Police and District Attorney reviewing recommedations from cold case team in JonBenet Ramsey murder

True to their word that the Colorado Cold Case Review Team (CCCRT) would make recommendations in the 1996 murder of six-year-old JonBenet Ramsey by year end, Boulder PD and the CCRT today announced the completion of digitization and review of all of the evidence connected to the case. 

The decision to submit the case to outside review was announced in early October of this year.

Blog post 10/23

Boulder PD AND THE BOULDER COUNTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY’S OFFICE are now “reviewing and prioritizing” the recommendations made by the CCCRT, which included the FBI, CBI, the Boulder County District Attorney’s Office and public and private forensic laboratories with expertise in cold case homicide investigations. 

The massive case file, including roughly 40,000 reports and more than one million pages documenting the investigation, was digitized. It sounds like there is not a lot of usable DNA in the case, but the evidence has all been evaluated and preserved “and will continue to be ready for testing when there is proven and validated technology that can accurately test forensic samples consistent with the evidence available in this case.” 

JonBenet’s half-brother commented:

This is the opportunity we have sought for a very very long time. The Cold Case Review should be the beginning of a comprehensive effort to identify and capture JonBenet’s killer. DNA tech and organizing files is great but finding the killer will likely require a dogged determination. I applaud the work to date and trust the BPD and DA Michael Dougherty to stop at nothing to find the killer of 6-year-old JonBenet. It can be done.

Daily Camera

The case was pried from Boulder PD Cmdr. Thomas Trujillo’s hands after a Change.org petition was started, circulated around the country and put in the hands of Governor Jared Polis. Can you even imagine Governor Whitmer looking for two seconds at a Change.org petition on behalf of FOUR child homicide victims in the OCCK case? Can you imagine Oakland County Prosecuting Attorney Karen McDonald working with the Michigan State Police on this cold case? Can you even imagine the MSP digitizing the entire OCCK file or working with third party labs to evaluate all of the evidence in this case to determine suitability for testing/retesting? Can you imagine not one, but two articles in the press describing steps to be taken and the fact that the investigation got moved off the dime?

Me neither. 

The Ramsey murder may never be solved. But law enforcement is making an effort at transparency. 

The OCCK case is almost 20 years “colder” than the Ramsey murder. It involves the murder of four kids. What is going on in Michigan, in the OCCK case, is utterly indefensible and incomprehensible. Unless, of course, they have something to hide. The news black out from 1977 continues to this very day. They don’t even try to fake it any more. It’s disgusting. 

Dauphin County man wanted on sex crimes dies from lawn mower crash in Colorado

(WHTM)– A man who was wanted on charges of rape and indecent assault of a minor in Dauphin County was killed in a lawn mower accident, according to the coroner. The Elbert County Coroner’s Office confirmed that William Gaudette III, 78, died after his lawnmower rolled over in September. His cause of death is from […]
— Read on www.yahoo.com/news/dauphin-county-man-wanted-sex-005526588.html

The OCCK case sits in file cabinets and bankers boxes, while other cold cases get traction.

A cold case team consisting of MSP West Branch Post detectives and the Oscoda Township Police Department has been formed to try to solve the October 31, 1969 disappearance of Patricia Spencer, 16, and Pamela Hobley, 15.  That sounds like tough sledding if all they have to go on is a description of the girls and what they were wearing when last seen 50 years ago, but at least police are giving it a go.

https://www.cbsnews.com/detroit/news/michigan-state-police-tips-solve-55-year-old-cold-case-1969-disappearance-patricia-spencer-pamela-hobley/

Here’s another cold case closed after using more advanced DNA testing, this time in Jerome, Idaho:

https://www.cbsnews.com/detroit/news/wilma-mobley-murder-idaho-killer-identified-neighbor-28-years-later-dna-test-police/

Twenty-eight years after Wilma Mobley was murdered, police identified her killer, who had offed himself in 2001. In June 2022, Sgt. Clinton Wagner took over the investigation at the Jerome Police Department and contacted the Idaho State Police forensics lab to submit the case for more advanced DNA analysis than had been conducted in the past. Detectives and technicians went over evidence collected during previous iterations of the investigation into Mobley’s murder and ultimately sent a portion of it to the lab for testing in March of this year. 

On Monday, lab technicians reported that “a significant amount of a DNA profile” matching Mobley had been found on a clasp from the killer’s underwear. Police have closed the cold case because of the amount of DNA matching the killer and excluding the other suspects mentioned in Mobley’s case file, and because no other DNA profile was present.

A statement from Jerome PD:

“The Jerome Police Department thanks the officers, detectives, and prosecutors who have worked on this case over the years, and helped to preserve the evidence which was available for this testing,” he said. “We also greatly appreciate the support and efforts put forth by the members of the Idaho State Police Forensics lab who made this closure possible for the victim’s family, and our department.” (Emphasis added.)

In the OCCK case there are at least 17 DNA samples that have been taken over the course of this investigation. The evidence for comparison purposes consists of partial mtDNA from hairs and a partial Y-str DNA sample. All that money, all that work, all that Jessica Cooper blathering on in 2012 about how the case “will be solved by science.” Yet they won’t use a sophisticated third-party lab specializing in degraded evidence to evaluate for DNA evidence these 17-plus samples could be compared to. 

Take the next and only logical step. Have ALL of the evidence in this case evaluated, tested or retested by Othram, a third-party lab the MSP has used in other cold cases. Those kids were dressed by somebody before their bodies were dumped. Maybe they wore gloves. Maybe not. That’s FOUR sets of clothing. 

The state lab has demonstrated its limits. Time to move on. No more excuses. We know–the evidence was mishandled, some (conveniently) lost, all of it probably stored improperly–yes, in what was the biggest manhunt in the country in 1977 and in the unsolved serial abduction, captivity and murder of at least four kids in Oakland County. Send it to a third-party lab for testing and report back to the public even if it is a “fail.” Tell us all how these evidence fuck ups will never happen again. End your 46-year news black out. 

All those DNA samples and nothing to test them against. Get a move on. Your colleagues in the western part of the state are starting to kick your ass. 

DIGITIZE THE CASE FILES AS HAS BEEN DONE IN OTHER MICHIGAN COLD CASES. It should have been done long ago, but you are going to need the capability to search those documents if you get genetic genealogy results. Use the services of the college students you work with at either MSU or WMU. They will do a better job than anyone who is too busy to return a call or email, and my guess is they won’t destroy evidence. Plus, the price is right. While you are at it, have them prepare a redacted version (legal redactions only, please) and make it available to the public for a nominal sum. Consider it a Karmic repayment for your complete lack of transparency in this case. 

DO WHATEVER CHAIN OF COMMAND VOODOO AND THEN CHAIN OF CUSTODY PROCEDURES ARE NECESSARY TO GET THE OCCK EVIDENCE TO OTHRAM LABS. It’s four homicides. You have a giant budget and you squandered all kinds of money pushing this case around various desks for the past 15 years, not to mention the 30 before that. I know when you work for government that “there is always tomorrow” for tasks that could have been done almost 50 years ago, but how about having some integrity on this for a change? 

INTERVIEW SURVIVORS OF CHILD SEX ABUSE/CHILD PORN RINGS/”PARTIES” OPERATING IN AND AROUND OAKLAND COUNTY DURING THE OCCK ERA, INCLUDING THOSE AFFILIATED WITH GM EMPLOYEES AND VICTIMS OF N. FOX ISLAND SO YOU UNDERSTAND THE PEDOPHILE SUBCULTURE FROM THAT TIME PERIOD AS PART OF THE REASON WHY THE OCCK CASES WERE NOT SOLVED. I know of two retired professionals who are trained to conduct forensic interviews of this nature. They would do it for free. No more cops further battering or doubting survivors willing to come forward about the people involved in these heinous crimes and the locations where children were victimized and filmed. You need to understand what was going on in Oakland County so you can understand how someone was able to freely escalate to child murder. These survivors offered to help. You shut them down. 

Are you too busy to ever do the right things in this case? You can’t have it both ways. You can’t claim “open/active investigation” and then do nothing in this case. There are three concrete steps you can take to make it look like you honestly want answers in this case.