey’s were being treated by the D.A.’s office and the other investigating detectives in Boulder.

“You just don’t turn into something overnight. Usually you have some inkling. John would call his kids when he was on the road. His ex-wife said he was a good father.” (Ramsey had two adult children from his previous marriage to Lucinda Pasch. Their eldest daughter, Elizabeth, died in a car crash in 1992.)

Smith stated that detectives had failed to perform certain tests that could have either further implicated or exonerated the Ramseys, and cited a number of procedural issues that occurred in the earliest days of the investigation.

“You only have one shot to do that right,” he said.

The house should have been totally shut. The crime scene was screwed up.” Smit theorized that the killer got into the Ramsey house on the evening of Christmas day and, after killing JonBenét, probably intended to remove her body from the house in a suitcase that was found near a broken basement window. Unlike some, he thought there were signs of forced entry by that window. (John Ramsey had said he broke the window beforehand a while back.)

Smit told the Post that the killer’s name was probably in the case file somewhere thanks to one of the thousands of tips police received, and that likely the guy was in prison for something else.

“But if you’re stuck on one thought of who did it you’re not going to solve it,” he said, rejecting the theory that the murder was staged as it was expressly to make it look like something it wasn’t (such as the work of a sexual sadist instead of the result of domestic abuse).

Footage by Lou Smit. Ramsey’s private investigator. made June 5th, 2000

Orientation: East is front of house/front door and yard, West is towards garage/back of home, North is towards right side of home towards butler pantry/butler door, South is to left of home towards dining room.


Christopher Watts Discovery File

The discovery file became available after Christopher Watts was sentenced to life in prison for murdering his pregnant wife, Shanann, and their daughters, 4-year-old Bella and 3-year-old Celeste.

 Watts was sentenced to three consecutive terms of life in prison without the possibility of parole for killing his pregnant wife and their two young daughters, Bella and Celeste; two more concurrent life sentences for two other murder charges – first-degree murder by a person in a position of trust – for the murders of Bella and Celeste; as well as three 12-year sentences for separate counts of tampering with a deceased human body for killing his pregnant wife and their two young daughters.

When sentences run consecutively, defendant have to finish serving the sentence for one offense before he start serving the sentence for any other offense.

You can read the file on this link Christopher Watts Discovery Files

JonBenet, Patsey Ramsey 911 call

undefined

Former Boulder detective Steve Thomas with his book “JonBenet: Inside the Ramsey Murder Investigation”

Spending 20 months investigating JonBenét’s murder detective Steve Thomas resigned in August 1998. He wrote about his experience of working on the case and his interpretation of the evidence. Steve Thomas believes that Patsy Ramsey is responsible for the death of her daughter and in his book he theorizes it could have been corporal punishment due to bed wetting.

He writes that at the end of a long Christmas day, Patsey angrily snatches off the girl’s red turtleneck top and slams her against the edge of the tub.

A panic-stricken she makes the fatal decision to stage a fake kidnapping instead of calling for help. Then the accident becomes a murder when the author says Ramsey chokes the unconscious child to death.

The first word of what had happened came at 5:52am on the morning after Christmas Day, when Patsy Ramsey dialed the 911 emergency number.

Page 15: “The telephone call gave us a cornerstone of evidence, not so much for what was easily heard but for what was found when experts washed out the background noise. It has been my experience as a police officer that such emergency calls are virtually unchallengeable. They are tape-recored, and either something was said or it was not. Tapes can be so powerful that prosecutors regularly play them so a jury can hear the actual voices and emotions of the participants.

In preliminary examinations, detectives thought they could hear some more words being spoken between the time Patsy Ramsey said, “Hurry, hurry, hurry” and when the call was terminated. However, the FBI and the U.S. Secret Service could not lift anything from the background noise on the tape. As a final effort several months later, we contacted the electronic wizards at the Aerospace Corporation in Los Angeles and asked them to try and decipher the sounds behind the noise.

Their work produced a startling conclusion. Patsy apparently had trouble hanging up the telephone, and before it rested on the cradle she was heard to moan, “Help me, Jesus, Help me, Jesus.” Her husband was heard to bark, “We’re not talking to you.” And in the background was a young-sounding voice: “What did you find?” It was JonBenet’s brother, Burke.

The Ramseys would repeatedly tell us that their son did not wake up at any point throughout the night of the crime. We knew differently.”

Released on April 11, 2000
Written by Steve Thomas with Don Davis

PR: (inaudible) police.
911: (inaudible)
PR: 755 Fifteenth Street
911: What is going on there ma’am?
PR: We have a kidnapping…Hurry, please
911: Explain to me what is going on, ok?
PR: We have a …There’s a note left and our daughter is gone
911: A note was left and your daughter is gone?
PR: Yes.
911: How old is you daughter?
PR: She is six years old she is blond…six years old
911: How long ago was this?
PR: I don’t know. Just found a note a note and my daughter is missing
911: Does it say who took her?
PR: What?
911: Does it say who took her?
PR: No I don’t know it’s there…there is a ransom note here.
911: It’s a ransom note.
PR: It says S.B.T.C. Victory…please
911: Ok, what’s your name? Are you…
PR: Patsy Ramsey…I am the mother. Oh my God. Please.
911: I’m…Ok, I’m sending an officer over, ok?
PR: Please.
911: Do you know how long she’s been gone?
PR: No, I don’t, please, we just got up and she’s not here. O my God Please.
911: Ok.
PR: Please send somebody.
911: I am, honey.
PR: Please.
911: Take a deep breath (inaudible).
PR: Hurry, hurry, hurry (inaudible).
911: Patsy? Patsy? Patsy? Patsy? Patsy?

Source: http://www.acandyrose.com/ The database for JonBenet Ramsey case

Perfect Murder, Perfect Town: JonBenét and the City of Boulder (2000)

TV Mini-series based on the “Perfect Murder, Perfect Town: JonBenet and the City of Boulder” by Lawrence Schiller a noted American photojournalist, film producer, director and screenwriter.

undefined Click here for his biography

 In Perfect Murder, Perfect Town, bestselling author Lawrence Schiller explores the mysterious death and the exhaustive investigation that failed to produce either a plausible scenario or a killer.

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started