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Mystery case of JonBenet Ramsey


 Twenty years on, the unsolved killing of this six-year-old beauty queen is being raked over in three new documentaries. Why did the case inspire such ghoulish hysteria, while her parents, like those of Madeleine McCann, were demonised and placed under suspicion?

Such is the level of suspicion in this story that even the date of death is deemed proof of a conspiracy. Twenty years ago, JonBenét Ramsey, a six-year-old girl known for ever to the world by the uncomfortably adult poses she struck in her beauty pageant photos, was found bludgeoned and garrotted in her family’s basement in Boulder, Colorado. The killer has never been found.



 There is now not one single part of this sad tale that has not been seized on – by the public, by the police, by JonBenét’s parents, John and Patsy – as proof of a coverup, even down to the child’s gravestone near Atlanta, Georgia, where she was born. There, the date of death is literally carved in stone: 25 December 1996.

The few undisputed facts are as follows: just before 6am on 26 December, Patsy called the Boulder police department from her home. Her daughter had been taken from their home in the middle of the night, she said. She had found a two-and-a-half-page ransom note demanding $118,000 for her safe return. The police arrived at the Ramsey house, along with many of the Ramseys’ friends, who wandered freely around the property. After the kidnappers failed to call at the promised time, one of the officers suggested to John that he look around the family’s large house. He went down to the basement with a friend and there he saw his daughter, bound and gagged. When he brought her upstairs, it was obvious she had been dead for some time. She had been bashed over the head, strangled with a garrote fashioned out of a nylon cord and her mother’s paintbrush, and possibly sexually assaulted. There was no immediately obvious sign of a break-in, and the house was so large, the perpetrator must have known its layout very well to have found JonBenét’s bedroom in the middle of the night and taken her down to the basement without waking anyone else.



The media coverage of this case was, and remains, almost unparalleled in its tawdriness. Photos of the little girl’s autopsy were bought and published by US tabloid the Globe. One journalist claimed to convert from Judaism to Christianity in order to attend the Ramsey’s church and glean insights from staring at the back of John and Patsy’s heads. (“I had never seen anyone pray for his own soul the way Patsy was praying for hers … At that moment, I decided she was the killer,” the journalist, Jeff Shapiro, said in probably the best-known book about the case, Lawrence Schiller’s Perfect Murder, Perfect Town.).

JonBenét was a pretty blond child from a well-off family, allowing the public the pleasure of looking at this photogenic child while simultaneously experiencing a quiet, unacknowledged frisson of schadenfreude at her parents’ pain. Add to this the undeniably sexualised pageant photos, in which the six-year-old wiggled and pouted in a manner that looked all the more fascinatingly horrific after her brutal death, and you have the perfect made-for-media confection. But none of these factors really explains the passion this case excites.



Pretty much from the moment this story broke, there have been two theories about what happened: either JonBenét was killed accidentally by one or both of her parents, or her then nine-year-old brother, Burke, and the parents staged a faked kidnapping to cover up the killing; or it was a botched kidnapping by a mystery outsider. Part of the reason this case has never been solved is because the Boulder police department badly bungled the first few days. Understaffed during Christmas and wholly unprepared for such an extraordinary case, they failed to secure the crime scene. They didn’t even find JonBenét’s body in the basement, leaving John to do so hours later. Their relationship with the Ramseys completely broke down when they threatened to refuse to release JonBenét’s body for burial unless the Ramseys came in for an interview, and there were frequent leaks from the Boulder police department to the media. “The police were not there to help us. They were there to hang us,” John Ramsey has said since

“The biggest mistake in this case is that there was a phenomenal number of people who decided on the first day that they knew what happened, and they would not allow new information to change that, and that boggles my mind,” says journalist and Boulderite, Charlie Brennan, who has been covering the story from its first days.



However, it is understandable why the police suspected the Ramseys. When a child is killed at home, it is statistically likely that a parental figure was involved. The Ramseys, according to the police, were reluctant to be interviewed (the Ramseys have denied this), and John was overheard on the phone an hour after finding JonBenét making arrangements for his family to leave the state (he has since said he was just trying to keep them safe). They were also swift to hire lawyers – suspiciously quick in the eyes of many. As for the date on her gravestone, her parents have since said they chose it because that was the last time they saw their daughter.

“The Ramsey case is a criminal Rorschach test – every piece of evidence can be looked at in several ways, and I’ve never seen that in any other case,” says Brennan. One example of this is the weirdly long ransom letter, demanding a very specific amount of money, which happened to be almost exactly what John Ramsey had received as a bonus that year. Even weirder, the note was clearly written in the Ramseys’ house, using a pad of paper and pen that were there. To some, this proves the Ramseys must have written it: what kidnapper would hang around to write such a long note? But to others, this is proof that they didn’t. Why would the Ramseys mention John’s bonus in the letter? It must have been someone with knowledge of his well-publicised business affairs who wanted to hurt him. The killer could have broken in while the family was out on Christmas Day visiting friends, their defenders say, and written the note while they were out, lying in wait until they went to sleep.



Then there are the pageants. Without question, the images of the little girl sashaying on stage in makeup, which were released without her parents’ consent, helped to turn public opinion against the Ramsey family. It certainly turned many people in Boulder against them.

“Boulder sees itself as a very sophisticated community and a lot of people figured that this whole spectacle was beneath them,” says Brennan. “The Ramseys had only moved to Boulder a few years earlier [from Georgia], and then the whole pageant thing came to light, which was something that was completely foreign to most people in Colorado and more associated with the deep south. So a lot of Boulderites felt: ‘This does not reflect us, they are not one of us.’” As a result, Brennan says: “A lot of people in Boulder feel there is no mystery – they know who did it.”


Even JonBenét’s parents seemed divided about the pageant issue. In their book about the case, The Death of Innocence, that they wrote together in alternate sections, John insists beauty pageants were just “one of her many hobbies”. Patsy, however, spends the next seven pages describing her daughter’s “gift” at “performing” (she also doesn’t mention any of her daughter’s other hobbies). Beauty pageants were unusual in Colorado, she writes, but she had done them herself when she was younger. For one, she bought JonBenét “a Ziegfeld Follies costume, reminiscent of the one I had worn in the Miss West Virginia Pageant some 20 years earlier. Like mother, like daughter.”



So Patsy, in particular, was shocked by the negative public reaction to the pageant photos after her daughter’s murder. One newscaster said the six-year-old resembled “a hooker”. Pretty much only pageant photos of JonBenét were used in the media, even though she had only been in nine pageants. There was a definite intimation in the now-hysterical media coverage that to put your child in a beauty pageant was weird, unnatural and sexually suspect. JonBenét was simultaneously deified as a photogenic angel and vilified as a child temptress, and her parents were criticised for fetishising her looks, while the public and media did exactly the same thing themselves. “What I saw on the pageant video … you don’t do that to a six-year-old,” JonBenét’s former dance teacher, Kit Andrew, says in Perfect Murder, Perfect Town.

The Killing of JonBenét: Her Father Speaks, 9pm, 11 December, Crime and Investigation; Who Killed JonBenét?, 10pm, 18 December, Lifetime; The Case of JonBenét Ramsey, 22 December

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