Author Topic: JonBenét Investigation 2015 Team JBI  (Read 211771 times)

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Offline JonBenet Investigation

Re: JonBenét Investigation 2015 Team JBI
« Reply #930 on: February 27, 2015, 07:55:24 AM »
Perfect murder Perfect town (completo com legenda )


Offline JonBenet Investigation

Re: JonBenét Investigation 2015 Team JBI
« Reply #931 on: February 27, 2015, 08:01:23 AM »
Fleet White and Priscilla White address Boulder City Council.



Offline JonBenet Investigation

Re: JonBenét Investigation 2015 Team JBI
« Reply #932 on: February 27, 2015, 08:08:38 AM »
The Killing of JonBenet: An Evil Twist (2006)


Offline JonBenet Investigation

Re: JonBenét Investigation 2015 Team JBI
« Reply #933 on: February 27, 2015, 08:10:41 AM »
The Killing of JonBenet (2001) documentary




Offline JonBenet Investigation

Re: JonBenét Investigation 2015 Team JBI
« Reply #935 on: February 27, 2015, 06:31:24 PM »
A new look at the killing of Jon-Benet Ramsey with Roscoe Clark on The Tom Sumner Program

Radio Interview 1 hr.  Air Date 2-27-2015 on the Ramsey case.

https://www.mixcloud.com/tom-sumner/a-new-look-at-the-killing-of-jon-benet-ramsey-with-roscoe-clark-on-the-tom-sumner-program/

Each year I will carve a Ice Carving with JonBenet Name carving into the base
John Ramsey show this picture to his family over Christmas.
We want him to know that people still care.


There is all ways more to the story.

Facebook post reply:

FBI investigator in to the Jonbenet Ramsey case.

John Douglas FBI Profiler:
Thanks Roscoe...I interviewed John and Patsy and did sound tests at their home. John and Patsy's bedroom was basically a finished attic. You couldn't even hear anything from the second floor where the children slept. JonBenet as you know was found two floors below that in the basement . Going into the case I also looked at the family as suspects. That's where you always first look. The defense asked me for help but they didn't sway me or pay me to come up with an analysis that would eliminate John and Patsy. They said they didn't know if they were guilty or not but they thought they had nothing to do with the crime. In the back of my mind before I did anything I thought there was a strong possibility that they were culpable.
I've done so many cases in my life that I knew very quickly that the Ramsey's were innocent. If you've ever been to a doctor for an injury or illness they are profiling you and hopefully will come up with what ails you or the extent of your injuries and how you should be treated. I don't know about you but from my experience doctors are like any other profession. Some are exceptional and others not so. I told the the Boulder PD what I thought but they were not happy that I was helping in their minds potential killers. I told them not to take my word for it and to contact my old unit. Apparently they did but according to Lou Smit one of the profilers said he would turn in his FBI credentials if the Ramsey's were innocent. Well he was wrong and this small town PD with 1-2 homicides a year took this agents comments very seriously. I secretly testified before the grand jury and read my notes from the analysis I did. Secretly...I was told to duck down when I was driven into the courthouse garage. They didn't want the media to see me going in. I told the grand jury from my notes that I was told there is DNA evidence. i read that if there was DNA evidence that it would not be semen but rather saliva. Why? Because this was not a sex crime. It was what I call in the Crime Classification Manual (CCM) as a personal cause homicide. It turns out that the DNA was saliva. I was told that they have "evidence" and I said if you have evidence why am I here...go with your evidence.
If I believed the Ramsey's were responsible I would have said that in my analysis. I'm not a hired gun whether working for the prosecution or the defense. Unfortunately the police made several major mistakes and let a theory drive an investigation rather then evidence.

« Last Edit: February 27, 2015, 09:13:34 PM by JonBenet Investigation »


Offline Myster

Re: JonBenét Investigation 2015 Team JBI
« Reply #937 on: February 27, 2015, 07:34:24 PM »
Interesting.

http://fox2now.com/2015/02/26/jonbenet-ramsey-case-10-things-the-ex-police-chief-just-revealed/
After those guarded answers, are you having second thoughts as to who you think was responsible, abs?
It's one of them cases, in'it... one of them f*ckin' cases.

Offline JonBenet Investigation

Re: JonBenét Investigation 2015 Team JBI
« Reply #938 on: February 27, 2015, 07:35:39 PM »
Interesting.

http://fox2now.com/2015/02/26/jonbenet-ramsey-case-10-things-the-ex-police-chief-just-revealed/

Thanks for the post, I was in the chat you posted about and copy all of the chat posting for our file.
I posted Team JBI and then all of his answers was deleted.
That made the News.
« Last Edit: February 27, 2015, 08:14:51 PM by JonBenet Investigation »

Offline JonBenet Investigation

Re: JonBenét Investigation 2015 Team JBI
« Reply #939 on: February 27, 2015, 07:38:04 PM »
After those guarded answers, are you having second thoughts as to who you think was responsible, abs?

I know it was not the Ramsey's family 100%
I also now know why this had been kept a cold case.
Read the post to me from the FBI profiler that work the case.

I will post more from him.

Was involved in the JonBenet Ramsey murder investigation in 1997 when John and Patricia Ramsey, the parents, hired him. The police regarded them as major suspects, but Douglas believed them innocent. The case remains unsolved.
« Last Edit: February 27, 2015, 08:07:43 PM by JonBenet Investigation »

Offline JonBenet Investigation

Re: JonBenét Investigation 2015 Team JBI
« Reply #940 on: February 27, 2015, 07:41:13 PM »
After those guarded answers, are you having second thoughts as to who you think was responsible, abs?

FBI Profiler that work the case.
His reply to me this week.

John Douglas
After my testimony I was told that Lou Smit would like to meet me. So I drove to Colorado Springs and when he came to the door he said, "I don't know how you were able to know the Ramsey's were innocent in 4 days when it took me 10 months...I would like to do a PowerPoint presentation". I of course agreed and after discussing the communique left by the perpetrator, or some believe written by Patsy, it was obvious that the person who wrote the note was a movie buff and young. The Ramsey's were not big movie goers nor did they watch very much television or movie DVDs. My role was if I believed the Ramsey's killed their child and not so much if they didn't kill their daughter then who did.
 One of the most terrible things to happen for a parent is to have one of your children murdered. This case taught me that even worse then that is to be falsely accused of killing your child.
« Last Edit: February 27, 2015, 07:43:22 PM by JonBenet Investigation »

Offline JonBenet Investigation

Re: JonBenét Investigation 2015 Team JBI
« Reply #941 on: February 27, 2015, 07:49:14 PM »
Yes Andrea and Patrice...I'm not going to argue with anyone on your True Crime Page. I don't have the time or the patience. I was there and they were not. I was also involved in the Amanda Knox case, the West Memphis Three, etc. and it always amuses me when people vehemently argue about a case when the only information they have is from the media who even they do not have all the information but they shape public opinion. Crime, politics, you name it. Don't think for a minute that the absolute truth is CNN, NBC, Fox, etc..
I talk too much. Now back to watching a hockey game.
John D



Boulder PD, West Memphis Arkansas PD, and the Perugia Italy PD all have one thing in common and that is lack of investigative experience. Any department can solve the ""Smoking Gun" types of cases but when the cases are non traditional you can't use traditional methods and thinking. Some departments have very low crime rates in their communities. You would think when a non typical case comes along a police chief or sheriff would ask for all available help. But no...that doesn't always happen. Particularly, if the PD doesn't want "outsiders" to see that there were mistakes made. We all make mistakes...admit it, By having that attitude guess who loses and wins in the end? The victim and surviving victims lose and the perpetrators win. What a shame.


Blink on crime....prosecutors, judges, and sheriffs are political...they have constituents better known as voters. I'm not saying the overall system is corrupt but there is always the potential or argument that it is corrupt in every situation when that's not true. I strongly don't believe there should be police or FBI labs. They should be independent. Again, it's not that they are corrupt but by having labs attached to law enforcement agencies there is always that argument. This is my personal opinion and certainly not that of the FBI. I go through all this in my last book "Law. & Disorder".



Good question Rene...and when you are on a Grand Jury you are only hearing one side of the case. That's why they say "a Grand Jury can indict a ham sandwich". In the Ramsey case they said the Grand Jury wanted to indict the Ramsey's for child abuse which led to her death. I don't believe that Alex Hunter presented the case for that result. I was cross examined by Hunter and two other attorneys and I believe they knew they would lose the case if they went to court. Why? What concrete evidence did they have? The crime scene was contaminated. The investigators would have been ripped to shreds when they testified. Hand writing analysis? Non verbal communications? Some said that John Ramsey read Mindhunter and "staged" the crime from what he learned from my book. I was in the Ramsey bedroom and the books I saw had to do with "coping" over the loss of a loved one. John's daughter from a prior marriage was killed in an automobile accident 4 years earlier...almost to the day JonBenet was murdered. She was in Illinois with her fiancé who just proposed to her and they we're going to announce their engagement to his parents. They were killed when their vehicle slid during a snow storm on an icy onramp. John and Patsy were crushed and then now they had to cope with the loss of JonBenet.
John didn't know me and never read "Mindhunter".The defense attorneys knew of me and they were the ones who asked me to give an opinion of the case.
If John and Patsy killed their daughter then they should get an Academy Award. I spoke with two survivors of a violent crime not subjects! I personally believe that Patsys cancer returned because how she was falsely being implicated by law enforcement for her daughters death.


These can be view on his Facebook Page.

Offline JonBenet Investigation

Re: JonBenét Investigation 2015 Team JBI
« Reply #942 on: February 27, 2015, 07:56:46 PM »
After those guarded answers, are you having second thoughts as to who you think was responsible, abs?

What you need to know:

John Edward Douglas is a former special agent with the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), one of the first criminal profilers, and criminal psychology author.

John Edward Douglas was born in Brooklyn, New York. A veteran of four years in the United States Air Force (1966–1970), he holds several degrees: a B.S. in sociology/physical education/recreation from Eastern New Mexico University; an M.S. in education psychology/guidance and counseling from the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee; an Ed.S. in Administration and Supervision/Adult Education from the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee; and a PhD in comparing techniques for teaching police officers how to classify homicides from Nova Southeastern University.

Career[edit]

Douglas joined the FBI in 1970 and his first assignment was in Detroit, Michigan. In the field, he served as a sniper on the local FBI SWAT team and later became a hostage negotiator. He transferred to the FBI's Behavioral Sciences Unit (BSU) in 1977 where he taught hostage negotiation and applied criminal psychology at the FBI Academy in Quantico, Virginia to new FBI special agents, field agents, and police officers from all over the United States. He created and managed the FBI's Criminal Profiling Program and was later promoted to unit chief of the Investigative Support Unit, a division of the FBI’s National Center for the Analysis of Violent Crime (NCAVC).[1][2][3]

While traveling around the country providing instruction to police, Douglas began interviewing serial killers and other violent sex offenders at various prisons. He interviewed some of the most notable violent criminals in recent history as part of the study, including David Berkowitz, Ted Bundy, John Wayne Gacy, Charles Manson, Lynette Fromme, Arthur Bremer, Sara Jane Moore, Edmund Kemper, James Earl Ray, Sirhan Sirhan, Dennis Rader, Richard Speck, Donald Harvey, and Joseph Paul Franklin. He used the information gleaned from these interviews in the book Sexual Homicide: Patterns and Motives, followed by the Crime Classification Manual (CCM). Douglas later received two Thomas Jefferson Awards for academic excellence from the University of Virginia for his work on the study.[1][2][3]

Profiling[edit]

Douglas examined crime scenes and created profiles of the perpetrators, describing their habits and attempting to predict their next moves. In cases where his work helped to capture the criminals, he built strategies for interrogating and prosecuting them as well. At the time of criminal profiling's conception, Douglas claimed to have been doubted and criticized by his own colleagues until both police and the FBI realized that he had developed an extremely useful tool for the capture of criminals.[4] Following his retirement from the FBI in 1995, Douglas has gained international fame as the author of a series of books detailing his life tracking serial killers, and has appeared numerous times on television.[1] Douglas has also written textbooks for criminal profiling classes. He is the author, along with Mark Olshaker, of several books. His books are considered to be some of the most insightful works written on the minds, motives, and operation of serial killers, and the methods and lives of those who track them.

However, Douglas has also been subject to scientific doubt and criticism regarding his research methods, theories or media work. This includes descriptions of his early interview studies as lacking the scale or rigor to substantiate the conclusions drawn from them; that the highly influential distinction between "organized" and "disorganized" crime scenes lacks validity as there is almost always a mixture of behaviors; and that he has made logical errors or exaggerated claims in the media without noting the existence of academic critics of his theories.[5]

Individual cases[edit]

Douglas first made a public name for himself with his involvement in the Atlanta murders of 1979–81, initially through an interview he did with People Magazine about his profiling of the as yet unidentified killer as a young black man. When Wayne Williams was arrested, Douglas was widely reported stating that he was "looking pretty good for a good percentage of the killings." He received an official letter of censure from the FBI Director for this, but has blamed the stress he was under at the time. However he attended the subsequent legal proceedings and claims to have helped the prosecution trap Williams into showing anger, which he claims was key in showing the jury that Williams was a murderer.[6]

For years, Douglas assisted police in attempting to identify and apprehend the Green River Killer in the Seattle, Washington metro area.[4] According to at least one key investigator, his profile was too general to be helpful. In addition, Douglas stated that a 1984 letter purporting to be from the killer was an amateurish hoax, but it subsequently appears it was indeed written by the killer. Douglas at first denied he would have given such an opinion, but, when confronted with what he agreed was his signed document, he said he couldn't recall it and suggested that perhaps he had still not been mentally ready after returning to work three months previously from a bout of viral encephalitis.[7]

Douglas was consulted in yet another controversial case known as "The West Memphis Three". In 1993, three eight-year-old boys were murdered and police and the prosecutor's office claimed the children died as a result of a Satanic ritual sacrifice. Three teens were later tried and convicted under this scenario (Satanism). Douglas was consulted by the defense in 2006/7, by which time there was new evidence of the three's innocence, and his report concluded that the killings were not related to Satanism but rather were unplanned homicides by a lone adult who knew the victims and felt rage against them.[8] In 2011, the three men were released under an Alford plea.[9]

Model for fictional characters[edit]

Jack Crawford, a major character in the Thomas Harris novels Red Dragon and The Silence of the Lambs, was directly based on Douglas.[3] Crawford was played by Dennis Farina in the film Manhunter, by Scott Glenn in the film version of The Silence of the Lambs, by Harvey Keitel in the 2002 version of Red Dragon, and by Laurence Fishburne in the 2013 NBC series Hannibal.

According to Bryan Fuller, creator of Hannibal, the series' version of Will Graham is based in part on John Douglas, namely in the character suffering a severe case of viral encephalitis throughout the first season.

There is also a screenplay being written for the book Mindhunter, which was optioned for an HBO pilot in concert with Charlize Theron's production company with David Fincher directing, but the project has stalled.[citation needed]

In January 2015, creators of the TV show Criminal Minds confirmed that the character of FBI profiler Jason Gideon was based on John Douglas.[10]

Link to this page: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_E._Douglas

Offline JonBenet Investigation

Re: JonBenét Investigation 2015 Team JBI
« Reply #943 on: February 27, 2015, 09:18:30 PM »
“Jonbenet Investigation 2015”
By: Team JBI
Pages: 32
Theme: Sketchbook
Location: Boulder, CO, United States
Project: SBP 2015


The Worm Has Turned.
No Crime Goes Unpunished.
The JonBenet Investigation Sketchbook 2015
View all seven JonBenet Investigation 2015 Sketchbooks this year.
View web site for more information.
www.JonBenetInvestigation.com
HelpDesk@JonBenetInvestigation.com
Each sketchbook has it own new drawings and information.
Thanks
Team JBI


https://www.sketchbookproject.com/library/11574#slide_1



Offline JonBenet Investigation

Re: JonBenét Investigation 2015 Team JBI
« Reply #944 on: February 27, 2015, 09:31:50 PM »
If you ask us "what was this crime about', we would say...

Personal Cause Homicide

 Team JBI
« Last Edit: February 28, 2015, 04:43:15 AM by JonBenet Investigation »