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STATE OF MICHIGAN
IN THE 3RD CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF WAYNE
BURKE RAMSEY
Plaintiff,

Case No. ____________-CZ

v.

Hon. ___________________

CBS CORPORATION, CRITICAL CONTENT, LLC,


JIM CLEMENTE, LAURA RICHARDS, A. JAMES
KOLAR, JAMES R. FITZGERALD, STANLEY B.
BURKE, WERNER U. SPITZ, and HENRY C. LEE,

JURY TRIAL DEMANDED

Defendants.
____________________________________________/

16-017577-CZ
FILED IN MY OFFICE
WAYNE COUNTY CLERK
12/28/2016 2:13:24 PM
CATHY M. GARRETT

LAW OFFICES OF JOHN A. LESKO, ESQ.


John A. Lesko (P55397)
JL@DetroitCounsel.com
134 N. Main St.
Plymouth, MI 48170
(734) 652-1338
L. LIN WOOD, P.C.
L. Lin Wood (pro hac vice pending)
lwood@linwoodlaw.com
Nicole Jennings Wade (pro hac vice pending)
nwade@linwoodlaw.com
Jonathan D. Grunberg (pro hac vice pending)
jgrunberg@linwoodlaw.com
G. Taylor Wilson (pro hac vice pending)
twilson@linwoodlaw.com
1180 West Peachtree Street
Suite 2400
Atlanta, Georgia 30309
404-891-1402
404-506-9111 (fax)
Attorneys for Plaintiff Burke Ramsey
____________________________________________/

COMPLAINT FOR DEFAMATION


There is no other pending or resolved civil action
arising out of the transaction or occurrences alleged in this Complaint.

NOW COMES Plaintiff, Burke Ramsey, and states his Complaint for Defamation against
Defendants CBS Corporation, Critical Content, LLC, Jim Clemente, Laura Richards, James
Kolar, James R. Fitzgerald, Stanley B. Burke, Werner Spitz, and Henry C. Lee (collectively,
Defendants), showing the Court as follows:

INTRODUCTION
1.

This defamation action is brought by Burke Ramsey to redress the permanent

damage to his reputation resulting from Defendants false accusation that he killed his sister,
JonBent Ramsey.
2.

This action arises out of the four-hour documentary, The Case of: JonBent

Ramsey, broadcast by CBS Corporation (CBS) on primetime television in two-hour shows that
aired on September 18, 2016, and September 19, 2016 (the Documentary).
3.

CBS aired the Documentary during a critical time in the fall schedule, as CBS

was looking to gain viewers to launch its new primetime season.


4.

Approximately 10.4 million people tuned in to view the September 18th show and

approximately 8.24 million tuned in to watch the September 19th show.


5.

Because CBS represented and promoted The Case of: JonBent Ramsey as a

documentary, viewers expected a presentation of factual information about real people, places,
and events that was truthful.
6.

CBS represented and promoted The Case of: JonBent Ramsey as a documentary

that would reveal the truth as to who killed JonBent Ramseya question that has captivated the
world for twenty years since her December 1996 murder in Boulder, Colorado.
7.

CBS represented and promoted that the Documentary would reveal the truth by

presenting to viewers new witnesses, new evidence, and new theories.


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8.

CBS further represented and promoted that for the Documentary, it had assembled

a highly skilled team of seven world renowned investigators who would conduct a complete
reinvestigation starting right from scratch, including a re-examination of crucial evidence.
9.

The gist of The Case of: JonBent Ramsey is that JonBents brother, Burke

Ramsey, killed his six-year old sister.


10.

At the time of her death, Burke Ramsey was nine-years old.

11.

The gist of The Case of: JonBent Ramsey is false and defamatory per se.

12.

Burke Ramsey did not kill his sister and had no involvement in her brutal murder.

13.

As far back as 1998, law enforcement authorities responsible for the JonBent

Ramsey murder investigation have repeatedly, publicly and unequivocally cleared Burke
Ramsey of any involvement in the death of his sister.
14.

Law enforcement officials publicly declared that Burke Ramsey was not a suspect

in a 1998 press release by former Boulder Police Chief Mark Beckner, in a 1999 press statement
by special grand jury prosecutor Michael Kane, in a 1999 press release and a 2000 sworn
affidavit by former Boulder District Attorney Alex Hunter, and in a 2003 press release and a
2008 letter by former Boulder District Attorney Mary Lacy.
15.

CBS perpetrated a fraud upon the publicinstead of being a documentary based

on a new investigation by a so-called team of experts, The Case of: JonBent Ramsey was a
fictional crime show based primarily on a preconceived storyline scripted in a self-published and
commercially unsuccessful book, Foreign Faction, written by Defendant James Kolar (Kolar)
and published in 2012.
16.

Defendants accusation that Burke Ramsey killed his sister was not based on

truthful facts, new witnesses, new evidence, or new theories.

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17.

Defendants accusation that Burke Ramsey killed his sister was based on a

compilation of lies, half-truths, manufactured information, and the intentional omission and
avoidance of truthful information about the murder of JonBent Ramsey.
18.

Defendants accusation that Burke Ramsey killed his sister was negligently

published and was published with actual knowledge of falsity and/or a reckless disregard of the
truth.

THE PARTIES
19.

Plaintiff Burke Ramsey (Burke) is a resident of the State of Michigan.

20.

Burke has continuously resided in Charlevoix, Michigan, since August of 2015,

where he is currently employed as a software engineer.


21.

Burke was born on January 27, 1987, in Atlanta, Georgia, and is 29-years-old.

22.

At the time of his sisters death in December of 1996, Burke resided in Boulder,

Colorado, with his sister and their parents, John Ramsey (John) and Patsy Ramsey (Patsy).
23.

In December of 1996 and for a brief period thereafter, John and Patsy had a

second home in Charlevoix, where the family would frequently visit on holidays and in the
summer months.
24.

In 2002, Charlevoix became Burke, John, and Patsys permanent home.

25.

Burke graduated from Charlevoix High School in 2005.

26.

Burke graduated from Purdue University.

27.

Burke has no history of criminal conduct, sexual abuse, drug abuse, alcohol

abuse, or any type of violent behavior.


28.

Burke is a private citizen and has never attained the status of public figure for

purposes of filing and prosecuting a defamation action to seek redress for false attacks on his
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reputation. Since the time of his sisters death until September of this year, Burke never
voluntarily participated in any media or public interviews to discuss his sisters tragic murder.
29.

In September of this year, following decades of silence and only after learning

that CBS was planning to broadcast a JonBent Ramsey show based on Foreign Faction in
which it would accuse him of killing JonBent, Burke exercised his right of reasonable response
by granting one interview to Dr. Phil McGraw in which he denied any involvement in
JonBents murder.
30.

Defendant CBS is a Delaware corporation, with its principal place of business

located at 51 West 52nd Street, New York, New York 10019.


31.

CBS represents on its website that it is a mass media company that creates and

distributes industry-leading content across a variety of platforms to audiences around the world.
About CBS Corporation, http://www.cbscorporation.com/about-cbs/ (last visited Dec. 21, 2016).
CBS has businesses with origins that date back to the dawn of the broadcasting age as well as
new ventures that operate on the leading edge of media. Id. CBS claims that it owns the mostwatched television network in the United States and one of the worlds largest libraries of
entertainment content, making its brandthe Eyeone of the most recognized in business.
Id. The companys operations span virtually every field of media and entertainment, including
cable, publishing, radio, local TV, film, and interactive and socially responsible media. Id.
Through one of its subsidiaries, CBS owns and operates a television station in Detroit,
MichiganWWJ-TV.
32.

In calendar year 2015, CBS reported gross revenues of almost $14 Billion

($13,886,000,000) and net earnings of nearly $1.5 Billion ($1,413,000,000).

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33.

Defendant Critical Content, LLC (Critical Content), is a California limited

liability company with its principal place of business located at 1040 North Las Palmas Avenue,
Building 40, Los Angeles, California 90038.
34.

According to its website, Critical Content is a leading global independent content

studio. About Critical Content, http://www.criticalcontent.com/about.html (last visited Dec. 21,


2016). Critical Content, which was [l]aunched in October of 2015, . . . focuses on unscripted
and scripted programming for broadcast, cable and digital platforms. Id. The company
currently has more than 60 projects in production for more than 30 different networks. Id.
Critical Contents series include Limitless (CBS), Home Free (FOX), Catfish (MTV), and The
Woodsmen (History).
35.

Previously known as Relativity Television, Critical Content reemerged from a

2015 bankruptcy filing with a reported $100 Million ($100,000,000) in new financing and no
debt.
36.

Critical Contents relationship with CBS is well-established. Tom Forman, CEO

of Critical Content and Executive Producer of the Documentary, previously ran a production
company called Tom Forman Productions, which produced series and pilots airing on CBS. He
is the former long-time producer of CBSs 48 Hours. Critical Content and CBS have recently
partnered on CBSs hit series Limitless. See http://www.criticalcontent.com/.
37.

Defendant Jim Clemente (Clemente) is a resident of the State of California and

played an acting role in the Documentary as one of the seven world renowned investigators
who would allegedly conduct a complete reinvestigation starting right from scratch.
38.

Upon information and belief, Defendant Laura Richards (Richards) is a

resident of California and played an acting role in the Documentary as one of the seven world

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renowned investigators who would allegedly conduct a complete reinvestigation starting right
from scratch.
39.

Defendant James R. Fitzgerald (Fitzgerald) is a resident of the State of Virginia

and played an acting role in the Documentary as one of the seven world renowned
investigators who would allegedly conduct a complete reinvestigation starting right from
scratch.
40.

Defendant Stanley B. Burke (Stanley) is a resident of the State of Virginia and

played an acting role in the Documentary as one of the seven world renowned investigators
who would allegedly conduct a complete reinvestigation starting right from scratch.
41.

Defendant Werner U. Spitz (Spitz) is a resident of the State of Michigan who

has a place of business and conducts business in Wayne County. Spitz is a well-known
television talking head who frequently interjects himself into high profile cases for publicity and
profit. Spitz also played an acting role in the Documentary as one of the seven world
renowned investigators who would allegedly conduct a complete reinvestigation starting right
from scratch.
42.

Defendant Henry C. Lee (Lee) is a resident of the State of Connecticut. Lee is a

well-known television talking head who frequently interjects himself into high profile cases for
publicity and profit. Lee also played an acting role in the Documentary as one of the seven
world renowned investigators who would allegedly conduct a complete reinvestigation
starting right from scratch.
43.

Defendant A. James Kolar (Kolar) is a resident of the State of Colorado. Since

he was the author of the book relied upon as a script for the Documentary, Kolar also played an

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acting role in the Documentary as one of the seven world renowned investigators who would
allegedly conduct a complete reinvestigation starting right from scratch.
44.

Kolar was a police officer who was briefly employed by the Boulder District

Attorneys Office from 2004 to the Spring of 2006.


45.

Kolar was hired by then Boulder DA Mary Lacy as an experienced agency

administrator to help build an investigations unit.


46.

Kolar had no significant experience in criminal homicide investigations and no

cold case homicide experience, but claimed that as of July 2005, he was taking the place of
former lead Ramsey investigator Tom Bennett, who had retired from the Boulder DAs Office.
47.

Prior to July 2005, Kolar had never been involved in the law enforcement

investigation of the murder of JonBent Ramsey.


48.

In July 2005, Kolar acknowledged that he was unfamiliar with the JonBent

Ramsey investigative files and that it would take some period of time to become fully
acquainted with the investigative files.
49.

Subsequently, Kolar requested a meeting with then Boulder DA Lacy and key

members of her team and much to the surprise of the Boulder DA, announced at the meeting his
theory that Burke committed the murder and claimed that he had gone through the investigative
files searching for any tidbit that might be used to support his theory.
50.

The presentation by Kolar to members of the Boulder DAs Office of his

accusation against Burke has been described, among other descriptive terms, as ludicrous,
total smoke and mirrors, and speculation based on hearsay.
51.

Kolars employment at the Boulder DAs Office ended shortly after his

presentation in the Spring of 2006.

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52.

Kolar subsequently sought to personally profit from his rejected theory against

Burke by writing Foreign Faction, which he self-published after the manuscript was rejected by
traditional publishing houses.
53.

Prior to 2016, Kolar also contacted several members of the mainstream media,

including CBS, ABC, and NBC, seeking interviews and publicity for his book, but his
promotional efforts were uniformly rejected.
54.

Although Burke was aware of the self-publication of Foreign Faction, he did not

sue Kolar for libel because (a) the book had no audience and received little or no publicity, (b)
the accusations were ridiculous and had been rejected by law enforcement authorities and the
mainstream media, (c) he did not wish to elevate Kolar or his book to a position of credibility
they did not deserve, (d) the book was a miserable failure, and (e) its publication did not at that
time cause any significant harm to Burkes reputation.
55.

In May and June of 2016, Burke was shocked to learn of rumors circulating in the

media community that CBS was planning to produce and broadcast a documentary based on
Foreign Faction.

JURISDICTION AND VENUE


56.

Defendants are subject to the jurisdiction of this Court with proper venue.

57.

Defendants are subject to being sued in the State of Michigan based on the

personal residence of Spitz and pursuant to the Michigan Long-Arm Statute for the other
Defendants.
58.

Sufficient contacts exist with respect to this action and the State of Michigan to

satisfy the requirements of due process.

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59.

Defendants are subject to the jurisdiction of this Court pursuant to MCL

600.705(2).
60.

The Court maintains general jurisdiction over CBS and Spitz, and specific

jurisdiction over all Defendants.


61.

Venue is proper in this Court pursuant to MCL 600.1621(a), 600.1627, and

600.1629.
62.

Defendants reasonably anticipated being haled into court in Michigan to answer

for the truth of their false and defamatory statements about Burke, a Michigan citizen.
63.

CBS maintains an office and transacts business in Wayne County.

64.

CBS has wide and regular circulation and viewership in Wayne County and

Michigan.
65.

Critical Contents television series have wide and regular circulation and

viewership in Wayne County and Michigan.


66.

CBS published the Documentary in Wayne County and throughout Michigan.

67.

CBS owns, uses, and possesses real property in Wayne County.

68.

Critical Content entered into an agreement with CBS to produce, market, and

publish the Documentary, including in Wayne County and throughout Michigan.


69.

Upon information and belief, Critical Content had an interest in the Documentary

whereby it purposefully derived a benefit tied to the volume of viewership, including in Wayne
County and Michigan.
70.

Defendants centered the Documentary on Burke, who lives and works in

Charlevoix County, Michigan.

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71.

Defendants expressly aimed their false and defamatory accusations at Burke,

knowing he is a Michigan resident.


72.

Defendants knew and intended that the Documentary would be published

throughout the CBS network, which broadcasts in Wayne County and Michigan.
73.

Defendants intended that their accusations in the Documentary be published

throughout the CBS network, which broadcasts in Wayne County and Michigan.
74.

It was the natural and foreseeable result of the Documentary that Defendants

false and defamatory accusations against Burke would be published and republished in Wayne
County and Michigan, causing substantial and permanent harm to Burke in the state.
75.

Defendants ambushed and attempted to interview Burke in Michigan in

connection with the Documentary.


76.

Defendants knew and intended that the brunt of the harm the Documentary caused

to Burke would be felt in Michigan, the state where Burke lives and works.
77.

Burke has suffered, is suffering, and will continue to suffer harm and original

injury in Michigan from Defendants tortious conduct in Wayne County and elsewhere.
78.

Defendants purposefully derived a benefit from publishing their accusations

against Burke, a citizen of Michigan.


79.

CBS purposefully derived a benefit from the Documentary by broadcasting it in

Wayne County and in Michigan on the station it owns, WWJ-TV. Those benefits included
revenue from selling advertising for airing the show in Michigan.

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FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS
PART ONE: BACKGROUND
A.

The Undisputed Historical Record Established Years Ago that No Evidence


Has Ever Existed to Support an Accusation that Burke Killed His Sister

80.

On the night of December 25 or the early morning hours of December 26, 1996,

while Burke was sleeping in his familys home in Boulder, Colorado, an unknown intruder
brutally tortured, sexually assaulted, and murdered his sister, JonBent.
81.

For years, JonBents murder was the subject of a massive investigation by law

enforcement officials in the State of Colorado, spearheaded by the Boulder PD and the Boulder
County District Attorneys Office (Boulder DA), with some occasional assistance from the
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). With the passage of time, official investigative efforts
have significantly lessened from the activity in the early years following her murder.
82.

On December 26, 1996, outside the presence of his parents and unknown to them,

Burke was interviewed by Boulder PD Detective Fred Patterson who concluded that Burke did
not have any idea or knowledge about what had happened to his sister.
83.

On January 8, 1997, Burke was interviewed with his parents consent and outside

of their presence by a psychologist, Dr. Suzanne Bernhard, who concluded in writing on her
report to the Boulder PD that it was clear to her that Burke did not witness the murder of his
sister.
84.

On June 10, 11and 12 of 1998, Burke was interviewed with his parents consent

and outside of their presence by Boulder PD Detective Dan Schuler.


85.

As part of the investigation, a grand jury was impaneled in September of 1998

and dismissed in the fall of 1999.

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86.

The Boulder PD and the Boulder DA publicly exonerated Burke before, during,

and after the grand jury investigation.


87.

In early 1998, former Boulder PD Chief Mark Beckner stated during a news

conference that Burke was not involved in the killing of JonBent, was not a suspect in
JonBents murder, and was not being looked at as a suspect.
88.

Despite being fully aware of his comments, Defendants ignored and did not

disclose Chief Beckners 1998 comments during the Documentary.


89.

In May of 1999, former Boulder DA Alex Hunter issued a press statement that

publicly and officially stated that Burke was not a suspect in connection with the murder of his
sister. It said, in part:
[A]lmost a year ago [Boulder] Police Chief Mark Beckner stated during a news
conference that Burke was not a suspect and that we are not looking at him as a
possible suspect. To this day Burke Ramsey is not a suspect.
90.

Former Boulder DA Hunters May 1999 exoneration occurred approximately

eight months after he convened a grand jury and approximately five months before the grand
jury investigation concluded.
91.

Despite being fully aware of the press release, Defendants ignored and did not

disclose DA Hunters May 1999 statements during the Documentary.


92.

The Boulder DA hired Michael Kane, Esq. (Kane), a prosecutor from

Pennsylvania, as a Special Prosecutor to oversee the grand jury investigation.


93.

On or about December 12, 1999, Kane publicly acknowledged in a statement to,

and published by, the Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Sunday Patriot News that there was no evidence
developed in the investigation that supported an accusation that Burke killed JonBent:
One of the more horrendous mistakes by the media, Kane said, was the story by a
supermarket tabloid, The Star, that branded Burke as the killer. Earlier this
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month, the Ramseys filed a $25 million libel suit against the paper. Kane recalled
that when the story first came out last May, it troubled the prosecution. And
when the story began getting picked up by other newspapers, they knew they had
to do something.
...
Alex Hunter and I decided there was no basis for that speculation and no
evidence to support it, and we issued a press release to put it to rest, Kane said,
I think its horrible that a 12-year-old kid would have a finger pointed at him
with no evidence to support it and have to see his picture on the cover of
tabloids every time hes in a supermarket saying that he killed his sister.
(Emphasis added).
94.

Kanes December 1999 statements occurred approximately two months after the

grand jury investigation concluded.


95.

Despite being fully aware of his comments, Defendants ignored and did not

disclose Kanes December 1999 comments during the Documentary.


96.

In a sworn affidavit dated October 12, 2000, former Boulder DA Alex Hunter

reaffirmed under oath that Burke had never been a suspect in the investigation into his sisters
murder. A copy of said affidavit is attached hereto as Exhibit A. The affidavit stated, in part:
From December 26, 1996, to the date of this affidavit, no evidence has ever been
developed in the investigation to justify elevating Burke Ramseys status from
that of witness to suspect.
97.

Despite being fully aware of his affidavit, Defendants ignored and did not

disclose DA Hunters October 2000 affidavit during the Documentary.


98.

In 2003, the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia

painstakingly analyzed the evidence of JonBents murder in connection with a contention that
Patsy killed JonBent. In a March 31, 2003, order entered on a motion for summary judgment,
the Honorable Julie Carnes declared that the weight of the evidence is more consistent with a
theory that an intruder murdered JonBent[.] Wolf Decision at 1363.

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99.

Despite being fully aware of Judge Carnes order, Defendants ignored and did not

disclose the Wolf Decision during the Documentary.


100.

On April 7, 2003, former Boulder DA Mary Kennan, n/k/a Mary Lacy, issued a

press release stating, in part, I agree with [Judge Carnes] conclusion that the weight of the
evidence is more consistent with a theory that an intruder murdered JonBent than it is with a
theory that Mrs. Ramsey did so. A copy of said press statement is attached hereto as Exhibit
B.
101.

Despite being fully aware of the press release, Defendants ignored and did not

disclose DA Lacys April 2003 press release during the Documentary.


102.

On July 9, 2008, former Boulder DA Lacy relied on newly discovered DNA

evidence to exonerate the Ramsey Family (including Burke) in an open letter released to the
public. DA Lacy declared that:
[N]ew scientific evidence convinces us that it is appropriate, given the
circumstances of this case, to state that we do not consider your immediate
family including you, your wife, Patsy, and your son, Burke, to be under
any suspicion in the commission of this crime.
...
The Bode Technology laboratory was able to develop a profile from DNA
recovered from the two sides of the long johns. The previously identified
profile from the crotch of the underwear worn by JonBent at the time of
the murder matched the DNA recovered from the long johns at Bode.
Unexplained DNA on the victim of a crime is powerful evidence. The
match of male DNA on two separate items of clothing worn by the victim
at the time of the murder makes it clear to us that an unknown male
handled these items.
103.

Although referenced by Defendants in the Documentary, Defendants

misrepresented and failed to accurately disclose the basis for Boulder DA Lacys exoneration of
the Ramsey family.

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104.

CBS has, itself, many times supported Burkes innocence. Indeed, CBS has

broadcast many reports regarding the exculpatory information establishing that Burke did not kill
JonBent. Examples of CBSs coverage of Burkes exonerations are attached hereto as Exhibit
C.
105.

There was no evidence developed prior to or during the law enforcement

investigation and the grand jury investigation that in any way links Burke to the killing of his
sister or that caused the Boulder PD or the Boulder DA to consider him a suspect in the
investigation of her murder.
106.

Since the grand jury concluded in October 1999, and aside from law

enforcements intervening exonerations of Burke and the Ramsey Family, the only new and
material evidence discovered in this case is the DNA evidence relied upon by former Boulder
DA Lacy to exonerate the Ramsey family in 2008 and to again reiterate Burkes innocence.
107.

Twenty years after JonBents death, the perpetrator of her brutal murder has

never been identified, and no indictment has ever been filed by law enforcement prosecutors
against any individual in connection with her death.
B.

Prior Accusations Against Burke and Resulting Lawsuits

108.

In late 1998 and early 1999, multiple members of the tabloid media published

articles accusing Burke of killing JonBent.


109.

The articles published by the tabloid media in 1998 and 1999 are very similar to

the accusations made by Defendants in the Documentary in 2016.


110.

Like the accusations made by Defendants in the Documentary, the accusations in

the tabloid media articles were false and defamatory.

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111.

In November of 1998, the supermarket tabloid Globe published articles stating

that Burke killed JonBent. These articles cited professed experts stating (a) that Burke may
have been suffering from a rage disorder; (b) that based on reviewing video tapes of Burke as he
was questioned about his sisters death, his behavior seemed odd, he was squirrely, and he
would hide his face, cower away, duck or look away and shrug making clear he was hiding
something; (c) that Burke was a disturbed child who killed his sister in connection with an act
of sexual molestation; (d) that his parents aided the then-9-year-old boy by covering up the
heinous crime with a phony kidnapping story and ransom note; (e) that Burke showed signs of
being disturbed when he smeared feces in his bathroom; (f) that it had been documented that
he once accidentally hit his sister with a golf club; and (g) that [a]lthough his parents said he
was in bed when Patsy first made a frantic call to police on Dec. 26, an enhancement of the 911
tape proved he was in the background, asking questions.
112.

In May of 2000, Burke sued Globe International, Inc. and Globe

Communications, Corp. in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Atlanta
and American Media, Inc. in the State Court of Fulton County, Georgia, for libel in connection
with the 1998 Globe accusations. Burke dismissed these lawsuits after reaching confidential
settlements with the defendants.
113.

In May and June of 1999, the supermarket tabloid Star published articles stating

(a) JonBent Killed by Brother Burke; (b) that Burke was the prime suspect; (c) that Burke
was resentful of the attention JonBent received; and (d) that JonBent wet her bed and crawled
in the bed with Burke who let loose his pent-up rage and lashed out at her physically.
114.

In late 1999, Burke sued American Media, Inc. and Star Editorial, Inc. in the

United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia for libel in connection with the

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1999 Star accusations. Burke dismissed this lawsuit after reaching a confidential settlement with
the defendants.
115.

In May of 1999, The New York Post essentially republished the false accusations

contained in the Star articles referenced above.


116.

In May of 2000, Burke sued NYP Holdings, Inc. d/b/a The New York Post in the

United States District Court for the Southern District of New York for libel in connection with
the republished Star accusations. Burke dismissed this lawsuit after reaching a confidential
settlement.
117.

In October and November of 1999, Court TV published press releases promoting

its upcoming TV show Who Killed JonBent Ramsey: Prime Suspects, which was broadcast in
November of 1999. Thereafter, Burke sued AOL Time Warner Inc., Time Warner Entertainment
Company, LP, Courtroom Television Network, LLC, and Liberty Media Corp. in the United
States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia for libel in connection with the
accusations in the press releases and for defamation for the accusations in the TV show that
falsely conveyed that Burke was a suspect in connection with his sisters death. Burke dismissed
this lawsuit after reaching a confidential settlement with the defendants.
118.

Since the time of the above accusations against Burke in 1998 and 1999, no

member of the tabloid media or the mainstream media has ever again accused Burke of being
involved inor suspected ofJonBents murder. That is, until CBS aired the Documentary.
119.

No evidence suggesting Burkes involvement in JonBents death has ever been

discovered, and because he is innocent, does not exist.

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120.

Defendants used their Documentary to accuse Burke of killing JonBent

approximately 17 years after similar accusations had been made by certain members of the
tabloid media who were held accountable for those false accusations in legal proceedings.
121.

While Defendants false accusations against Burke echo the accusations made

against him by supermarket tabloids years ago, the key difference is that this time, the accusation
was published by the most respected member of the American broadcast media, CBS.
C.

Key Facts About the Murder of JonBent and the Law Enforcement
Investigation

122.

JonBent was six-years-old when she was murdered.

123.

At the time of his sisters murder, Burke was nine-years-old.

124.

JonBent competed in beauty pageants. In 1995, she held the title of Little Miss

Colorado Sunburst and on December 6, 1996, appeared in the Lights of December Parade at the
Boulder Mall.
125.

On the night of December 25, 1996, the Ramsey family attended a Christmas

dinner at the home of their friends Fleet and Priscilla White.


126.

After the family returned home, John and Patsy put the children to bed and went

to bed themselves soon after.


127.

The family intended to rise early the following morning because they were flying

to Charlevoix, Michigan, for a family vacation.


128.

John and Patsy awoke at approximately 5:30 a.m. on the morning of December

26, 1996, to prepare for their trip to Charlevoix.


129.

John and Patsy were not awakened during the night.

130.

Burke was not awakened during the night.

131.

Burke did not leave his bedroom during the night.


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132.

Shortly after waking up, Patsy went down two flights of stairs from her room to

the main floor. On a step near the bottom of the stairs, she discovered a two-and-a-half-page
handwritten ransom note stating that JonBent had been kidnapped (the Ransom Note).
133.

Patsy screamed and rushed to check JonBents bedroom, which was empty.

134.

John heard the scream and rushed to find Patsy.

135.

John and Patsy checked on Burke, who appeared to them to be sleeping in his

136.

Panicked and frightened, Patsy dialed 9-1-1 at approximately 5:52 a.m.,

room.

breathlessly imploring the operator to send help (the 9-1-1 Call).


137.

After she hung up with 9-1-1, Patsy telephoned family friends, who promptly

came to the Ramsey home.


138.

Police arrived shortly thereafter, but failed to properly secure the crime scene, a

failure that seriously compromised the crime scene.


139.

The Ransom Note stated that the kidnappers would call between 8 and 10 a.m.

tomorrow, but the call never came.


140.

To keep John occupied, Boulder Police Department (Boulder PD) Detective

Linda Arndt instructed him to search the home for anything unusual. The home had previously
been searched by Boulder PD officers and Johns family friend, Fleet White (Fleet).
141.

John and Fleet began their search in the basement.

142.

John and Fleet first searched the playroom and observed, among other things, a

broken ground-level window and a suitcase beneath that window that was normally stored in a
different place.

Page 20 of 108

143.

John eventually searched what is often called the wine cellar in the basement

(the Wine Cellar) that served as a storage area. A Boulder PD officer had previously observed
that the door to the Wine Cellar was locked from the outside and did not open the door to inspect
the room. Fleet had previously opened the door to the Wine Cellar but did not turn on the light
in the room.
144.

John opened the door, turned on the light in the Wine Cellar and discovered

JonBents body. John cried out, shocked to discover the body of his young daughter.
145.

Duct tape covered JonBents mouth, her wrists were tied above her head, and she

had a garrote embedded in her neck.


146.

John scooped his daughter up in his arms and carried her body upstairs, crying out

for help.
147.

Detective Arndt observed JonBents body and informed John that his daughter

was dead.
148.

JonBent was strangled to death with a torture and bondage device known as a

garrote.
149.

The garrote was made from a nylon cord and a wooden handle fashioned from the

middle of a paintbrush discovered in Patsys paint tray in the boiler room in the basement. The
end of the nylon cord was tied to this wooden handle and, on the other end, was a loop with a
slipknot, with JonBents neck within the loop.
150.

Until her autopsy, it was not visually apparent that JonBent also suffered a

massive blow to her head that fractured the right side of her skullan injury that has been
described as the equivalent to an injury resulting from a fall from the third floor of a building.

Page 21 of 108

151.

During the course of her brutal murder, the pathologist performing the autopsy

discovered that JonBent was sexually assaulted by being vaginally penetrated, including
penetration with the broken wooden handle of a paintbrush.
152.

JonBents body showed many signs of a struggle with her attacker.

153.

JonBent was brutally tortured, assaulted and murdered.

154.

John and Patsy found themselves under suspicion by the Boulder PD in

connection with the investigation into JonBents murder.


155.

During the course of the investigation, John and Patsy sought repeatedly to

cooperate with investigators, including signing more than one hundred releases for information
requested by the police, and providing all evidence and information in their possession requested
by the police.
156.

John and Patsy gave the Boulder PD historical handwriting samples and

supervised written exemplars.


157.

John and Patsy gave hair, including pubic hair, and DNA samples to police.

158.

Burke also gave a DNA sample to the police.

159.

John, Patsy, and Burke each consented to multiple interviews by law enforcement.

160.

Burke was interviewed regarding JonBents death on at least three occasions

outside the presence of his parents.


161.

On December 26, 1996, John gave the Boulder PD handwriting exemplars for

himself and Patsy.


162.

On December 26, 1996, John voluntarily provided police with a note pad Patsy

had previously used in their home. Law enforcement subsequently determined that the Ransom
Note was written on that pad.

Page 22 of 108

163.

Law enforcement consulted six qualified and highly respected experts in the field

of handwriting analysis who performed extensive analysis of Patsy, John, and Burkes
handwriting samples to the original Ransom Note.
164.

All six experts conclusively eliminated John and Burke as authors of the Ransom

165.

None of the six experts concluded that Patsy wrote the Ransom Note. Although

Note.

they could not determine with 100% certainty that Patsy did not author the Ransom Note, the
handwriting experts consensus was that the chances she wrote the Ransom Note were very
low:
During the investigation, the Boulder Police Department and Boulder County
District Attorneys Office consulted at least six handwriting experts. . . . All six
experts agreed that Mr. Ramsey could be eliminated as the author of the Ransom
Note. None of the six consulted experts identified Mrs. Ramsey as the author of
the Ransom Note. Rather, the experts consensus was that she probably did not
write the Ransom Note. On a scale of one to five, with five being elimination as
the author of the Ransom Note, the experts placed Mrs. Ramsey at a 4.5 or a 4.0.
The experts described the chance of Mrs. Ramsey being the author of the Ransom
Note as very low.
Wolf v. Ramsey, 253 F. Supp. 2d 1323, 1334 (2003) (the Wolf Decision).
166.

The Ramsey home was not secure on the night of December 25, 1996. They had

not turned their security alarm on, and at least seven windows and one door were found unlocked
on the morning of December 26, 1996. A door from the kitchen to the outside was found open.
167.

On the ground level of the Ramsey home, there was a removable grate over three

windows that opened into the playroom area of the basement.


168.

The center window had a broken pane.

169.

Law enforcement found scuffmarks and a suitcase positioned upright beneath the

center window leading to the playroom area of the basement (the Window).

Page 23 of 108

170.

The area around the Window showed clear evidence of a disturbance.

171.

Leaves and white Styrofoam packing peanuts that had pooled in the Window area

appeared to have been cleared from, or brushed to either side of, the Window sill.
172.

A shard of glass was found on the suitcase beneath the Window.

173.

Green foliage was found tucked under the movable grate over the Window well.

174.

Leaves and debris consistent with that found in the Window area were found on

the floor of the basement underneath the Window.


175.

A leaf and white Styrofoam packing peanuts like those in the Window area were

found in the Wine Cellar where JonBents body was found.


176.

The end portion of the wooden handle and the cord used to construct the garrote

were never found in the Ramsey home; i.e., the perpetrator removed these items from the home
after killing JonBent.
177.

The duct tape covering JonBents mouth was never sourced to the Ramsey

178.

Fiber evidence suggests that the cord and duct tape were, at one time, in the

home.

second-floor area of the home near JonBents bedroom.


179.

Fibers consistent with those of the cord used to make the slip knots and garrote

were found on JonBents bed.


180.

Other items not belonging on the second floor of the Ramsey home were found

there on the day after the murder.


181.

A rope was found inside of a brown paper sack in the guest bedroom on the

second floor.

Page 24 of 108

182.

Small pieces of the material of this brown sack were found in JonBents bed and

in the body bag that was used to transport her body.


183.

John and Patsy disclaimed ownership and knowledge of that rope.

184.

A baseball bat not owned by the Ramseys was found on the north side of the

house containing fibers consistent with fibers found in the carpet in the basement where
JonBents body was found.
185.

Brown cotton fibers found on JonBents body, the garrote handle, the duct tape,

and the wrist ligatures were not sourced to and do not match anything in the Ramsey home.
186.

Recently-made and unidentified shoeprints containing a HI-TEC brand mark

were found in the basement imprinted in mold growing on the basement floor.
187.

Neither John, Patsy, nor Burke owned any HI-TEC brand shoes at the time of the

murder.
188.

The DNA of an unidentified male was found under JonBents fingernails.

189.

The DNA found under JonBents nails does not match John, Patsy, or Burkes

190.

The DNA of an unidentified male was found in the crotch of JonBents

DNA.

underwear.
191.

The DNA found in JonBents underwear does not match John, Patsy, or Burkes

192.

The DNA found in JonBents underwear was likely from saliva.

193.

An unidentified Caucasian pubic or auxiliary hair was found on the blanket

DNA.

covering JonBents body and does not match John, Patsy, or Burke.

Page 25 of 108

194.

The DNA of an unidentified male was found on the left and right sides of the

waistband of the pajama bottoms worn by JonBent at the time of her death.
195.

The DNA found on JonBents pajama bottoms does not match John, Patsy, or

Burkes DNA.
196.

The DNA found on JonBents pajama bottoms was touch DNA.

197.

The saliva DNA found on JonBents underwear is consistent with the touch

DNA found on JonBents pajama bottoms.


198.

The medical examiner found the cause of JonBents death was asphyxia by

strangulation with the garrote associated with craniocerebral trauma.


199.

The medical examiner found physical evidence that conclusively establishes that

JonBent was alive at the time she was asphyxiated.


200.

There were physical findings on her body that strongly suggest that JonBent

struggled with her attacker and was conscious at the time she was garroted.
201.

JonBents neck had fingernail abrasions and scrapes in the area where the garrote

was embedded in her neck.


202.

JonBent had burn like marks on her face and back consistent with the application

of a stun gun.
203.

The autopsy report revealed that although no head injury was visible when

JonBents body was found, she received a severe blow to her head shortly before or around the
time of her death.
204.

JonBent was sexually assaulted shortly before her death.

205.

Wood fragments from the paintbrush used to create the garrote were found in

JonBents vagina.

Page 26 of 108

206.

JonBents hymen was injured during the sexual assault, causing her to bleed onto

her underwear.
207.

The city of Boulder recorded the 9-1-1 Call on a recycled tape that had previously

been used to record unknown numbers of other 9-1-1 calls (the 9-1-1 Recording).
208.

After Patsy hung up her wall phone from the call, the 9-1-1 Recording contains

six seconds of inaudible background noise consistent with the sounds of computer keystrokes
being made by the 9-1-1 operator.
209.

Investigators sent the 9-1-1 Recording to the FBI and U.S. Secret Service for

testing, but those agencies could not discern any conversations or voices from the background
noise on the tape.
210.

In 1997, investigators sent the 9-1-1 Recording to the Aerospace Corporation

(Aerospace) asking its technicians to decipher the unintelligible sounds at the tail end of the 91-1 Call.
211.

Aerospace technicians claimed they heard the following at the tail end of the 9-1-

1 Recording: (a) John saying, Were not talking [speaking] to you; (b) Patsy saying, Help me,
Jesus. Help me, Jesus; and Burke saying, [Well,] what did you find? See, e.g., Steve Thomas,
JonBent: Inside the Ramsey Murder Investigation 14-15 (St. Martins Press 2000); Foreign
Faction, pp. 102-103.
212.

Law enforcement developed two primary theories: that an intruder killed

JonBent or Patsy killed JonBent. While under the umbrella of suspicion along with Patsy,
investigators did not believe John killed his daughter after completing the initial investigation.
213.

The Boulder PD officers handling the investigation had no experience in

investigating homicides.

Page 27 of 108

214.

The Boulder DA subsequently hired the highly-respected Colorado homicide

Detective Lou Smit (Smit) to review the case.


215.

Smit concluded that JonBent was murdered by an intruder who subdued her with

a stun gun and then sexually assaulted, tortured, and brutally murdered her in the basement of the
Ramseys home (the Smit intruder theory).
216.

Former Boulder PD Detective Steve Thomas (Thomas), who was the lead

detective on the case, was an undercover drug officer with zero homicide experience. Thomas
was the leading public proponent of the Patsy-did-it theory, participating in media interviews and
publishing a book setting forth his accusations against Patsy after he resigned from the Boulder
PD. Thomas has testified that the Boulder PD theory was that Patsy accidentally struck
JonBent in a rage after discovering that she had wet her bed and thereafter staged a cover-up of
her crime in which John quietly acquiesced after he discovered JonBents body.
217.

In June of 1998, Boulder PD presented their evidence to the Boulder DA.

218.

In September of 1998, Boulder DA Alex Hunter convened a grand jury to

investigate JonBents death.


219.

The grand jury investigation ended in October of 1999, without criminal charges

or indictments being brought by the District Attorneys Office against any individual.
220.

Following the conclusion of the grand jury investigation, Boulder DA Alex

Hunter held a press conference stating that I must report to you that I and my prosecution task
force believe we do not have sufficient evidence to warrant the filing of charges against anyone
who has been investigated at this time.
221.

John and Patsy strongly believed that the Boulder PD investigation was seriously

flawed from the outset of the investigation through the date the investigation was taken over in

Page 28 of 108

December 2002 by former Boulder DA Mary Lacy f/k/a Mary Keenan with the agreement of
then Boulder PD Chief Beckner.
222.

In 2013, it was leaked to the media that the grand jury had voted to recommend

that John and Patsy be indicted by the Boulder DA for commit[ting] a child to be unreasonably
placed in a situation which posed a threat of injury to the childs life or health and for
render[ing] assistance to a person with the intent to hinder, delay and prevent the discovery,
detention, apprehension, prosecution, conviction and punishment of such a person knowing the
person being assisted has committed and was suspected of the crime of Murder in the First
Degree and Child Abuse Resulting in Death.
223.

In the exercise of their professional and ethical duties as prosecutors, members of

the Boulder DAs Office did not believe that those recommended charges could be successfully
prosecuted based on the evidence related to JonBents death and, therefore, declined to sign any
indictment.
224.

Burke has never been suspected of the crime of Murder in the First Degree and

Child Abuse Resulting in Death.


225.

As made abundantly clear by the public statements of Boulder prosecutors

familiar with all of the evidence developed in the case and presented to the grand jury, no
evidence existed to support a finding that Burke killed his sister and, therefore, the grand jury did
not vote to indict John and Patsy based on a belief that the evidence established that they
engaged in a cover-up to prevent the discovery that Burke killed JonBent.
PART TWO: THE PRODUCTION OF THE CASE OF: JONBENT RAMSEY
226.

Upon information and belief, Defendants agreed to engage in a conspiracy to

defame Burke, and CBS and Critical Content entered into a joint venture agreement to promote,

Page 29 of 108

produce, and publish the Documentary. The Documentary was produced and structured to
support the preconceived storyline that Burke of killed JonBent.
227.

From the outset, Defendants understood and agreed that the Documentary would

be intentionally produced and structured to support the accusation that Burke killed JonBent
before Defendants ever commenced the claimed complete reinvestigation.
A.

CBS, Critical Content, and the Pseudo-Experts Agree to Film and Publish
the Documentary

228.

Upon information and belief, CBS originally intended to produce the

Documentary in connection with the twentieth anniversary of JonBents murder, and to do so


in-house through its highly-respected show that specializes in true crime stories, 48 Hours.
229.

Upon information and belief, CBS abandoned its 48 Hours production and joined

forces in the late spring of 2016 with Critical Content, an outside entity, to produce the
Documentary.
230.

Upon information and belief, CBSs in-house broadcast standards are

substantially more rigorous than Critical Contents.


231.

Upon information and belief, CBS decided to work with an outside production

company because CBS knew that the Documentarys preconceived conclusionthat Burke
killed JonBentwould not pass CBSs stringent broadcast review standards.
232.

Upon information and belief, CBS and Critical Content originally agreed to

produce and publish a three-part, six-hour documentary, but elected on the eve of the broadcast
to cut the Documentary to just two-parts for a total of four-hours.
233.

Upon information and belief, the third part of the Documentary examined and

excluded suspects other than members of the Ramsey family, thereby supporting the

Page 30 of 108

preconceived storyline that Burke was the killer and that this accusation was the only conclusion
supported by the evidence.
234.

Upon information and belief, CBS and Critical Content have an agreement

through which they shared resources to film and publish the Documentary.
235.

Upon information and belief, CBS and Critical Content entered into a joint

venture agreement whereby they agreed to jointly produce and publish the Documentary: a
single project for profit.
236.

Upon information and belief, CBS and Critical Content agreed to a sharing of

profits as well as losses in connection with the Documentary.


237.

CBS and Critical Content contributed their skills and property to the

Documentary.
238.

CBS and Critical Content had a community interest and control over the

Documentary, including a right of joint control.


239.

Clemente, Richards, Fitzgerald, Kolar, Stanley, Spitz and Lee (collectively, the

Pseudo-Experts) were acting as CBSs and Critical Contents employees and/or agents during
the filming and publication of the Documentary.
240.

All acts and omissions of the Pseudo-Experts were undertaken in the normal

course and for the furtherance of CBSs and Critical Contents business, in furtherance and
within the scope of CBSs and Critical Contents resource sharing agreement, and within the
scope of their employment and/or agency.
241.

Defendants knowingly agreed to participate in and further the Documentarys

production and unlawful purpose of falsely accusing Burke of killing JonBent, including by
participating in the filming of the Documentary.

Page 31 of 108

242.

The Pseudo-Experts all knowingly agreed to appear in the Documentary as actors

and allow CBS and Critical Content to use their professional reputations and credentials to
legitimize the false and defamatory accusation that Burke killed JonBent.
243.

The Pseudo-Experts all knowingly agreed to allow CBS and Critical Content to

use their professional reputations and credentials to legitimize the false portrayal of the
Documentary as a complete reinvestigation starting right from scratch.
244.

From the outset of the production of the Documentary, the Pseudo-Experts knew

that the Documentary would be scripted from Kolars self-published book and was never
intended to be an independent reinvestigation of the murder.
B.

Defendants Marketing of the Documentary

245.

CBS planned, promoted and produced the Documentary to attract the largest

number of viewers possible and then hook those viewers into watching later installments of its
new true-crime series and its new fall lineup of TV shows.
246.

Defendants represented and promoted that the Documentary would reveal

JonBents killer.
247.

Defendants represented and promoted that The Case of: JonBent Ramsey would

be a documentary that presented factual information revealing who did what to whom and when
and how.
248.

Defendants represented and promoted that their team of seven highly skilled

experts would get to the truth about how she died by presenting new witnesses, new
evidence, and new theories. See, e.g., http://www.laurarichards.co.uk/featured/official-trailerthe-case-of-JonBent-ramsey/.

Page 32 of 108

249.

When Defendants advertised that they would present new witnesses,

Defendants advertisement shows their interview of 9-1-1 operator Kim Archuletta.


250.

Ms. Archulettas interview in the Documentary is nearly identical to her interview

with Kolar, which he published in Foreign Faction in 2012. See Foreign Faction, p 100.
251.

Kim Archuletta was not a new witness.

252.

When Defendants advertised that they would present new evidence,

Defendants advertisement shows their purported enhancement of the 9-1-1 Call.


253.

In 1997, Aerospace purportedly enhanced the 9-1-1 Recording and published a

transcript virtually identical to the transcript in the Documentary. Aerospaces 1997 transcript
was published in the supermarket tabloids in 1998, by Steve Thomas in 2000, and Kolar in 2012.
See, e.g., JonBent: Inside the Ramsey Murder Investigation, pp. 14-15; Foreign Faction, pp.
101-102. These transcripts have always been the subject of dispute, with their accuracy being
denied by members of law enforcement investigating the case and by John, Patsy, and Burke.
254.

The purported analysis of the 9-1-1 Recording was not new evidence and was

not the result of any advancements in technology: the analysis was performed in 1997.
255.

When Defendants advertised that they would present new theories, Defendants

advertisement shows a purported cobweb demonstration in the basement Window.


256.

The Documentarys cobweb theory and demonstration was not a new theory, as

it was also taken directly from Kolars book, Foreign Faction. See Foreign Faction, pp. 234239.
257.

Clemente promoted the Documentary as fact, its theory as conclusive, and the

case as resolved.
258.

Clemente made the following claims published by The Sydney Morning Herald:

Page 33 of 108

It explains who did what to whom and when and how.


Thats why the case was inconclusive until today.
Cold case homicide investigations many times are at an advantage. People
wouldnt talk before and now theyd talk to us. Technology has advanced.
Criminal behavioral analysis has advanced. All these things coming together
helped us find new evidence and helped us better understand the evidence from
before. Our team got together, we argued it out, and we came up with one
comprehensive theory.
Hopefully that documentary will build enough groundswell support to get the
District Attorneys office to resolve the case.
See http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/tv-and-radio/JonBent-ramsey-docuserieswill-name-new-suspect-says-retired-fbi-agent-jim-clemente-20160919-grjj11.html.
259.

Clemente made the following claims published by Mirror: We all came to one

complete theory that explains everything that happened, and [t]he world has heard so many
false rumors. The people of the community need to know the truth so they can put pressure on
the district attorney. See http://www.mirror.co.uk/tv/tv-news/JonBent-ramsey-theoryexplains-everything-8867093.
260.

Clemente also claimed on a CBS interview that we are confident that the team of

experts we put together will move this case forward so that there will be justice for JonBent,
and if you watch the show . . . we have some very strong conclusions about what happened that
day to JonBent Ramsey. See http://amp.cbslocal.com/video/category/interviews/3504304-jimclemente-tom-forman-discuss-JonBent-ramsey-docuseries/.
261.

In the same interview, Tom Forman promotes the Documentarys team of

independent experts and their purported independent yet identical conclusion:


[A] team of the best investigators in the worldits Henry Lee and Werner Spitz,
these guys are world-class at what they dospent the summer reinvestigating this
case, and independently, each one of them reaches the same conclusion: that there
is only one way this could have gone down.
Page 34 of 108

262.

When Fitzgerald was promoting the Documentary, he proclaimed we solved it.

See http://www.eonline.com/news/795944/the-case-of-JonBent-ramsey-will-solve-the-murderbut-no-one-will-be-arrested-here-s-why.
263.

According to Fitzgerald, [y]ou will learn a lot and you will be, Im pretty sure,

convinced who killed JonBent Ramsey. Originally published at


http://highlighthollywood.com/2016/10/burke-ramsey-sues-werner-spitz-for-150m-followingoutrageous-JonBent-death-accusations/.
264.

While Richards was promoting the Documentary, she stated that they tested

every hypothesis. See http://extratv.com/videos/0-98uf19sb/.


C.

Defendants Based the Documentary on Foreign Faction

265.

Foreign Faction was the primary source for Defendants script.

266.

Contrary to their representations to the public, Defendants did not present a

Documentary and did not conduct a complete reinvestigation starting right from scratch based
on true facts, new witnesses, new evidence, and new theories.
267.

Defendants merely presented the sensational accusations of Foreign Faction and

the long ago legally rejected accusations of the supermarket tabloids.


268.

The sting of Defendants Documentary and the allegations supporting that sting

were largely lifted straight from Foreign Faction, in which Kolar praised the assistance provided
by his legal counsel, Thomas B. Kelley, of the firm of Levine Sullivan Koch & Schultz.
269.

Mr. Kelley served as co-counsel for Globe International, Inc. and Globe

Communications, Corp. in the successful libel litigation brought on behalf of Burke arising out
of the November 1998 supermarket tabloid accusations against Burke that were strikingly similar
to the accusations published in Foreign Faction and the Documentary.
Page 35 of 108

270.

Defendants knew that Foreign Faction was the basis for the Documentary but

failed to disclose that fact to the public as it would have detracted from the compelling but false
storyline that the Documentary was a complete reinvestigation by new experts.
271.

Defendants knew that the majority of the falsehoods, half-truths, material

witnesses, and theories presented in the Documentary were taken from Foreign Faction and did
not, as represented to the public, result from a complete reinvestigation by new experts.
272.

CBS knew that a Documentary rehashing stale theories from a commercially

unsuccessful and self-published book would not capture the publics imagination and produce
the ratings and profits sought by CBS. CBS needed the public to buy into the idea that the welltrodden Ramsey case was about to be blown wide open with JonBents killer being publicly
revealed by a new reinvestigation, which would solve the twenty-year-old murder mystery.
273.

To accomplish their goals of achieving ratings and profits, Defendants produced

the Documentary to make the false accusations of Foreign Faction appear to be real.
274.

Defendants created the illusion of a new real-time reinvestigation by using

individuals with law enforcement credentials as actors to play the role of the Pseudo-Experts and
support and act out the accusation of Kolars book and the basis supporting its accusation.
275.

Defendants fraud on the viewers kicks off in the first three minutes of the

Documentary when Clemente proclaims, what we need to do is a complete reinvestigation


starting right from scratch. At that exact moment, the television frame shows a copy of Kolars
Foreign Faction on the war room tableunintentionally revealing the script for the
preconceived storyline of the Documentary. A copy of the television frame is attached hereto as
Exhibit D.

Page 36 of 108

276.

Defendants falsely marketed, promoted, and portrayed Clemente, Richards,

Fitzgerald, Kolar, Spitz, and Lee as independent experts who were coming together for the
first time in the Documentary and who independently reach the same conclusion.
277.

Richards continued the fraud on the viewers when she states that she is putting

together this elite and renowned team and actually bringing these minds into one room. This
has never been done before.
278.

In fact, Kolar had discussed his rejected theory with Fitzgerald and the FBIs

Behavioral Analysis Unit as early as 2006.


279.

Fitzgerald, Clemente, and Stanley all previously worked for the FBIs Behavioral

Analysis Unit.
280.

Upon information and belief, Fitzgerald had discussed Kolars theory with

Richards, and Richards agreed to join a team to review the Ransom Note, prior to Richards
putting together this elite and renowned team.
281.

Upon information and belief, Kolar had discussed his theory and Spitzs flashlight

theory with Spitz prior to Richards putting together this elite and renowned team.
282.

Kolar relied extensively on Spitz and Lee in writing Foreign Faction.

283.

Upon information and belief, Defendants only hired Kolar as an actor to play the

role of a world-renowned investigator because he was the author of Foreign Faction and had
likely cut a deal to appear in the Documentary when he sold the publishing rights to CBS and
Critical Content.
284.

Defendants knew, before undertaking any purported complete reinvestigation,

that Kolar would accuse Burke of killing JonBent.

Page 37 of 108

285.

Defendants hired Clemente, Richards, Fitzgerald, Stanley, Spitz, and Lee because

they were familiar with and/or collaborated on various aspects of Kolars Burke-did-it
explanation, well in advance of the Documentary and its purported complete reinvestigation.
286.

Defendants hired Fitzgerald, Clemente, and Richards because Defendants knew,

before conducting any complete reinvestigation, that they would accuse Burke of killing
JonBent and support Defendants preconceived storyline.
287.

Defendants hired Spitz and Lee because Kolar had previously relied on their

theories to support his false accusation against Burke.


288.

According to Foreign Faction, Kolar had spoken on many occasions with the

FBIs Behavioral Analysis Unit, and Fitzgerald in particular, regarding his Burke-did-it-theory
between 2006 and 2012. See Foreign Faction, pp. 364-367.
289.

And according to Kolar, Fitzgerald was very interested in [Kolars] theory,

wanted to know if [Kolar would] be willing to come to Quantico to share it with members of his
team, [Fitzgerald] offer[ed] to put together a small team of forensic linguistic experts from
around the nation to take another objective look at the ransom note, and that [o]ne of his peers
from the United Kingdom had volunteered to participate as well. Id. at 366-367.
290.

Upon information and belief, Fitzgeralds purported team of forensic linguistic

experts included Clemente, Richards, and Stanley.


291.

Kolar even wrote a letter dated January 1, 2007, to Colorado Governor Bill

Owens requesting that consideration be given to inviting the FBIs Behavioral Analysis Unit to
participate in the examination of this new evidence and case theory. Id. at 380-381.
292.

Clemente, Fitzgerald, and Stanley are former co-workers.

Page 38 of 108

293.

Clemente, Fitzgerald, and Richards are current co-workers. The three of them are

key employees at a production company called X-G Productions LA, Inc. (X-G Productions).
X-G Productions consults on and produces fictional crime films and TV shows. See
http://www.xgproductions.com/.
294.

X-G Productions slogan is authenticity. Id.

295.

X-G Productions expertise is to make fake crime stories seem real to television

viewers.
296.

X-G Productions works on an array of fictional crime shows and movies,

including Criminal Minds, Blindspot, Quantico, Sleepy Hollow, NCIS, The Americans, Person
of Interest, True Detective, Smokin Acees 2 Assassins Ball, The Closer, and King & Maxwell.
297.

X-G Productions also employs Aliza Rosen (Rosen) as its Chief Content

Officer.
298.

The Documentary credits Clemente, Richards, and Rosen for its Concept and as

its Co-Executive Producers.


299.

Prior to the commencement of the phony reinvestigation, Defendants had their

concept and the seven so-called independent experts who agreed to act out Foreign Faction
under the guise of engaging in a legitimate reinvestigation: one expert who was the only
person connected to the investigation to have suggested that Burke was the killer, one expert
who was an FBI linguist known to have consulted on and supported Kolars theory for years,
three experts who were the linguists past and current co-workers with whom he shared
Kolars theory, and two experts relied on by Kolar to support his theory.
300.

Defendants promotions and representations concerning the new, complete

reinvestigation that would reveal the killer were hugely successful, as Defendants accusation

Page 39 of 108

against Burke resounded loudly throughout the world. The media, in headline after headline,
article after article, and social media post after social media post shouted: CBS says Burke
killed JonBent. No longer were the false accusations against Burke emanating from the
netherworld of Ramsey conspiracy theorists or from the pages of the supermarket tabloids or
from the pages of a self-published book rejected by law enforcement and the mainstream media.
Now CBSthe most respected name in broadcast news and the network of Murrow, Cronkite,
and Wallaceplaced the full power and credibility of its brand and its reputation for integrity
solidly behind the accusation that Burke killed his sister.
PART THREE: THE BROADCAST OF THE CASE OF: JONBENT RAMSEY
A.
301.

Defendants and Their Purported Fields of Expertise


At the beginning of the Documentary, Defendants introduce their team of so-

called world renowned experts: Clemente, Richards, Fitzgerald, Kolar, Stanley, Spitz, and
Leei.e., the Pseudo-Experts.
302.

The Documentary describes Clemente as, among other things, a Retired FBI

Profiler, an expert in the areas of child sex crimes, child abductions, and child homicides, and
a former member of the FBIs Behavioral Analysis Unit.
303.

Clemente currently works for X-G Productions as a writer and co-producer of

fictional crime series and films.


304.

The Documentary does not disclose Clementes connection to X-G Productions.

305.

The Documentary describes Richards as a Criminal Behavioral Analyst trained

by New Scotland Yard and the FBI.


306.

Richards currently works for X-G Productions as a co-producer of fictional crime

series and films.

Page 40 of 108

307.

The Documentary does not disclose Richards connection to X-G Productions and

Clemente.
308.

The Documentary describes Fitzgerald as a Profiler, Forensic Linguist, and a

former police officer too.


309.

Like Clemente, Fitzgerald was also a member of the FBIs Behavioral Analysis

310.

Fitzgerald currently works for X-G Productions as a co-producer of fictional

Unit.

crime series and films.


311.

The Documentary does not disclose that Fitzgerald worked for the FBIs

Behavioral Analysis Unit, his connection to X-G Productions, or his connections to Clemente
and Richards.
312.

Stanley was also a member of the FBIs Behavioral Analysis Unit.

313.

The Documentary does not disclose that Stanley was a member of the FBIs

Behavioral Analysis Unit or his connection to Clemente and Fitzgerald.


314.

The Documentary describes Kolar as an Investigator for the Boulder D.A. and

Chief of Telluride Marshalls Department.


315.

According to his book, Kolar became familiar with the FBIs Behavioral Analysis

Unit and Fitzgerald while corresponding with the FBIs Behavioral Analysis Unit regarding his
Burke-did-it theory.
316.

The Documentary does not disclose that Kolar authored Foreign Faction or his

connections to the FBIs Behavioral Analysis Unit and Fitzgerald.


317.

The Documentary describes Spitz as a Forensic Pathologist who consulted on

the JFK Autopsy and MLK Assassination.

Page 41 of 108

318.

Federal judges have referred to Spitz as not useful or credible, and his opinions

as simplistic and preposterous. Spitz once provided dubious testimony about a mans cause of
death to support his paying client, even though his testimony explicitly contradicted his own
treatise.
319.

Spitzs purported factual conclusions regarding the sequencing of injuries,

cause, manner, and time of death were relied upon by Kolar to support his theory in Foreign
Faction.
320.

Spitz has a long history of using his rsum to interject himself into high profile

cases for money and publicity.


321.

The Documentary describes Lee as a world renowned criminalist, Forensic

Scientist, and a Pathologist.


322.

Lees purported factual conclusions regarding the meaning of the DNA

evidence discovered on JonBents body and clothing were relied upon by Kolar to support his
theory in Foreign Faction.
323.

Lee has a long history of using his rsum to interject himself into high profile

cases for money and publicity.


324.

The Documentary does not disclose that Kolar relied on Spitz and Lee in his

book, Foreign Faction.


B.

The False, Defamatory, and Malicious Gist of the Documentary

325.

The false and defamatory gist of Defendants Documentary is that Burke killed

JonBent, and that gist also conveys to the viewers that Burke participated in a criminal cover-up
of his act and lied to the police.

Page 42 of 108

326.

Defendants negligently published the Documentary and negligently published the

accusation that Burke killed JonBent.


327.

Prior to publishing the Documentary and the accusation against Burke,

Defendants had actual knowledge that Burke did not kill JonBent or they published the
accusation that Burke killed JonBent with a reckless disregard for the truth.
328.

Defendants made their false accusation against Burke with malice, in that

Defendants predetermined the result of their Documentary, but nevertheless portrayed the
Documentary as being a complete reinvestigation featuring new witnesses, new evidence,
and new theories.
329.

Defendants made their false accusation against Burke with malice, in that

Defendants preselected their team of Pseudo-Experts because they had robust preexisting
connections with each other, but were willing to be marketed and falsely portrayed as
independent.
330.

Defendants made their false accusation against Burke with malice, in that

Defendants knew their team of Pseudo-Experts would accuse Burke before conducting a
complete reinvestigation, but marketed and portrayed that their Pseudo-Experts independently
. . . reache[d] the same conclusion[.]
331.

Defendants supported their Burke-did-it accusation with a web of statements, re-

creations, and images, of which some were true but most of which were knowingly false,
misrepresentative, and/or omitted and ignored accurate information.
332.

The purpose of the Documentary was to generate ratings and profits at the

expense of Burke, showing a wanton, reckless, and malicious disregard for the damage to Burke
that was entirely foreseeable.

Page 43 of 108

333.

Defendants focused their purported reinvestigation on disputing aspects of the

Smit intruder theory and focusing exclusively on Burke.


334.

Defendants failed to meaningfully examine, and recklessly dismissed,

explanations for JonBents death other than the conclusion that Burke was responsible.
335.

Defendants version of events is so improbable on its face that Defendants

necessarily acted with a reckless disregard for truth or falsity in publishing it.
336.

When Defendants published the Documentary, there were obvious reasons to

seriously doubt the truth and credibility of any accusation that Burke killed JonBent, and those
reasons were easily ascertainable by Defendants, as they were part of the public record related to
the murder investigation.
337.

When Defendants published the Documentary, they knew that there was no direct

evidence ever developed that supported an accusation that Burke killed JonBent.
338.

When Defendants published the Documentary, they knew that their accusation

against Burke had no basis in fact.


339.

When Defendants published the Documentary, they had actual knowledge that for

almost two decades CBS had discussed and reported on information and evidence that
exonerated Burke, including the DNA evidence and the public statements by the Boulder
authorities that Burke was not a suspect and no evidence existed which supported speculation or
accusations that he killed his sister.
340.

In publishing the Documentary, Defendants purposefully avoided and ignored the

overwhelming evidence that established that Burke did not kill his sister.
341.

CBSs strategy for purposefully avoiding and ignoring the truth included using a

third-party production company, in a weak attempt to try and legally insulate itself from the

Page 44 of 108

overwhelming evidence that Burke did not kill JonBent and the conscious, intentional
manipulation and misrepresentation of information in the Documentary undertaken by
Defendants to support the false accusation against him.
342.

CBSs use of a third-party production companyinstead of an in-house team

such as 48 Hours or 60 Minuteswas contrary to its usual practice in discussing and


investigating true crime stories and was motivated by CBSs desire to avoid the truth and
insulate itself from the falsity of its accusations, thus evidencing a reckless disregard for truth or
falsity.
343.

Upon information and belief, CBS, by and through its CEO Leslie Moonves and

Glenn Geller, President of CBS Entertainment, was presented an opportunity by a trusted and
well-respected member of the media to review a large notebook containing the exculpatory
information regarding Burke prior to airing the Documentary, but they declined to even accept
the opportunity to review the information from this known and trusted source.
344.

When Defendants published the Documentary, they acted with a reckless

disregard for the truth of the accusation that Burke killed JonBent by doing so in the face of
verifiable denials by Burke, the Ramsey family, and numerous law enforcement officials who
have steadfastly professed his innocence for over 18 years.
345.

When Defendants published the Documentary, they acted with a reckless

disregard for the truth of the accusation that Burke killed JonBent by failing to verify and
investigate the serious charge it was levying against him.
346.

Indeed, because the accusation that Burke killed JonBent was not hot news

i.e., Defendants did not publish information that must be communicated immediately to prevent
it from losing its newsworthinessDefendants acted with a reckless disregard for the truth by

Page 45 of 108

conducting a phony investigation (or lack thereof) that was grossly inadequate under the
circumstances.
347.

When Defendants published the Documentary, CBS acted with a reckless

disregard for the truth of the accusation that Burke killed JonBent by relying on Critical
Content. Critical Content is in the business of fiction and reality television, rather than the
business of conducting legitimate investigations into twenty-year-old murders that have
remained unsolved despite unparalleled scrutiny by law enforcement and investigative
journalists.
348.

When Defendants published the Documentary, they acted with a reckless

disregard for the truth of the accusation that Burke killed JonBent, because they hired experts
who were essentially TV talking heads with dubious experience, independence, and reputation,
who were not reliable, unbiased sources or investigators.
349.

When Defendants published the Documentary, CBS and Critical Content acted

with a reckless disregard for the truth of the accusation that Burke killed JonBent by relying on
Clemente, Richards, and Fitzgerald, whose current occupations are to make fake crime appear
real on TV.
350.

When Defendants published the Documentary, CBS and Critical Content acted

with a reckless disregard for the truth of the accusation that Burke killed JonBent by relying on
Kolar and his self-published book Foreign Faction. Kolars Burke-did-it accusation had been
widely rejected by the many public officials and members of the mainstream media to whom he
shopped it, in large part because it was a nonsensical and unsupported accusation against an
innocent young man based on lies and rampant speculation.

Page 46 of 108

351.

The egregious nature of Defendants conduct is conclusively established by the

fact that Defendants sought to hide their reliance on Foreign Faction from the public and the
viewers of the Documentary.
352.

When Defendants published the Documentary, they acted with a reckless

disregard for the truth because they knew that the Documentary was not a complete
reinvestigation that uncovered new evidence that could implicate Burke; nevertheless,
Defendants knowingly published the accusation that Burke killed JonBent, which contradicted
the law enforcement findings that CBS has long reported.
353.

When Defendants published the Documentary, they acted with a reckless

disregard for the truth, because they premised their conclusion on factual assertions that were
false, contrary to established evidence, and, in some cases, contrary to prior assertions made by
their own Pseudo-Experts when they were briefly involved in the actual law enforcement
investigation of JonBents murder.
354.

When Defendants published the Documentary, they knowingly based their

accusation against Burke on false assertions of fact.


355.

When Defendants published the Documentary, they acted with a reckless

disregard for the truth, because they knowingly omitted from the Documentary and recklessly
ignored exculpatory information that definitively established Burkes innocence.
356.

When Defendants published the Documentary, they had actual knowledge that

because the actual evidence did not support the accusation that Burke killed JonBent, the
Documentary grossly manipulated, misrepresented, and distorted information.

Page 47 of 108

357.

When Defendants published the Documentary, they knowingly manipulated and

distorted the results of the Documentarys demonstrations and re-creations to lend unwarranted
support to their false accusation against Burke.
358.

Upon information and belief, when Kolar self-published Foreign Faction, he

sought out 48 Hours to promote his book, but 48 Hours declined to even interview him, rejecting
his books conclusion as absurd and not worthy of belief based on known evidence and
information about the case.
359.

Prior to Defendants publication of the Documentary, Burke delivered a letter to

CBS advising them of the falsity of their accusation and demanding that it not be published. A
copy of said letter is attached hereto as Exhibit E.
360.

After the Documentary was broadcast, Burke promptly demanded that Defendants

retract and correct the Documentary, including the false and defamatory conclusion, gist, and
implication that Burke killed JonBent. Burke further described and demanded retraction of
various specific false and defamatory statements, as well as other statements the Documentary
used to support the false and defamatory gist that Burke killed JonBent. Copies of the
retraction demands delivered to Defendants are attached hereto as Exhibit F and Exhibit G.
361.

Defendants refused to retract the false and defamatory gist and implication of the

Documentary, as well as the many specific statements creating and supporting the false gist.
362.

Defendants refusal to retract the accusation that Burke killed JonBent, despite

being put on notice that it was false and defamatory, also evidences their reckless disregard for
the truth.

Page 48 of 108

363.

Defendants ultimate conclusion, implication, and gistthat Burke killed

JonBentis comprised of several segments predesigned to bolster their accusation against


Burke.
364.

Nearly every segment, every statement, and every image in the Documentary is a

building block designed to convince Defendants audience that Burke killed JonBent.
365.

Defendants false accusation against Burke is premised on a mountain of false,

misrepresented, and omitted facts.


366.

The false gist, lies, misrepresentations, half-truths, omissions, and distortions of

each segment of Defendants Documentary are hereinafter addressed in this Complaint.


367.

The Documentary, itself, is expressly incorporated herein by reference.

368.

A written transcription of the Documentary is attached hereto as Exhibit H.

C.

Defendants Falsely Convey that New Evidence Establishes that Burke Can
Be Heard on the 9-1-1 Call

369.

Defendants Documentary begins its assault on Burke with a segment analyzing

the 9-1-1 Call and 9-1-1 Recording.


370.

To support their accusation against Burke, Defendants convey the false and

defamatory gist that Patsy made the 9-1-1 Call as part of an elaborate attempt to cover-up that
Burke killed JonBent.
371.

The Ramseys did not engage in a cover-up of JonBents murder.

372.

This segment falsely conveys that Burke was in the kitchen with his parents at the

time Patsy made the 9-1-1 Call.


373.

Burke was not in the kitchen when the 9-1-1 Call was made.

374.

This segment falsely conveys that Burke, John, and Patsy lied to the police about

whether Burke was in the kitchen when the 9-1-1 Call was made.
Page 49 of 108

375.

To support their accusation against Burke, Defendants knowingly and falsely

claim they used new technology to prove, for the first time, that Burke can be heard on the
inaudible portion of the 9-1-1 Recording.
376.

To support their accusation against Burke, Defendants knowingly and falsely

claim that they are the first to interview and rely on 9-1-1 operator Kim Archulettas explanation
for the 9-1-1 Call and what transpired during those six seconds.
377.

In truth, Defendants lifted these purported breakthroughs straight from Foreign

Faction and stuck them nearly verbatim into the Documentary. See, e.g., Foreign Faction, pp.
100-102.
378.

But before the Documentary stages its false reveal about Burke, Defendants begin

their discussion of the 9-1-1 Call using a technique called forensic linguistics.
379.

Forensic linguistics is, at best, an unreliable pseudo-science.

380.

For example, the analysis begins by asserting that Patsys 9-1-1 Call exhibits

extremely unusual behavioral things, because she said We have a kidnapping and Im the
mother, and she doesnt mention her daughters name. Defendants have no basis for
concluding these statements, or lack thereof, are extremely unusual.
381.

Defendants false and fictitious forensic linguistic analysis begins with the

Pseudo-Experts casting a shadow on Patsy.


382.

At the outset, Defendants strongly imply that Patsy staged the 9-1-1 Call when

Fitzgerald states, Patsy thought the phone call was ended. The last thing she ever thought was
somebody was still listening to her.
383.

Defendants false and fictitious forensic linguistic analysis ends with the Pseudo-

Experts casting a shadow on Patsy for hanging up the phone when the call was over.

Page 50 of 108

384.

Defendants strongly imply that Patsy ended the call because she knew her

daughter was dead. Defendants claim that callers usually stay on the line until the police arrive,
because 9-1-1 is a lifeline that gives the callers hope. And for that phone to be hung up,
youve got to ask yourself why. . . . And if theyre legitimately hoping for their child to be taken
care of, rescued, saved, whatever, if there is something else going on then you have a different
set of parameters involved.
385.

But, when Patsy hung up the phone, the 9-1-1 Call had come to its logical

conclusion. Patsy had answered all of the 9-1-1 operators questions. Then Patsy pleaded with
the 9-1-1 operator to send over an officer, and the 9-1-1 operator repeatedly assured Patsy that an
officer was coming. Only after those repeated assurances did Patsy end the call.
386.

The Documentary then delves into the unintelligible sounds at the tail end of the

9-1-1 Recording. But this is well-trodden territory, and Defendants knew it.
387.

Richards and Clemente repeat, nearly verbatim, Aerospaces twenty-year-old

transcript of the 9-1-1 Recording:


John: Were not talking to you.
Patsy: What did you do? Help me, Jesus.
Burke: Well, what did you find?
388.

Notably, Clemente also gives an alternative for what Patsy said: Help me, Jesus.

Help me, Jesus. By doing so, he offers Aerospaces interpretation as stated by Steve Thomas in
his book and Kolars in his book.
389.

Before and after restating Aerospaces purported conclusions, the Pseudo-Experts

falsely convey that this analysis is brand new and therefore justifies redirecting the entire focus
of th[eir] investigation onto Burke:

Page 51 of 108

Clemente: Most of the general public has never heard the enhanced version. We
want to use todays technology to actually nail down what exactly was said and
by whom in those final moments of that tape.
Clemente: Oh, wow. I think I hear a man say, Were not speaking to you. I
think thats John Ramseys voice.
Clemente: Ive never heard that before.
Richards: This is hugely significant.
Clemente: Oh, my god.
Richards: I mean this changes things because their account is that Burke was
asleep at the time.
Richards: And we must remember that they did say in a statement that Burke was
asleep. Why say hes asleep when hes clearly not. I believe we heard his voice
on the 9-1-1.
Clemente: And that absolutely changes the entire focus of this investigation and
we should keep that in mind as we evaluate the rest of this evidence. (Emphasis
added.)
390.

For dramatic effect, the Documentary depicts Clemente, Richards, and a

purported sound technician decoding the unintelligible garble at the end of the 9-1-1 Recording.
391.

Defendants knew, however, that this was a deceitful and dishonest dramatization

of Aerospaces twenty-year-old disputed analysis. But to justify to the viewers why they are
changing the focus of their reinvestigation to Burke, Clemente and Richards pretend they are just
now discovering Burkes purported statement on the 9-1-1 Recording.
392.

Throughout their deceitful dramatization, Defendants repeatedly imply Burkes

guilt. For instance:


Richards: There were only four people in that house.
Clemente: Right, one of them was dead.
Richards: I believe weve heard John Ramseys voice. Weve heard Patsys
voice. So we know the only other person in the address at the time is Burke.
Page 52 of 108

393.

Defendants knew, contradicted, recklessly ignored, and failed to disclose that

despite law enforcement efforts to analyze and enhance the 9-1-1 Recording, no consensus has
ever been reached as to what, if anything, transpired during those six seconds.
394.

In no uncertain terms, the Documentarys phony investigation into the 9-1-1 Call

and Recording changes nothing about the longstanding investigation into the brutal murder and
sexual assault of JonBent.
395.

The static at the tail end of the 9-1-1 Recording is just that, undecipherable static

or noise, likely made by the computer keystrokes of the 9-1-1 operator.


396.

At the end of the 9-1-1 Recording, John did not say Were not talking to you;

and Defendants knew it.


397.

At the end of the 9-1-1 Recording, Patsy did not say What did you do? Help me,

Jesus; and Defendants knew it.


398.

At the end of the 9-1-1 Recording, Burke did not say Well, what did you find?;

and Defendants knew it.


399.

As set forth above, even the FBI and U.S. Secret Service were unable to decipher

any translation of the 9-1-1 Recording.


400.

Yet Defendants proclaim that their use of new techniques established Burkes

voice on the 9-1-1 Recording, and that this newly discovered factual finding justifies changing
the focus of the investigation to direct it on Burke.
401.

Further, the findings that Patsy said, What did you do? and that Burke asked

What did you find on the 9-1-1 Recording are not only false, they are entirely inconsistent with
and internally contradict the logic of Defendants speculative version of events. Under
Defendants version of events, the Ramsey family was on the same page by the time they staged
Page 53 of 108

the 9-1-1 Call. John and Patsy had already come to the end of their elaborate multi-hour staging
of JonBents death at the time of the 9-1-1 Call, and police would be arriving any minute.
Defendants theory requires that after discovering Burke had killed JonBent, John and Patsys
first communication with Burke was during the 9-1-1 Call. John and/or Patsy had already
strangled JonBent to death, inserted a broken piece of wood into her vagina, and drafted a twoand-a-half-page Ransom Note. It is illogical and inherently improbable that John and/or Patsy
would have engaged in this elaborate cover-up to protect Burke, without knowing what he had
done, and without Burke knowing what they had found and that they were covering up the fact
that he killed his sister.
402.

The conversation Defendants claim was discovered for the first time by them in

their new investigation is errant nonsense.


403.

The Documentary then stages an interview with 9-1-1 Call operator, Kim

Archuletta.
404.

Ms. Archuletas very first statement to Clemente and Richards in the

Documentary is a lie. She states, Ive always been under a gag order, so Ive never really talked
to anybody. Um, so my side of the story has never really been heard.
405.

Ms. Archuletta goes on to state that this is the first time that anyones asked for

my opinion . . . in twenty years.


406.

In truth, Ms. Archuletta gave a virtually identical interview to Kolar in 2005. In

that interview, Ms. Archuletta had already told her side of story. See Foreign Faction, p. 100.
407.

The statement that she was under a gag order is false, as no such order has ever

existed or been entered by any court in any jurisdiction.

Page 54 of 108

408.

The Documentarys interview with Archuletta rehashes the same details from her

interview with Kolar in Foreign Faction. Yet, her interview in the Documentary is portrayed by
Defendants as the first-time Ms. Archuletta has spoken publicly on this issue.
409.

Defendants knew that Ms. Archuletta had already told her side of the story to

others, yet they knowingly broadcast that lie to the public.


410.

After Ms. Archuletta, Clemente, and Richards listen to the 9-1-1 Recording, Ms.

Archuletta states, I just remember having that sunken feeling like something wasnt right.
411.

In Foreign Faction, Kolar maintains that Archulet[t]a explained that:

The telephone line had not disconnected immediately, and she had heard a
definite change in the tone of Patsy Ramseys voice before the call was fully
terminated. Aruchlet[t]a explained that the hysterical nature of Patsy Ramseys
voice appeared to have dissipated, and she thought that she had been talking to
someone nearby at her end of the telephone line.
412.

Richards then asks Ms. Archuletta a leading question, guiding Ms. Archuletta to

repeat the story she told Kolar. Richards asks, Was there a shift in kind of tone from sort of
being very hysterical to suddenly . . . something quite different? Ms. Archuletta responds,
Right. What bothered me immensely, it sounded like she said Okay, weve
called the police, now what? And that disturbed me. So I remained on the
phone trying to hear what was being saidsounded like there were two voices in
the room, maybe three different ones. I had a bad feeling about this. To me it
seems rehearsed. Mm-hmm.
413.

Richards asked this leading question, because she knew that this is what Ms.

Archuletta purportedly told Kolar.


414.

Neither the Documentary nor Ms. Archuletta explain when she has ever had a

good feeling about hearing a desperate and breathless mother reporting the kidnapping of a
child,or how she had the experience or training to evaluate whether a 9-1-1 call was rehearsed.

Page 55 of 108

415.

Nor does the Documentary ask Ms. Archuletta why the 9-1-1 Recording in no

way supports the false statement that Patsys tone changed at the end of the call. The 9-1-1
Recording speaks for itself. Patsys voice never waivers from the distress of believing that
JonBent had been kidnapped.
416.

Ms. Archuletta also asks a leading question: I know they did an enhancement,

right? But Defendants continue their lie: We did enhance the end of it. (Emphasis added).
417.

Defendants knew that Ms. Archulettas statements were not reliable or credible,

and that her statements did not change Burkes status as a witness in 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999,
2000, 2003, 2008 or in 2012, and they certainly do nothing to change his status in 2016.
418.

After the mock interview scene, the Documentary returns to its Pseudo-Experts to

discuss the 9-1-1 Call.


419.

Richards launches into a game of telephone, describing Ms. Archulettas

statements in a manner that both defies her actual statements in the mock interview and in the 91-1 Recording. As Defendants knew, Richards falsely claims that Ms. Archuletta basically said
that what she heard Patsy say was Okay, we called the police, now what?
420.

During the 9-1-1 Call, Patsy never said anything resembling, Okay, we called

the police, now what?


D.

Defendants Falsely Claim that Patsy Wrote the Ransom Note

421.

The Documentary next moves on to the Ransom Note that Patsy discovered on

the morning of December 26, 1996.


422.

To support their false accusation against Burke, Defendants falsely claim that

Patsy wrote the Ransom Note to cover-up that Burke killed JonBent.
423.

The Ramseys in no way participated in writing the Ransom Note.

Page 56 of 108

424.

The six legitimate handwriting experts who analyzed the original Ransom Note

and original handwriting exemplars of John, Patsy, and Burke, long ago rejected the theory that a
member of the Ramsey family wrote the note.
425.

Each of the six handwriting experts concluded that Burke and John did not write

the Ransom Note, and the consensus of the six experts was that the chances that Patsy wrote it
were very low.
426.

As set forth in the Wolf Decision,

During the investigation, the Boulder Police Department and Boulder County
District Attorneys Office consulted at least six handwriting experts . . . All six
experts agreed that Mr. Ramsey could be eliminated as the author of the Ransom
Note. None of the six consulted experts identified Mrs. Ramsey as the author of
the Ransom Note. Rather, the experts consensus was that she probably did not
write the Ransom Note. On a scale of one to five, with five being elimination as
the author of the Ransom Note, the experts placed Mrs. Ramsey at a 4.5 or a 4.0.
The experts described the chance of Mrs. Ramsey being the author of the Ransom
Note as very low.
Wolf Decision at 1334.
427.

Defendants knew that if a Ramsey did not write the Ransom Note, an intruder

committed the murder.


428.

The fact that a stranger to the Ramsey family wrote the Ransom Note is

fundamentally inconsistent with Defendants false accusation that Burke killed JonBent.
429.

Defendants not only knowingly disregarded the longstanding findings of the

legitimate handwriting experts, but Defendants contradicted them.


430.

In the four-hour Documentary, there is only one mention of the prominent

handwriting expert evidence. In the Documentarys interview with former Boulder PD Detective
Steve Thomas, the leading proponent of the Boulder PD Patsy-did-it theory states:
I think [Patsy] was the author of that ransom note. . . . the ransom note . . . bore
handwriting characteristics that some experts said were remarkably similar to
Page 57 of 108

Patsys . . . but . . . for some reason the district attorney wanted to create some
parallel universe why it wasnt hers. I find it preposterous.
431.

The Documentary knowingly failed to disclose that Detective Thomas has

published a book publicly accusing Patsy of the murder, claiming that the Boulder PD also
believed that the evidence supported the conclusion that Patsy killed her daughter.
432.

Defendants mislead their viewers and misrepresent the known evidence by

knowingly and intentionally failing to disclose the legitimate experts findings that the Ramseys
did not write the Ransom Note.
433.

Defendants misrepresent the handwriting experts analysis in the same manner as

Kolar did in Foreign Faction.


434.

Rather than rely on the established and judicially recognized science of

handwriting analysis which totally undermines Defendants accusation against Burke, the
Documentary relied on the junk science of statement analysis to analyze the Ransom Note and
form a false, misrepresentative and unreliable basis for claiming that Patsy wrote the note.
435.

By claiming that Patsy authored the Ransom Note, Defendants buttressed their

false accusation that John and Patsy covered up the fact that Burke killed JonBent.
436.

The central figure in the Documentarys analysis of the Ransom Note is Pseudo-

Expert Stanley.
437.

Stanley purportedly teaches statement analysis at the FBI Academy.

438.

None of the other Pseudo-Expertsincluding Clemente, Richards, or

Fitzgeraldclaim to be experts in statement analysis.


439.

Defendants knew or recklessly disregarded that their Pseudo-Experts analysis of

the Ransom Note was unreliable pseudo-science and cannot be admissible evidence in a court of
law.
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440.

The Pseudo-Experts analysis of the Ransom Note borders on fantasy as the

Pseudo-Experts wonder aloud why the note starts with Listen carefullywhich would be
appropriate for the spoken word rather than read carefully, given that the note had been
written. This attempt at shallow observation does little more than show the Documentary is
grasping for straws to fill airtime to support its false accusations, while recklessly avoiding the
actual evidence.
441.

Defendants rely on the multiple references to Hollywood films in the Ransom

Note as evidence that it was written by Patsy. Yet Defendants fail to disclose that the author of
the Ransom Note also likely lifted the line listen carefully from movies featuring kidnappings
that were heavily referenced in the Ransom Note: (1) Dirty Harry, Now listen to me carefully.
Listen very carefully; (2) Nick of Time, I need you to listen carefully; and (3) Ruthless People,
Listen very carefully!
442.

Notably, investigators searched the Ramsey home and did not find any of the

movies referenced in the Ransom Note, nor did they find any evidence connecting the Ramseys
to these films. Yet Defendants knowingly twisted the facts about the Ramseys and the films
referenced in the Ransom Note. The Documentary said only that the [Ramseys] house was
filled with movie posters. But Defendants knowingly fail to disclose that none of the movie
posters or movies found in the Ramsey home matched the movies referenced in the Ransom
Note.
443.

Defendants also knew but failed to disclose that investigators had long ago

recognized the Ransom Notes apparent references to movie dialogue.


444.

Defendants only identify the following links between the Ransom Note and one

scene in the movies Dirty Harry and in Speed:

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a.

In Dirty Harry the kidnapper says, If you talk to anyone, I dont care if

its a Pekingese pissing against a lamppost, the girl dies. The Ransom note mirrors
and repeats this threat: If we catch you talking to a stray dog she dies. If you alert
bank authorities, she dies. If the money is in any way marked or tampered with, she
dies. Youll be scanned for electronic devices and if any are found she dies.
b.

In Speed the killer says, Do not attempt to grow a brain. Likewise, the

Ransom Note states, Dont try to grow a brain John.


445.

Here is what Defendants knowingly omitted or recklessly disregarded:


a.

The Ransom Note said, The delivery will be exhausting so I advise you

be rested. Similarly, the ransom demand in Dirty Harry said, It sounds like you
had a good rest. Youll need it.
b.

The Ransom Note said, Speaking to anyone about your situation such as

the police, FBI, etc will result in your daughter being beheaded. . . . You and your
family are under constant scrutiny as well as the authorities. Similarly, in the Nick
of Timein which a father attempts to recover his kidnapped daughterthe father is
told: (1) You talk to a cop; you even look at a cop too long and your daughters
dead. . . . Ill kill her myself. Cut the head off right in front of you.; and (2) Dont
forget. Ill be watching you. And in Ruthless People, the kidnapper says, You will
be watched at all phases of execution.
c.

Less than two months before JonBents murder, a movie named Ransom

was releasedthe plot of which is strikingly similar to the attempted kidnapping of


JonBent. In Ransom, the child of a wealthy businessman is kidnapped by a woman
who worked for the family (and others). The kidnappers provide the father with

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precise instructions for getting his son back, including putting specific denominations
of money in a particular suitcase. The kidnappers also warn that they will kill the
child if their instructions are not followed and that they are watching the family.
446.

In short, the Ransom Note references a series of films, none of which were in the

Ramseys possession, and for which there is no record of the Ramseys having seen the movies.
447.

The idea that Patsyin the midst of covering up Burkes killing of JonBent in

the middle of the night by strangling and sexually assaulting her daughtertook the time to
work in numerous Hollywood film references into a 3-page Ransom Note while carefully
disguising her handwriting is so inherently improbable that it is not worthy of belief and
certainly not a legitimate basis upon which to accuse Burke of killing his sister.
448.

The Documentary then concludes that precisely 76% of the words in the Ransom

Note are extraneous. The implication is that because a true kidnapper would have supposedly
used an economy of words, the Ransom Note must have instead been written by a person trying
sell a cover-upi.e., Patsy.
449.

The Documentary then knowingly falsely states that the only mistake in the

Ransom Note is in the first paragraph, in which business is spelled with an extra s,
business. The Ransom Note is in fact riddled with mistakes, including the following: (1) an
omitted comma between the first two independent clauses in the final sentence of the first
paragraph; (2) the phrase adequate size attach is grammatically incorrect; (3) in the second
paragraph, a comma was omitted after the phrase, When you get home; (4) in the second
paragraph, a comma was omitted after the introductory phrase, The delivery will be
exhausting; (5) in the first sentence of the third paragraph, the Ransom states deviation of
rather than deviation from; (6) in the third paragraph, a comma was omitted after the first

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independent clause, You can try to deceive us; and (7) the word outsmart was mistakenly
spelled as two words, out smart.
450.

Fitzgerald pointing to the misspelling of bussiness as a purposeful mistake is

just another instance of grasping for straws as Fitzgerald and Defendants have no reliable,
scientific basis or experience for concluding it is the result of a purposeful mistake. Clemente
tries to pile onto this notion, by pointing out that other lengthy words are spelled correctly,
including [p]articular, enforcement, countermeasures. But none of those words have a letter
that appears once standing alone and again as an identical paire.g., buSineSS. Indeed, none of
those three words has an identical letter pair, nor does the Ransom Note have any word other
than business in which a single letter first stands alone and then is repeated as an identical pair.
Defendants recklessly misrepresent an empty observation about a single typo as a meaningful
insight supporting the accusation against Burke.
451.

Defendants then observe that the Ransom Note is suspect because it is a long

letter and thus exhibits high risk behavior. This observation actually undermines the notion
that the Ramseys were engaged in a cover-up, as the Ramseys would have no incentive to draft a
long letter that would leave more clues and increase the probabilities of being caught.
452.

Defendants next claim that the Ransom Note was likely written by a woman (i.e.,

Patsy) because it states listen carefully, when you get home, and do not particularly like
you.
Fitzgerald: Age is not always easy to determine, but I would certainly say this persons an
adult. No indication of sort of teenage slang, vernacular, so I would say we have
someone, an adult, 30 or older. The last one and part of a linguistic profile is gender, and
this can be one of the trickiest ones to determine. There are at least six examples of what
I would call maternalistic language. The very first sentence is already circled. Can you
picture a mother telling their young child, Listen carefully, when you get home, not
when you get back to your house, not when you get to your residence, when you get
home. Do not particularly like youwould a guy necessarily care if someone likes
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them or not in this context? I find in the thousands of cases I have worked over the years,
when someone puts a statement in like that, it turns out to be a female.
453.

Clemente then assertswithout any basis whatsoeversheer speculation that the

Ransom Note was written after JonBent was killed, not before her murder. The false
implication is that someone in the Ramsey family wrote the Ransom Note.
454.

Defendants then time how long it takes them to transcribe the Ransom Note and

proclaim that [a]ssuming this is done by an outside person who broke into the house for the
purposes of a kidnapping, the intruder stayed in the house [twenty-one-and-a-half minutes]
longer than they needed to.
455.

However, the length of time that it took to practice and write the note could also

conceivably undermine an notion that Mrs. Ramsey wrote it. Under plaintiffs scenario, Mrs.
Ramsey was working quickly to create a staged crime scene. . . . Given those time constraints,
and presumably a desire to provide as little handwriting as possible for purposes of future
analysis, she arguably would not have written such a long note. Wolf Decision at 1361. This is
even more persuasive in light of the several accurate quotations and references to dialogue from
Hollywood films.
456.

In sum, Defendants knowingly misrepresentedwhile largely omittingthe

opinions of credible handwriting experts in favor of an unreliable statement analysis. They did
so because the credible opinion of handwriting experts totally undermines their false accusation
against Burke.
E.

Defendants Falsely Cast Suspicion on Burke Based on Purported Behavior


During the Hours After the 9-1-1 Call

457.

Defendants cast a sinister shadow over the Ramseys behavior in the hours

following the 9-1-1 Call.

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458.

Defendants purposefully cast a sinister suspicion on the Ramseys in order support

their false and defamatory gist that Burke killed JonBent.


459.

Defendants cast their shadow by making false assertions of fact and illogical

innuendos.
460.

Defendants begin this segment by introducing former FBI Agent Ron Walker

(Walker), whom Clemente and Richards describe as the only first responder who went as a
behavioral analyst, who knew what to look for, and would have the answers to some of the
gaps weve got.
461.

Walker immediately claimed that the ransom note was a red herring and that it

was stagingso its even more important at that point for the detectives to maintain visual
contact.
462.

Defendants claim that John was out of pocket from 10:30 a.m. to noon on

December 26, 1996. This claim comes from Linda Arndt, a former Boulder PD detective who
was the only officer stationed at the Ramseys home during that time period. The fact that the
Boulder PD understaffed the Ramsey home does not mean that John was out of pocket.
Rather, Linda Arndt failed to notice that John was in his study, worried sick over his belief that
JonBent had been kidnapped.
463.

Piling on John, Defendants falsely state that John reappears, when in fact

Defendants knew that John had never disappeared. Moreover, Defendants emphasize that John
was agitated, as if this is suspicious behavior for a man who believes his daughter has been
kidnapped.
464.

Defendants falsely claim that John was instructed to search the house top and

bottom and were gonna start at the top, but that John disregarded the instruction and ma[de] a

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beeline for the basement door. John was not told to begin a search at the top. Rather, as
Defendants knew, the phrase top to bottom is merely a common phrase for a thorough search.
465.

In connection with this assertion, Defendants display the fictional image of a

person instructing John to start at the top.


466.

As to Johns discovery of JonBents body, Walker boldly asserts that in

[v]irtually every staged murder case that I have seen, the perpetrator manipulates the arrival of
friends or other family members who are then put in the situation where they actually discover
the body or they are with the perpetrator as the body is discovered. Clemente agrees: They
bring somebody along. They discover the body, but with a witness who can testify to their shock
and awe and horror at what they find.
467.

Defendants cast suspicion on John because he put [JonBents dead body] on the

floor instead of the living room couch, coffee table, or chairs. But Defendants knew that a
Boulder PD detective had directed John to place her body on the floor.
468.

The suitcase found beneath the Window has consistently been relied on as indicia

that an intruder used it to exit the basement playroom. Defendants not only fail to reference this
possibility, but instead assert that perhaps the perpetrator [intended] to put the body in a suitcase
and remove the body from the crime scene or conceal[] the body for a time.
469.

Defendants implication that John or Patsy would stick JonBents lifeless body

in a suitcase either to remove her from the scene or to conceal her body is inherently improbable
on its face. Defendants ignore that under their version of events, John and Patsy staged the crime
scene to look like it was committed by a perverted monster who tortured and strangled JonBent
with a garrote and sexually assaulted her with a piece of wood. Defendants do not question
whether JonBents body could have fit into the suitcase, but imply the possibility that John hid

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JonBents body in a suitcase and subsequently removed her to stage the discovery of her body.
Finally, Defendants knew, recklessly ignored, and failed to disclose that there was a shard of
glass from the Window sitting on top of the suitcase.
470.

Defendants openly assert that [t]he statements that were made said that John

called out that she was here before he turned the light on and imply that he could not have seen
JonBents body without the light on first. But Defendants knew and failed to disclose that John
turned the light on before finding JonBent, a fact confirmed by Fleet White in a statement he
provided within a day of the murder.
471.

Defendants hide from the viewers the fact that the Documentarys knowingly

false portrayal of the events at the Ramsey home on December 26th mirror Kolars portrayal in
Foreign Faction.
472.

Defendants hide from the viewers the fact that Kolar also relied on Ron Walker in

Foreign Faction.
F.

Defendants Stage a Demonstration of a Young Boy Bludgeoning a Pig Skin


Clad with a Blonde Wig to Create the Image of Burke Killing His Sister

473.

Defendants then conduct a segment with Spitz that culminates with a disgusting

staged demonstration intended to plant in the viewers minds the powerful and incriminating
image of Burke killing his sister: Spitz commands a ten-year-old boy to, in effect, pretend he is
bludgeoning JonBent to death by using a flashlight to strike a pig skin skull covered with a
blonde wig.
474.

The segment with Spitz and the recreation of the bludgeoning was intended to

convey one message and one message only to the viewer: Burke killed JonBent with a vicious
blow to the head with a flashlight.

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475.

In order to support Defendants claimed version of events, this segment with Spitz

conveys that John and Patsy garroted JonBent.


476.

The main proposition of this flashlight segment is lifted directly from Foreign

Faction.
477.

With no direct evidence establishing the murder weapon, Defendants recklessly

state that the murder weapon used to kill JonBent was the three D-cell Maglite flashlight (the
Flashlight) that had been found on the kitchen counter of the Ramsey home.
478.

Defendants false and defamatory conclusion that Burke killed JonBent depends

on the Documentary conning the viewer into believing that the Flashlight was the murder
weapon. After all, not even Defendants could sell the absurd notion that Burke, at the tender age
of nine, asphyxiated his sister with a garrote made of cut cord, slipknots, and Patsys broken
paintbrush handle.
479.

But as Spitz and the other Defendants knew, the coroner who actually examined

JonBents body found she was murdered by asphyxiation with a garrote found embedded in her
neck at her autopsy.
480.

Despite Defendants aversion to the truth, even they cannot contest the undisputed

physical and medical findings establishing that JonBent was alive when she was asphyxiated
with the garrote. So, Defendants falsely assert that she was bludgeoned and brain dead or
virtually dead before being asphyxiated, but still technically alive at that time.
481.

Defendants also concede that JonBent had no visible head injury as a result of

the blow with the Flashlight.


482.

Defendants fail to confront the inherent improbability of the story they

manufactured that requires concluding that John and Patsy discovered JonBent while she was

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still alive and without any visible head injury, but they quickly concocted their plan, found the
materials, made the garrote, and choked what life remained out of their six-year-old daughter
while sexually assaulting her.
483.

Later in the Documentarywhen accusing Burke of causing the purported stun

gun injuries to JonBents lifeless body with his toy train trackKolar touches on the absurdity
of Defendants accusation: An adult would have been calling 9-1-1 for an ambulance upon
finding their child alive but unresponsive.
484.

Further, Defendants knowingly fail to disclose that there were strong

unmistakable signs that JonBent was actually conscious when she was asphyxiated, including
physical evidence that JonBent struggled against the garrote, clawing at the ligature around her
neck and leaving tell-tale fingernail marks.
485.

JonBent was alive and conscious when she was being tortured with a garrote.

486.

But if JonBent was conscious while being garroted, Defendants knew their

audience would not accept that a family membermuch less her nine-year-old brotherwas
responsible for the brutal physical and sexual assault.
487.

Defendants knowingly and falsely stated that the fracture to JonBents skull

preserved the appearance, the dimensions of the [Flashlight], which fits to perfection.
488.

The Documentarys first false demonstration with a flashlight has Pseudo-Expert

Clemente striking a thin wooden board with a flashlight to alleged recreate the physical damage
to JonBents skull from a blow delivered by the flashlight. The experiment has no scientific
validity. This made-for-TV demonstration was staged and phony. In short, Defendants
knowingly lied to the viewers by performing a fake experiment, all with the aim of convincing
the viewers that Burke killed his sister.

Page 68 of 108

489.

Defendants then knowingly conduct a second false demonstration with a

flashlight: only this time a ten-year-old child is instructed to use a flashlight to strike a purported
skull covered by a pigskin and blonde wig.
490.

Defendants knew that their demonstration with the child and the Flashlight had no

scientific validity.
491.

Defendants rigged this demonstration in an obvious attempt to recreate the image

in the viewers minds of Burke killing JonBent. For example, after the boy strikes the wigged
skull, the Documentary reveals the damage. Defendant Clemente falsely proclaims that the
defect in the skull is very similar to the type of break that we saw on JonBent. The injury to
JonBents skull was a rectangle with rounded edges, whereas the skull in the Documentary has
a triangular hole. Yet Defendants falsely announce, The demonstration was a convincing
confirmation of the association of the Flashlight with that injury in the head and there is no
doubt that this Flashlight or one exactly like it caused that injury.
492.

Upon information and belief, Defendants staged several demonstrations of the pig

skull being struck by the ten-year-old actor until they got a result that they felt would support
their false accusation against Burke.
493.

As Defendants knew, experts had previously determined that it took a tremendous

amount of force to create the fracture in JonBents skullmore than a child could muster.
Nevertheless, Defendants end the flashlight segment with the knowingly false conclusion that it
didnt take tremendous strength to cause the injury to JonBents skull.
494.

Defendants accusation that Burke used the Flashlight to kill his sister, and then

his parents covered it up, is false, and Defendants demonstration designed to convey to the

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viewers the image of Burke striking his sisters head with a flashlight was a false image
manufactured by Defendants.
G.

Defendants Overtly Misrepresent the Interviews of the Ramsey Family

495.

In Defendants quest to convince their unsuspecting audience of Burkes guilt,

Defendants engage in a biased and unreliable statement analysis of John and Patsys media
statements.
496.

In order to support the false and defamatory conclusion that Burke killed

JonBent and his parents covered it up, Defendants knowingly and falsely state that the Ramseys
spoke to CNN before they gave interviews to the Boulder PD: Within days of JonBents body
being found, the Ramseys speak to CNN before theyve even given interviews to the Boulder
Police department.
497.

Defendants so-called statement analysis makes many of the same assertions that

Kolar made in Foreign Faction.


498.

As Defendants knew, John, Patsy, and Burke had all been interviewed by the

Boulder PD, before CNN interviewed John and Patsy on January 1, 1997 (CNN Interview).
499.

The Boulder PDs interview of Burke on December 26, 1996, is a clear indicator

of Burkes innocence. As Defendants knew, Boulder PD Detective Fred Patterson interviewed


Burke one-on-one and concluded that Burke had no knowledge of what had happened to
JonBenta conclusion that absolutely contradicts the notion that Burke killed JonBent.
Defendants nevertheless knowingly disregard the trained detectives conclusions and
purposefully fail to disclose it to the viewers. It is inherently improbable that Burkeas a nineyear-old childcould deceive a trained detective within hours of killing his sister.

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500.

As Defendants knowingly fail to disclose, the Boulder PD interviewed John

shortly after the murder, including on December 26th, 27th, and 28th.
501.

As Defendants knowingly fail to disclose, the Boulder PD interviewed Patsy

shortly after the murder, including on December 26th and 28th.


502.

Defendants also knowingly fail to disclose that John and Patsy offered to sit for

extensive interviews with the Boulder PD in the days just after JonBents murder. The
Ramseys had asked that the interviews occur at their friends home, because Patsys doctor said
she was too ill to sit for a long interview at the police station. The Boulder PD refused this offer,
and even went one horrible step further: threatening to withhold JonBents body from the
family until John and Patsy came down to the station.
503.

Defendants engage in yet another phony analysis: this time having some of the

Pseudo-Experts examine very limited, hand-selected, and highly edited segments of the CNN
Interview.
504.

When analyzing the CNN Interview, Defendants rely upon the pseudo-sciences of

forensic linguistic analysis and statement analysisneither of which were applied in a


scientifically valid fashion.
505.

Defendants knowingly fail to disclose that Patsy was heavily medicated during

the CNN Interview. Mired in grief, Patsy had taken anti-anxiety medication and tranquilizers
that altered her speech and demeanor.
506.

Defendants begin their attack by slighting John for stating that he and Patsy want

to know who murdered JonBent, [n]ot because were angry, but because weve got to go on.
Richards and Stanley deride John for showing grace rather than vitriolimplying that John was
covering for Burke. The Documentary assumes that John would have been angry if an intruder

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had truly murdered JonBent, whereas John would not be angry if Burke had committed the
murder. This is nonsensical.
507.

The Documentary then latches onto Patsys side-to-side head nod in response to

the CNN interviewers question, Are you fully convinced that your daughter was kidnapped by
some outsiders outside your family or circle of friends? The question itself is a poor one,
because at that point everyone knew that JonBent had not been kidnapped. An affirmative
answer to the question would technically be incorrect, because JonBent was not kidnapped.
And a negative answer would have inappropriately pointed the finger at the Ramseys friends
and family.
508.

The Documentarys attempt to find meaning in Patsys nodding head is an

exercise in reckless fabrication. In nearly every clip the Documentary shows of the CNN
Interview, Patsy is nodding her head from side-to-side, with an occasional pause or change to up
and down. As even a layperson knows, people often shake their heads from side-to-side in the
face of dismay and inconsolable grief. Defendants knew that Patsys body language in response
to the question about JonBents kidnapper was firmly in line with normal human behavior. But
Defendants nevertheless knowingly and falsely used Patsys head nod to imply that Burke killed
JonBent.
509.

The Documentary next analyzes John and Patsys press conference on May 1,

1997 (Press Conference)again with the purpose of knowingly and falsely implying that they
were covering up for Burke.
510.

Defendants main criticism of the Press Conference is that John said he and Patsy

successfully accomplished sitting through their formal interrogation by the Boulder PD.
Pseudo-Expert Stanley accusatorily asks, Why is that such an accomplishment to go and talk to

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the police about the possible resolution of your daughters homicide? The Documentary is so
intent on sleight of hand that it cannot even truthfully depict the Ramseys formal interrogation
by the Boulder PD. As Defendants knew, John and Patsy did not simply go and talk to the
police. Rather, John and Patsy had to sit through a lengthy interrogation with a police
department that was erroneously focusing its investigation on John and Patsy, rather than
focusing on finding the actual murderer of their six-year-old daughter. No parents would relish
sitting across from people wrongfully accusing them of killing their daughter, while the real
killer roamed free. For John and Patsy, getting through the adversarial interrogation with their
misguided accusers was an accomplishmentas it would have been for anyone.
H.

Defendants Create a False Cobweb Demonstration to Discredit the Smit


Intruder Theory

511.

Defendants proceed with their steady onslaught on the truth by staging an overtly

false demonstration about a cobweb in the Window that JonBents murderer may have climbed
through.
512.

In this segment, Defendants begin their direct attack on the Smit intruder theory

lifting evidence and theories from Foreign Factionthereby supporting the false and
defamatory conclusion that Burke killed her.
513.

Defendants falsely conclude and recklessly declare that you can eliminate the

outside intruder hypothesis.


514.

Defendants hid from the viewers the truth that the Window demonstration was

taken straight from Foreign Faction.


515.

The Window in question was the center window in the train room in the basement

of the Ramseys home.

Page 73 of 108

516.

John had broken the Window earlier in 1996, after he locked himself out and was

trying to get back into the Ramsey home.


517.

A crime scene video shot shortly after JonBents murder shows the cobwebs and

debris in the Window. There is a small cobweb in the bottom corner of the Window and bits of
debris, such as leaves and Styrofoam packing peanuts.
518.

Defendants knowingly and intentionally inflate the cobweb and debris until they

bear no meaningful resemblance to the condition of the Window shortly after JonBents murder.
The Documentarys cobweb is anchored from almost halfway across the sill to almost halfway
up the right-side jamb, whereas the actual cobweb spans a much smaller distance. Crime scene
photos of the actual condition of the Window are attached hereto as Exhibit I; photos of the
Documentarys misrepresentative recreation of the Window are attached hereto as Exhibit J.
519.

Having stacked the cards, Pseudo-Expert Richards crawls in and out of the

Window in a way that ensures she wrecks the cobweb and scatters the other debris. Defendants
then conclude that it makes no sense that the murderer used the Window, because there was an
intact cobweb in the Window and the debris was undisturbed.
520.

Defendants conclusions about the Window are blatant misrepresentations, as

Defendants knew that the actual cobweb was small enough to remain undisturbed by a person
climbing through the Window.
521.

Defendants had actual knowledge of, knowingly contradicted, failed to disclose,

and recklessly ignored facts about the Window that supported the Smit intruder theory, including
the following: (1) there were at least eight unlocked windows and/or doors found in the Ramsey
home on the morning of December 26th; (2) there was a new scuff mark on the wall under the
Window that was likely caused by the intruder; (3) debris outside of the Window had been

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pushed to either side of the Window, while debris in front of the other two windows remained
intact, (compare Ex. I with Ex. J); (4) leaves and packing peanuts found outside the Window
were located on the floor of the basement beneath the broken Window; (5) a leaf and packing
peanuts like those found outside the Window were found in the Wine Cellar; and (6) the grate
outside the Window well had been recently raised and lowered, as evidenced by fresh green
foliage stuck underneath the grate, where it could not have grown naturally.
522.

Defendants had actual knowledge of, knowingly contradicted, failed to disclose,

and recklessly ignored other facts that supported the Smit intruder theory, including the
following: (1) fibers consistent with those of the garrote were found in JonBents bed; (2) other
items not belonging on the second floor were found there on the day after the murder, including a
brown paper sack with a rope in it; (3) small pieces of the brown paper sack were found in
JonBents bed; (4) unidentified and recent HI-TEC shoeprints in the basement that did not
match any shoes owned by the Ramseys; (5) an unidentified Caucasian pubic or auxiliary hair
not matching the Ramseys; and (6) a baseball bat that did not belong to the Ramseys found
outside their home.
523.

Defendants purposefully false Window demonstration provides no evidence

supporting the accusation that Burke killed JonBent.


524.

Moreover, in their attempt to shoot down the Smit intruder theory, Defendants

pretend that the intruders only possible point of entry and exit was the Window. Defendants, in
fact, knew there were many unlocked windows and doors at the Ramsey home when JonBent
was murdered, providing at least eight possible points of unforced entry.

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I.

Defendants Falsely Assert that JonBent Was Not Sexually Assaulted

525.

Defendants falsely state that JonBent was not sexually assaulted during her

brutal murder, because a sexual assault totally undermines the accusation that Burke killed
JonBent by striking her on her head with the Flashlight.
526.

Defendants lied about JonBent being sexually assaulted with the broken piece of

paintbrush used to fashion the garrote, because they knew their audience would not accept an
accusation that John, Patsy, and/or Burke penetrated JonBents vagina with a splintered piece of
wood as part of the killing or cover-up.
527.

Defendants make their false assertion by expressly contradicting their own

Pseudo-Experts official opinion to law enforcement that the perpetrator sexually assaulted
JonBent with the wooden handle from which the garrote was made.
528.

As Defendants knew, the evidence clearly demonstrated that JonBents murderer

also sexually assaulted her: (1) there was blood on JonBents underwear and the entrance of her
vagina; (2) JonBents hymen had been freshly broken, likely close in time to her death; (3)
forensic pathologists that examined her found that she had been penetrated; and (4) fragments of
wood that matched the garrote handle were found in her vagina.
529.

In the 1990s, before he sold his services to participate in the Documentary,

Pseudo-Expert Spitz examined evidence regarding JonBents vaginal injury. He found that the
injuries to JonBents vagina showed she was sexually assaulted at or near the time of death.
This information is not disclosed to the viewers.
530.

In a dramatic reversal, Spitz leads Defendants assault on the truth by either

ignoring or erroneously discounting his own prior conclusion and the wealth of evidence proving
that JonBent was sexually assaulted by the person who murdered her.

Page 76 of 108

531.

The Documentary spends less than two minutes discussing whether JonBent was

sexually assaulted, because there is zero evidence that could possibly support Defendants
assertion that she was not sexually assaulted.
532.

The Documentary discusses only a sliver of the evidence that JonBent was

sexually assaulted, but discounts and contradicts that evidence with absurd explanations.
533.

First, the Documentary discusses wood that was found in JonBents genital tract.

This piece of woodparticularly when analyzed with the other evidencestrongly suggests that
JonBent was sexually assaulted.
534.

Defendants do not disclose that the wood found in her vagina was traced to the

paintbrush handle that was used to make the garrote handle.


535.

The Documentary attempts to dismiss the piece of wood by strongly suggesting

that it found its way into her vagina due to a secondary transfer. Pseudo-Expert Lee states that
the secondary transfer could have occurred when JonBents body was moved repeatedly or
when a blanket was put on her.
536.

The secondary transfer theory regarding the piece of wood is so inherently

improbable and absurd as to be obviously false. As Defendants knew, the piece of wood was
traced to the very same paintbrush that was used to make the garrote handle. Further, the
secondary transfer theory assumes that wood from the paintbrush somehow crawled through
JonBents pajamas, then through her underwear, and then up into her vagina, all because her
body was moved or a blanket was placed on top of her. That is nothing short of nonsensical and
demonstrates the lengths these experts were willing to go to in order to support their false
accusation against Burke.

Page 77 of 108

537.

Spitzs claim that JonBent was not sexually assaulted is particularly malicious,

because he changed his opinion without identifying any new evidence or disclosing his prior
opinion to the viewers.
538.

Second, the Documentary discusses JonBents blood spot in her underwear. The

blood spot, in conjunction with over evidence, is powerful proof that JonBent was injured from
the sexual assault.
539.

The Documentary discounts the blood spot in the most cursory fashion. Lee falls

back on his secondary transfer theory, paying no mind to the virtual absence of blood on other
parts of JonBents body and the barriers the blood would have to get through to reach
JonBents underwear. In short, Defendants secondary transfer theory is so irrational and
improbable that it is not worthy of belief, and it contradicts the undisputed evidence of her sexual
assault.
J.

Defendants Falsely Assert that Burke Caused the Stun Gun Injuries with His
Train Toy

540.

The false and defamatory gist of this segment is that Burke attacked JonBent

with his toy train track, inflicting wounds on her face and back that experienced investigators
determined were likely caused by a stun gun.
541.

Defendants use their toy train theory to undermine the Smit intruder theory.

542.

Defendants had to assert that JonBent was not attacked by a stun gun, because

their audience would not believe the family would have needed to subdue her.
543.

To continue undermining the Smit intruder theory, Defendants assert that

JonBent was already dead when these injuries were inflicted. This absurd accusation requires
that after John and Patsy strangled JonBent with the garrote, Burke snuck into the basement and

Page 78 of 108

violently prodded her face and back with a train toy with sufficient force to cause the burn-like
abrasions in question.
544.

But even Defendants cannot keep track of their fabricated version of events.

While Spitz is asserting that JonBent was dead and without blood flow when the injuries were
inflicted, Kolar and Richards are asserting that she was unconscious and so Burke was trying to
wake her with his train toy.
545.

Defendants stage yet another ridiculous demonstration in attempt to show no stun

gun was used: Defendants use a stun gun on a two-hundred-and-fifteen-pound man for the
knowingly false propositions (1) that JonBent would not have been subdued by a stun gun and
(2) that the JonBents wounds could not have been inflicted by a stun gun.
546.

Defendants begin this segment of the Documentary by suggesting that the effect

of the stun gun on a six-year-old girl would be magnified when compared to its use on a grown
man.
547.

As Defendants concede, there are different types of stun guns, and it is unclear if

the stun gun Defendants use is representative of the stun gun used on JonBent.
548.

From this demonstration, however, Pseudo-Expert Richards concludes that the

stun gun does the actual opposite from subdu[ing] or making her unconscious. So,
Richards asserts, the stun gun theory just doesnt many any sense.
549.

Spitz concludes from the demonstration on a grown man that [i]f this were done

to these kids, you would have a scream from this kid that would have gone through the entire
building. Everybody in that house would have heard it.
550.

Defendants have no basis to assert how JonBent would have responded to being

stunned, and they knew it.

Page 79 of 108

551.

That a grown man who is a paid actor in a controlled environment responded

verbally and was not subdued or rendered unconscious is not probative of whether JonBent
would have been subdued or otherwise cowered in fear when a stranger stunned her in the dead
of night.
552.

Defendants further lack any basis for suggesting that if JonBent was not subdued

or rendered unconscious, she was not attacked with the stun gun.
553.

Defendants also knew but failed to disclose that the appearance of a fresh stun

gun injury on a living grown man is unlikely to exactly match the appearance of a stun gun
injury on the dead body of a six-year-old girl.
554.

Defendants had actual knowledge of, knowingly contradicted, failed to disclose,

and recklessly ignored prior findings explaining, and photographs depicting, the similarities of
JonBents stun gun injuries to those of other dead stun gun victims.
555.

As Defendants knew, their unreliable stun gun demonstration proved nothing

about the injuries JonBent suffered when she was stunned.


556.

Defendants then knowingly and falsely assert that instead of a stun gun, Burke

injured JonBent with his toy train track.


557.

Defendants do so through the Pseudo-Experts absurd discussion about

JonBents wounds and the train tracks, which directly contradicted earlier segments.
558.

Kolar states the accusation that:

a Sergeant at my office [in Telluride] said, heyI might have found something
that could possibly be responsible for these injuries. He talked about the O
gauge track, and I asked Boulder PD to do some one to one photos with this as
well as with the train tracks. These pins that connect the dots together, you can
see that the scaled pictures of the two outside pins of the train tracks match
exactly to the injuries on JonBent. Youve got this train room and pieces of
track here in this room, and then there were pieces of train track in the crime
scene video that were on the floor in Burkes room as well. I thought it was an
Page 80 of 108

incredible discovery, to find a toy in the house that could have been responsible
for these injuries.
559.

Spitz then chimes in with the following consciously false assertion, despite

Defendants concession that JonBent was alive when she was garroted:
If you look carefully at those two marks in her back, there is a central defect
within each of the marks. That defect is from something penetrated through the
skin. She was obviously without a blood circulation at the time . . . .
560.

Richards and Kolar then knowingly and falsely state the Burke used a train track

to try and wake JonBent after he knocked her out:


Richards: So if we think that JonBent took the blow to the head, she doesnt
seem to be breathing or shes not conscious then somebody using a piece of
train track
Kolar: Trying to see if they can get a response from her, waking JonBent. Is this
something an adult would try to use to get a response from an unconscious girl?
An adult would have been calling 911 for an ambulance.
561.

Spitz echoes Kolar and knowingly and falsely states, I would have to conclude

that its either [the train track] or something like it.


562.

Defendants cannot even keep their own stories straight, and their disregard for the

truth is staring them in face. In the first episode of the Documentary, Defendants falsely
concluded that JonBent was virtually deadher blood still circulatingwhen John and/or
Patsy asphyxiated her with a garrote. Now in the final episode, Defendants claim either of the
following: (1) that Burke killed her in the kitchen, ran down to the basement to fetch a train
track, and then stabbed her with it when she was already deadher blood was not circulating; or
(2) that Burke nearly killed her, her parents then garroted her to death, her parents next defiled
her body, and finally Burke repeatedly stabbed her dead body with the train tracks. Either
scenario is inherently improbable on its face and fundamentally inconsistent with Defendants
other conclusions.
Page 81 of 108

563.

Like so many other details portrayed by Defendants as part of their new

reinvestigation, Defendants merely echo Kolars unsupported speculation in Foreign Faction.


Foreign Faction asserts: (1) that Spitz opined that the mark on her cheek had been caused by
the imprint of a small object versus a deteriorating burn mark from a stun gun (p. 246); (2) that
the marks from a stun gun do not match the injuries on the body of JonBent (p. 272); (3) that
it is [Kolars] belief that JonBent would have screamed bloody murder if [a stun gun] had ever
been used on her (p. 311); (4) that Kolars colleague in Telluride, Sergeant Harry Stephens
sent Kolar a single piece of the O gauge style train track, the same model of train and track
depicted in the crime scene video of the basement play room (p. 384); and (5) that Kolar
thought I think you just found the weapon used to inflict those marks on JonBent (p. 385).
Even the purported scaled photographs used by Defendants to support their position are lifted
from Foreign Faction. See pp. 385-386.
K.

Defendants Falsely Claim that the DNA Evidence is Worthless

564.

The false and defamatory gist of this segment is that new technology

demonstrates that the foreign male DNA evidence found in JonBents underwear, and under her
nails in 1997, and the foreign male DNA found on her pajama bottoms in 2008, is worthless, has
nothing to do with the perpetrator of this crime, and should be ignored when searching for the
killer.
565.

The purpose of this segment is to undermine former Boulder DA Mary Lacys

2008 exoneration of the Ramsey Family by DNA evidence, in order to further discount the Smit
intruder theory.
566.

At the time when Defendants published the Documentary, they knew that Lacy

claimed the underwear DNA matched the pajama bottoms DNA.

Page 82 of 108

567.

In an attempt to find an innocent explanation for foreign male DNA found on the

body of a murder victim, Defendants rehash stale theories and experiments about the DNA, but
present them as fresh and based on technology that was previously unavailable to law
enforcement.
568.

Defendants, in fact, did little more than reenact the purported experiments Kolar

discussed in Foreign Faction.


569.

Defendants knowingly and falsely assert that both the unidentified male DNA

found in JonBents underwear and the consistent DNA found on JonBents pajama bottoms
came from the underwear manufacturer rather than JonBents murderer.
570.

Furthermore, Defendants knowingly and falsely assert that the DNA evidence is

useless because DNA from JonBents underwear could have transferred to her pajama bottoms
from the underwear or because the items were laundered together.
571.

Defendants begin the segment by asserting that the DNA experiments the

Documentary will perform use technology that is superior to what law enforcement had used to
analyze the JonBent DNA samples. Pseudo-Expert Clemente announces that DNA technology
has evolved significantly since 1996. Today trace DNA, or what some people call touch DNA,
can actually be found in multiple situations and you have to actually understand what is the
significance in any particular case. The purpose of these statements was to imply that the
Documentary would discover new DNA evidence.
572.

Defendants in fact knew that in 2008, law enforcement analyzed touch DNA from

JonBents long johnsi.e., law enforcement used evolved DNA technology.


573.

Defendants nevertheless lied in order to support the knowingly false conclusion in

this segment: that based on new technology, District Attorney Lacy should not have exonerated

Page 83 of 108

anybody based on just transferred DNA, the DNA recovered from the case sample should
probably be ignored, and the DNA evidence is totally erroneous.
574.

Defendants had actual knowledge, knowingly contradicted, failed to disclose, and

recklessly ignored that the presence of the unidentified males DNA in the JonBents underwear
should not be ignored.
575.

Defendants had actual knowledge, knowingly contradicted, failed to disclose, and

recklessly ignored that no reasonable investigator would ignore consistent samples of DNA
found on separate garments of a sexually assaulted murder victim.
576.

Lee begins his part of the DNA segment knowingly and falsely claiming the

[underwear] DNA maybe has no forensic value, maybe it just has some innocent explanation got
there [sic]. Its not a true piece of physical evidence to link somebody or to exonerate
somebody. Come to my Institute of Forensic Science Center laboratory. Should test again for
DNA. That can shed some light on the whole case.
577.

After Defendants state that they would use superior technology in their

experiments, Defendants purport to demonstrate the existence of DNA samples on unopened


packages of underwear.
578.

Defendants knowingly and falsely conclude that the DNA evidence from

JonBents clothing is totally erroneous, because certainly if somebody packaged [JonBents


underwear] in Thailand and sent it over here and left their DNA on it, they had nothing to do
with this crime, they werent even in this country.
579.

When Defendants knowingly uttered their false and defamatory accusations

against Burke, Defendants and their Pseudo-Experts knew that several years ago, an experiment
was conducted to show that new off-the-shelf underwear may have human DNA from the

Page 84 of 108

manufacturing process. Indeed, in Foreign Faction, Pseudo-Expert Kolar asserts that because of
this prior experiment, the DNA in the JonBent case may have had nothing whatsoever to do
with the death of JonBent. See p. 305.
580.

In his 2012 book, Kolar states as follows:

[T]hat some random DNA tests had been conducted in off-the-shelf childrens
underwear to determine if trace biological DNA samples could be obtained from
brand new clothing that had been shipped from the manufacturer. He indicated
that DNA samples had been located in the articles of new clothing, but they had
been approximately 1/10 the strength of the unknown sample found in JonBents
underwear. (p. 304).
...
Distal Stain 007-2, and other trace samples collected in this case, are mere
artifacts of trace genetic materials that have no bearing on the investigation, and
are of no material assistance in identifying the perpetrator(s) involved in this
crime. They were in place long before the crime was committed. (p. 427).
...
Cloth to cloth transfer could be responsible for [the transfer of genetic material
from her underwear to the leggings.] (p. 427).
581.

Defendants knew that they lacked any reasonable basis for the Documentarys

statement that the DNA found on JonBents underwear was from the manufacturing process.
582.

In the Documentary, Defendants knowingly failed to disclose that JonBents

underwear was not manufactured in the same location as her pajama bottoms.
583.

Defendants also falsely assertreferencing some studiesthat the male DNA

on JonBents underwear innocently transferred to long johns through cloth to cloth transfer or
through the laundry. Lee stated, DNA can transfer from one garment thats worn on top of
another garment, even through the laundry sometimes.
584.

Defendants knowingly failed to disclose that the male DNA found on JonBents

underwear was from saliva, while the DNA found on her pajama bottoms was touch DNA.
Page 85 of 108

585.

Defendants knowingly failed to disclose the high degree of improbability that

DNA from the inside of JonBents underwear could be transferred to the outside of her pajama
waistband.
586.

Further, Defendants knowingly failed to disclose the high degree of improbability

that saliva DNA from the inside of JonBents underwear was transformed into touch DNA on
the outside of her pajama bottoms.
587.

At the time when Defendants uttered their false and defamatory accusations

against Burke, they had no basis to conclude that JonBents new underwear was washed in the
laundry with her pajama bottoms.
588.

In sum, Defendants knew they lacked any scientific basis for concluding that the

DNA found on JonBents underwear was totally erroneous and should probably be ignored.
589.

As Defendants knew, the presence of consistent unknown male DNA found on

two separate garmentsone a saliva sample and one a touch sampleis extremely compelling
evidence that an intruder killed JonBent.
L.

Defendants Use Burkes Inability to Be Prosecuted Due to His Age as


Evidence of His Guilt

590.

Defendants falsely assert that John and Patsy were indicted for covering up

Burkes crime.
591.

Defendants falsely convey that the Boulder DA presented evidence to the grand

jury that Burke killed JonBent.


592.

Yet, Defendants knew that the Boulder PD, the Special Prosecutor overseeing the

grand jury proceedings, and the Boulder DAthe same DA that convened the grand jury
publicly exonerated Burke, both before and after the grand jury was convened, stating that there
was no evidence to support an accusation that Burke killed his sister.
Page 86 of 108

593.

When they published the Documentary, Defendants knew that the indictments of

John and Patsy (which were never signed by the Boulder DA and filed) contradict Defendants
accusation that the indictments evidence Burkes guilt.
594.

Defendants read the proposed indictments against John and Patsy, the essence of

which is that John and Patsy commit[ted] a child to be unreasonably placed in a situation which
posed a threat of injury to the childs life or health which resulted in the death of JonBent
Ramsey and render[ed] assistance to a person with intent to hinder, delay and prevent the
discovery, detention, apprehension, prosecution, conviction and punishment of such a person
knowing the person being assisted has committed and was suspected of the crime of Murder in
the First Degree and Child Abuse Resulting in Death.
595.

Burke was not indicted, yet Defendants knowingly and falsely assert that his

parents proposed indictments implicate him as the murderer:


Normally, if they do an accessory charge which here is generally after the fact,
its usually somebody else. My opinion would be that theres a third person. The
only third person thats left is Burke Ramsey [but] Colorados minimum age for
prosecution is ten. The science behind it, of course, would be that the child under
ten is not psychologically able to commit a crime. . . . Burke was nine and eleven
months . . . at the time of the crime.
596.

Defendants intentionally fail to disclose that the entire indictment file has never

been released; rather, only a small portion has been unsealed.


597.

Defendants knowingly fail to disclose that their theory contradicts former Boulder

PD Chief Beckners pre-grand jury public exoneration of Burke in 1997.


598.

Defendants knowingly fail to disclose that their theory contradicts former Boulder

DA Hunters public exoneration of Burke in 1999 during the grand jury proceeding.

Page 87 of 108

599.

Defendants knowingly fail to disclose that their theory contradicts Special

Prosecutor Kanes December 1999 public exoneration of Burke approximately two months after
the grand jury investigation concluded.
600.

Defendants knowingly fail to disclose that their theory contradicts former Boulder

DA Hunters public exoneration of Burke in 2000.


601.

Defendants knew that the Boulder DA did not present a theory to the grand jury

that Burke killed JonBent, yet they falsely convey to their audience that John and Patsy were
indicted for covering up Burkes crime.
602.

Defendants knowingly fail to disclose that the plain language of the indictments

contradict their assertion that Burke killed JonBent. The unfiled indictments against John and
Patsy were for assisting a person they knew was suspected of the crime of Murder in the First
Degree and Child Abuse Resulting in Death. Yet, Defendants knew that the Boulder DA,
Boulder PD, and Special Prosecutor did not suspect Burke of committing the crime of Murder in
the First Degree or Child Abuse Resulting in Death.
603.

Finally, this accusation was also scripted from Foreign Faction. See p. 428 (I

believe each member of the Ramsey family, home on the night of the murder, may have been
involved at least as an accessory after the fact. Burke, only nine years old at the time, could not
have been prosecuted for any crime because, in Colorado, a child under ten years of age is
presumed incapable of forming criminal intent. The statutes of limitations for the crime of
accessory after the fact have long since expired).
604.

Defendants knew that they lacked any reasonable basis for conveying that the

grand jury believed Burke killed JonBent.

Page 88 of 108

K.

Defendants Assert that Burke Did Not Display the Correct Response to
Trauma

605.

The Documentary takes a deceptive tour through an old law enforcement

interview with Burke and the recollections of a longtime Ramsey critic and self-promoter who
has sued the Ramseys; the false and defamatory gist of which is to cast Burke as a lying
sociopath who killed JonBent.
606.

This segment conveys the false and defamatory gist that Burke killed JonBent,

lied to investigators regarding his involvement, and was therefore complicit in the cover-up of
JonBents death.
607.

The first part of this segment of the Documentary alternates between excerpts of a

psychologists interview of Burke several weeks after the murder and the Pseudo-Experts
disparaging comments regarding Burkes alleged suspicious response to JonBents death.
608.

Defendants largely rely on Pseudo-Experts Clemente and Richards to interpret

excerpts of Burkes interview.


609.

Clemente and Richards are totally unqualified to perform a psychological analysis

of a child based on a video interview and no legitimate psychologist would render any opinions
based on excerpts from such an interview.
610.

The Documentary begins by reminding the viewers that Clemente is an FBI

Profiler [and] an expert in the areas of child sex crimes, child abductions and child homicides,
and that Richards is a criminal behavioral analyst that has reviewed and advised on thousands
of cases and [has] a Masters in Forensic and Legal Psychology.
611.

Defendants show a reckless disregard for the truth by engaging in an unscientific

analysis of Burkes behaviormasquerading as expert analysisto accuse Burke of killing


JonBent.
Page 89 of 108

612.

Defendants first examine excerpts from Burkes January 1997 interview with a

psychologist, Dr. Suzanne Bernhard (the Bernhard Interview).


613.

Defendants lift nearly every excerpt and interpretation of the Bernhard Interview

from Foreign Faction. See, e.g., pp. 349-359.


614.

Defendants first hand-selected excerpt is Burke responding in the affirmative to

Dr. Bernhard asking, So do you feel like youre pretty safe? Kolar also relies upon this
response in Foreign Faction. See p. 349.
615.

Clemente and Richards then engage in a preconceived dialogue designed to imply

Burkes involvement in JonBents death.


616.

Finishing each others sentences, Clemente and Richards agree that the tone of it

is completely off. His sister disappears in the middle of the night; she ends up dead in the
basement and he doesnt worry about himself or worry that they may come back for him. . . . He
was in the house at the time and he doesnt seem to be concerned at all.
617.

Defendants false implication is that Burke stated he felt safe because he knew

that he killed JonBent, rather than a stranger who remains at large.


618.

Defendants recklessly disregard and knowingly fail to disclose that both the

Boulder PD and Child Social Services were convinced from the interviews that Burke did not
know what has happened to his sister when interviewed on December 26 and that Burke did not
witness his sisters murder.
619.

Defendants then play hand-selected excerpts of Burke stating that he has secrets

and that although things have changed at his house a lot, he is basically just going on. Kolar
also relies on the secrets dialogue in Foreign Faction. See p. 350.

Page 90 of 108

620.

According to Defendants, his statement was not a proper response to what should

be a life-changing . . . event, even for a nine-year-old boy.


621.

Defendants consciously false and defamatory implication is that Burke would

have had a more emotional response to JonBents death if he had not been the one who killed
her.
622.

Defendants then select Burkes response to Dr. Bernhards question, What do

you think happened? Burke responded that he know[s] what happened, and Dr. Bernhard
asks you mean when she got killed? Kolar also relies upon this excerpt of the Bernhard
Interview in Foreign Faction. See p. 354.
623.

Clemente then takes statements out of context and actually mischaracterizes Dr.

Bernhards follow-up question as Burkes answer. To implicate Burke, Clemente feigns


incredulity: Alright, hold up. So I know what happened, right, when she was killed, right?
And he said, I asked my dad where did they find the body. Dr. Bernhard said, when she was
killed, not Burke. By the time Dr. Bernhard interviewed Burke, he should be expected to
generally know what happened to JonBent. Nevertheless, Clemente knowingly and falsely
suggest that this is a quasi-confession.
624.

According to Richards, this portion of the Bernhard Interview is significant

because of what [Burke is] not saying, what he would logically expect at that point is asking
what happened to her. Of course, the Bernhard Interview is taking place approximately two
weeks after JonBents death. By this time, Burke has a general understanding of what
happened to JonBent and would not be asking a child services investigator for confirmation of
the techniques used to brutally murder his sister.

Page 91 of 108

625.

Defendants then continue playing the same excerpt, including Burke physically

describing what may have happened to JonBent. Defendants refer to it as odd that he would
reenact the physical motion of JonBent being stabbed in the head.
626.

Defendants replay this excerpt multiple times in an intentionally false and

defamatory attempt to convince their viewers that Burke is reenacting how he killed JonBent.
627.

As Defendants knew but intentionally failed to disclose, this was not a

reenactment. Burke did not act in the first place, because Burke did not kill JonBent.
628.

Directly in the middle of Defendants playing hand-selected snippets of the

Bernhard Interview, Defendants splice in a snippet of their interview with Judith Phillips. Ms.
Phillips proclaims that Burke had a bad temper. . . . He hit [JonBent] with a golf club in the
face. Kolar also relies upon the alleged golf club incident in Foreign Faction. See p. 369,
629.

Judith Phillips hardly knew Burke and had no firsthand knowledge of the alleged

golf club incident, and Defendants knowingly failed to disclose that she lacked credibility on this
subject.
630.

Burke did not intentionally attack JonBent with a golf club or otherwise

intentionally hit her with a golf club.


631.

Defendants spliced in Ms. Phillips statements to convey that Burke could have

killed JonBent in a fit of anger and that the physical demonstration was in fact a reenactment
of Burke killing her.
632.

Defendants knowingly failed to disclose to their viewers that Ms. Phillips lacks all

credibility, that she has long accused Patsy of killing JonBent, and that she has publicly stated
that the golf club incident was an accident. Ms. Phillips has consistently taken advantage of

Page 92 of 108

JonBents death for her personal gainmaterial facts that Defendants failed to disclose to the
viewers.
633.

Ms. Phillips has sold photographs of JonBent to the tabloids for profit against the

Ramseys wishes, acted as a paid source for many tabloid stories, and even publicly accused
Patsy of killing JonBent because Patsy supposedly caught John molesting her on Christmas
night.
634.

According to Ms. Phillips, it is karma that Johns oldest sister died in a car

wreck in 1992, that Patsy was diagnosed with terminal cancer, and that JonBent died. Ms.
Phillips even insulted the Ramseys for their past success, claiming they were only wealthy
because they were in the right place at the right time.
635.

Defendants knowingly failed to disclose that the golf club incident was an

accident, which Foreign Faction acknowledged. See, e.g., Foreign Faction, p. 369.
636.

Defendants then briefly mention Burkes interview with former Boulder PD

Detective Fred Patterson on December 26, 1996. Again, Defendants hold it against Burke that
he was not the one asking questions while he was being interrogated by an adult: He never
asked Detective Patterson, who interviewed maybe an hour after JonBent was found, if his
sister had been found, what happened to her, you know, when theyre going to get her back.
Nothing about his sister. Kolar similarly misrepresents this interview in Foreign Faction. See
p. 346.
637.

Defendants then knowingly and falsely accuse Burke of scatological behavior to

further suggest that Burke suffered from an array of psychological problems: There was a
softball-sized ball of feces found in JonBents bed at some point and technicians found feces

Page 93 of 108

spread on a box of candy that she had gotten the day before for Christmas. Kolar also relies on
these false assertions from untrustworthy witnesses in Foreign Faction. See, e.g., p. 370.
638.

Defendants plagiarized the following specific examples relied on by Kolar in

Foreign Faction:
a.

Burke did not display the appropriate response to JonBents murder, (see

id. at pp. 348, 358-359);


b.

Burke stated he felt safe in his home, (see id. at p. 349);

c.

Burke has secrets, (see id. at p. 350);

d.

Burke gave a physical demonstration of how JonBent may have been

murdered, (see id. at p. 354);


e.

Burke failed to ask Detective Patterson questions regarding JonBent,

which is evidence of his guilt, (see id. at p. 346); and


f.

Burkes alleged scatological behavior is evidence of his guilt, (see id. at p.

370).
639.

But as Defendants knowingly failed to disclose: (1) even Kolar admits in Foreign

Faction that more than this [behavioral indicia] was needed to prove any theory of [Burkes]
involvement, and that such evidence is of a highly speculative nature; and (2) even Kolar
admits that there are conflicted interpretations of Burkes behavior in the aftermath of
JonBents death. See id. at pp. 351, 359, 423.
M.

Defendants Set the Stage for Their Preposterous Theory that Burke Killed
JonBent for Taking His Pineapple

640.

Defendants absurdly claim that Burke knew that the pineapple is the smoking gun

for this crime, and that he then successfully deceived law enforcement as to his knowledge.

Page 94 of 108

641.

The false and defamatory gist of this section is that Burke killed JonBent after

becoming enraged when she took a piece of his pineapple without asking, lied to investigators,
and was complicit in the cover-up of JonBents death.
642.

Defendants attempt to support this preconceived gist by reviewing pre-selected

excerpts from Burkes interview with Boulder PD Detective Schuler eighteen months after
JonBents death (the Schuler Interview).
643.

Defendants use the Schuler Interview to set the stage for their knowingly false,

defamatory, and purely speculative accusation that Burke killed JonBent over a piece of
pineapple and then stabbed her with his toy train track. These theories are taken straight from
Foreign Faction. See, e.g., pp. 65, 343, 384-385.
644.

Defendants go so far as to make the inherently improbable assertion that during

the Schuler Interview, Burke is aware that that piece of pineapple in JonBents stomach
actually creates a major problem in terms of the timeline of when and how she was killed.
645.

Defendants knowingly fail to disclose that they have no basis whatsoever to assert

that Burke, at eleven-years-old, is playing a high-stakes game of cat and mouse with Detective
Schuler.
646.

In this segment, Defendants continue to cast a shadow over Burkes alleged

improper behavior during interviews.


647.

For instance, Clemente claims that Burke is acting like a smart aleck here, like

Im smart and Im proud of myself. Clementes knowingly false and defamatory implication is
that Burke is proud of himself for outsmarting law enforcement by hiding that he killed
JonBent.

Page 95 of 108

648.

Clemente also falsely accuses Burke of deception because he oversell[s] when

he states I always sleep really deeply and I can never hear anything.
649.

Defendants then use two topics raised by Detective Schuler as a springboard for

two key aspects of their version of events: the purported pineapple in JonBents lower intestine
and Burkes toy train track.
650.

For instance, Defendants show an excerpt of Burke responding yes to Detective

Schulers question about JonBent liking pineapple, and then Defendants pounce. Defendants
make the false and defamatory accusation that Burke lost his temper and bludgeoned JonBent
with a flashlight because she at a piece of his pineapple.
651.

Defendants then preface their wildly false and speculative conclusion by stating

that the pineapple issue might look quite innocuous and inconsequential but it also tells us a lot
about what probably went on that night.
652.

Defendants knowingly and falsely claim that the pineapple gives us a possible

timeline, because the pineapple was ingested subsequently to the Ramseys returning home
from dinner at the Whites.
653.

Defendants conjecture is particularly far reaching in this segment. Spitz

extrapolates from his three children in order to accuse Burke of killing JonBent:
Clemente: But its certainly reasonable to believe that JonBent may have snatched one
piece.
Spitz: Right, directly with her fingers. For estimating time of death, this is important.
Clemente: Isnt it possible that JonBent came down and saw that Burke was eating this,
and took one piece? She didnt touch the bowl, she didnt touch the spoon
Spitz: You know, I have three grandchildren myself. Kids will do that. Theyll go by and
pick out a piece with their fingers.

Page 96 of 108

654.

To convince their audience that their rampant speculation is accurate, Defendants

splice in a clip of a blonde girl stealing a piece of pineapple from a young boy, who, in turn,
violently grabs the girl by the wrist.
655.

Upon information and belief, Defendants had actual knowledge and failed to

disclose that a Boulder PD analysis after the autopsy determined that JonBents small intestine
had the remnants cherries, grapes, and pineapplecommon fruit cocktail ingredients. Yet,
because the presence of cherries and grapes completely undermines Defendants series of events,
Defendants consciously fail to share their knowledge with the viewer. Instead, Spitz merely asks
Did the pathology report indicate what the pineapple looked like, or the gastric contents?
656.

Further, Spitz is aware that the presence of the fruit cocktail in JonBents

stomach does not establish a concrete timeline from which investigators may glean her time of
death, and that the minimum amount of time it would require for the fruit to get to JonBents
lower intestine undermines the theory that it started the cascade of the rest of events that
happened on the day she died.
657.

Defendants also knowingly failed to disclose that the amount of time it would

have taken the pineapple to travel to JonBents small intestine is fundamentally inconsistent
with the Burke-did-it accusation.
658.

Defendants then note that while Burke and Patsys fingertips are on the bowl of

pineapple, JonBents are not. This is explainable, Defendants speculate, because she must have
only taken one piece but didnt touch the bowl or touch the spoon.
659.

Defendants have no factual basis for speculating that JonBent took a piece of

Burkes pineapple, much less that her fingerprints are not present on Defendants purported
smoking gun because she only snatched one piece.

Page 97 of 108

660.

The fact JonBents fingerprints are not on the bowl of pineapple or the spoon is

actually strong evidence that she did not eat the pineapple from the bowl.
661.

Upon information and belief, Defendants knowingly failed to disclose that there

was more than one piece of fruit in JonBents digestive tract.


662.

Upon information and belief, Defendants knowingly failed to disclose that there

was more than one type of fruit in JonBents digestive tract.


663.

Defendants next use a clip of Burke affirming that he had an electric train set to

Schuler as an opportunity to replace the stun gun with Burkes toy train. It was an incredible
discovery, to find a toy in the house that could have been responsible for these injuries. . . . An
adult would have been calling 9-1-1 for an ambulance.
664.

Pseudo-Expert Kolar then repeats his entirely speculative accusation, discussed

above, that Burke used one of his train toys to inflict the supposed stun gun injuries on JonBent.
See Foreign Faction, pp. 384-385.
N.

Defendants Pronouncement that Burke Killed JonBent

665.

After Defendants presented the limited evidence they could muster against

Burke, Defendants announced the conclusion of their complete reinvestigation in rapid-fire


succession.
666.

The inescapable false and defamatory conclusion of this final segment is that

Burke killed JonBent.


667.

Defendants began this segment with Clemente proclaiming their goal:

Now that weve been investigating for months, weve been working together as a
team, I think we need to actually try to piece together everything that happened.
Anybody who does a legitimate investigation will look at all the evidence and see
where that evidence takes you. So we have to test every theory and the ones that
remain, are the ones that are supported by the evidence.

Page 98 of 108

668.

Defendants first agreed quickly and with little examinationcorrectlythat

neither John or Patsy killed JonBent.


669.

Defendants then declared that there was no intruder: I dont think the evidence

that stands up to scientific or behavioral scrutiny indicates that somebody came in from outside
that home and killed JonBent.
670.

Defendants falsely attacked the intruder theory by proclaiming that the DNA

evidence in this case is totally erroneous and there is really no sexual assault here.
671.

Richards then invited Kolar to share what he believes happened that night, as

though she did not already know: James, Im interested to know what exactly you think
happened in the house that night.
672.

Kolar then stated the grand accusation against Burkethe same one from Foreign

Faction:
My hypothesis was that I think the Ramseys came home around 9:30, 10:00
oclock. I think JonBent was asleep. I think John did carry her upstairs. Patsy
remained downstairs with Burke and served him the tea and the pineapple. I think
that accounts for the physical evidence as well as the latent prints. Then I think
she got JonBent up to make sure she used the toilet so she didnt wet the bed that
night. JonBent was up, she may or may not have brushed her teeth. That stuff
was out on the counter. And then I think she was up and awake enough, but she
maybe was still hungry and went downstairs. In the meantime, Patsy continued
packing for the Michigan trip. I think if Burke was upset about circumstances or
Christmas presents, he probably wouldve been upset about her trying to snag a
piece of pineapple. Out of anger he may have struck her with that flashlight.
673.

Without further discussion, the remaining five Pseudo-Experts unanimously

agreed with Kolars accusation that Burke killed JonBent with the Flashlight over a piece of
pineapple:
Spitz: I think we all agree on that.
Clemente: Yeah.

Page 99 of 108

Fitzgerald: Yes.
Richards: Absolutely.
Lee: Sure, yeah, I agree with that.
Spitz: Okay.
674.

As Kolar sets forth Defendants accusation, the Documentary flashes fictional

reenactments designed to bolster and support Defendants false accusations.


675.

Defendants openly and falsely accused Burke of fatally bashing JonBent over the

head with the Flashlight. And Defendants offered no other alternative for who may have
murdered JonBent. To the contrary, Defendants attempted to negate all other possibilities.
676.

Consistent with their marketing, Defendants portrayed that they solved it.

677.

Defendants then provide a motive for John and Patsy for a cover-up: [Patsy] said

she would have nothing left to live for if she lost Burke.
678.

Defendants then openly conclude, without clearly explaining any connection

between John and Patsy and the cover-up, that John and Patsy covered up Burkes crime:
Mixed motives make it pretty clear that both parents are involved.
...
And I think thats what we have here in the language utilized as well as the crime
scene itself, the body and everything else. Within an hour of this crime being
committed, theres probably a cover-up starting with whatever they did to the
body and certainly the writing of this letter, the 9-1-1 call, everything that
happened later. But I dont think Burke was involved in the cover-up.
...
But as far as the cover-up itself, I would say primarily, its John and Patsy who
were involved in that. I think the most likely probability is that adults in that
family, John and Patsy Ramseyand this is consistent with what the grand jury
wanted to indict them forstaged this to look like a monster predator had come
in their house and killed their daughter. Its my opinion that the Ramsey family
did not want law enforcement to resolve this case and thats why it remains
unsolved.
Page 100 of 108

...
100% agree.
...
I think in the end this was about two parents [who] deeply cared for the daughter
they lost and wanted to protect the child they had remaining.
679.

Defendants false accusation against Burke was accepted as true by millions of

viewers who were convinced that it was based on a legitimate reinvestigation by legitimate
experts and based on truthful and complete information broadcast by CBS.
680.

The viewers did not know that the Documentary was a purposeful fraud, built

around Kolars Burke-did-it accusation. The Documentary was not a complete reinvestigation
of JonBents murder by a panel of seven independent experts. It was a fraudulent charade
that merely repackaged Kolars false accusations and decades of debunked theories in a manner
intended to deceive the viewers into believing that the information was real. It was all a lie. But
a lie that will haunt and harm Burke for the rest of his natural life.
CAUSES OF ACTION
COUNT I - DEFAMATION (ALL DEFENDANTS)
681.

Burke reasserts and incorporates by reference paragraphs 1 through 680 of this

Complaint as if fully restated herein.


682.

Defendants negligently published the false and defamatory gist that Burke killed

his sister, JonBent.


683.

In accusing Burke of killing his sister, Defendants falsely conveyed that Burke

Ramsey was involved with his parents in a criminal cover-up and that Burke lied to police.

Page 101 of 108

684.

Defendants published and communicated the false and defamatory statements

about Burke to third-parties and did so without privilege or authorization.


685.

Defendants published the false and defamatory statements concerning Burke with

actual malicee.g., with actual knowledge of the statements falsity, and/or with reckless
disregard for the falsity of the statements.
686.

Defendants also published the false and defamatory statements concerning Burke

with common law malicee.g., in bad faith and/or with ill-will towards Burke.
687.

Defendants false and defamatory statements concerning Burke Ramsey are

defamatory per se, thereby causing serious and permanent harm to Burkes reputation.
688.

Defendants false and defamatory statements about Burke proximately caused

him to be exposed to public hatred, contempt and ridicule and continues to so expose him.
689.

Defendants false and defamatory statements about Burke were repeated and

republished worldwide throughout the media and by countless private individuals. Examples of
third-party republications are attached hereto as Exhibit K.
690.

Defendants intended that their false accusations against Burke be republished.

691.

The republications of their false and defamatory statements about Burke were

reasonably foreseeable by Defendants at the time they published the statements.


692.

The republications of Defendants false and defamatory statements concerning

Burke were the natural and probable result of Defendants original publication of those false and
defamatory statements.
693.

As a direct and proximate result of Defendants false and defamatory statements

regarding Burke, he has suffered and will continue to suffer damage and other harm, including
economic damages, damages to his reputation, mental anguish, and special damages.

Page 102 of 108

694.

Defendants conduct demonstrates that degree of willful misconduct and an entire

want of care that raises a conscious indifference to the consequences of their actions.
695.

Defendants published the Articles with constitutional actual malice, thereby

entitling Burke to an award of punitive damages.


696.

Burke is also entitled to an award of punitive damages to punish Defendants for

their unlawful conduct and to penalize and deter them from repeating similar unlawful and
egregious conduct.
697.

Burke is entitled to recover exemplary and/or punitive damages, including

because Defendants are guilty of fraud, oppression, and malice in publishing the false
accusation that Burke killed JonBent.
COUNT II CONSPIRACY TO DEFAME (ALL DEFENDANTS)
698.

Burke reasserts and incorporates by reference paragraphs 1 through 697 of this

Complaint as if fully restated herein.


699.

Defendants and their Pseudo-Experts agreed to form and engaged in a conspiracy

to create and publish the false and defamatory Documentary.


700.

Defendants and their Pseudo-Experts preconceived the story line that Burke killed

JonBent.
701.

Defendants and their Pseudo-Experts planned to accuse Burke of killing JonBent

under the guise of conducting a sham reinvestigation and claiming that the accusation was based
on the evidence discovered in the reinvestigation.
702.

Defendants and their Pseudo-Experts knowingly agreed to participate in the

Documentarys fraudulent portrayal of a reinvestigation of the murder of JonBent.

Page 103 of 108

703.

Defendants and their Pseudo-Experts knowingly agreed to present the ultimate

conclusion of Kolars Foreign Faction, and the supposed reinvestigation was a charade.
704.

Defendants and their Pseudo-Experts knowingly agreed to an unlawful plan to

accuse Burke of killing JonBent.


705.

Each of the Defendants knowingly and intentionally took a responsible part in the

publication of the Documentary, including the false and defamatory statements conveying that
Burke killed JonBent.
706.

Defendants and their Pseudo-Experts knowingly engaged in concerted action and

made overt actions in furtherance of their unlawful plan to falsely accuse Burke of killing
JonBent.
707.

Defendants and their Pseudo-Experts knowingly took concerted action and made

overt actions in furtherance of their unlawful plan to mislead the viewers into believing that
Burke killed JonBent.
708.

Defendants and their Pseudo-Experts, acting jointly and according to their

preconceived and unlawful plan, knowingly and intentionally published false and defamatory
statements imputing to Burke that he killed JonBent, engaged in a criminal cover up with his
parents and lied to the police.
709.

Through the conspiracy, Defendants proximately caused Burke to be exposed to

public hatred, contempt and ridicule and continue to so expose him.


710.

As a direct and proximate result of Defendants conspiracy and the false and

defamatory gist regarding Burke, he has suffered and will continue to suffer damage and other
harm, including economic damages, damages to his reputation, mental anguish, and special
damages.

Page 104 of 108

711.

Burke is also entitled to an award of punitive damages to punish Defendants for

their unlawful conspiracy and to penalize and deter them from repeating similar unlawful and
egregious conduct.
712.

Burke Ramsey is entitled to recover exemplary and/or punitive damages,

including because Defendants by and through their conspiracy are guilty of fraud, oppression,
and malice in publishing that Burke killed JonBent.
COUNT III JOINT VENTURE (CBS AND CRITICAL CONTENT)
713.

Burke reasserts and incorporates by reference paragraphs 1 through 712 of this

Complaint as if fully restated herein.


714.

CBS and Critical Content entered into an agreement indicating an intention to

undertake a joint venture in connection with the Documentary.


715.

CBS and Critical Content jointly undertook to produce and publish the

Documentary.
716.

Pursuant to their joint venture agreement, CBS and Critical Content undertook the

Documentary project for profit.


717.

Pursuant to their joint venture agreement, CBS and Critical Content shared in the

profits as well as losses in connection with the Documentary.


718.

Pursuant to their joint venture agreement, CBS and Critical Content contributed

skills and property in connection with the Documentary.


719.

Pursuant to their joint venture agreement, CBS and Critical Content had a

community interest and control over the Documentary, including a joint right of control.
720.

CBS and Critical Content preconceived the story line that Burke killed JonBent.

Page 105 of 108

721.

Pursuant to their joint venture agreement, CBS and Critical Content planned to

accuse Burke of killing JonBent under the guise of a sham reinvestigation and claiming that the
accusation was based on the evidence discovered in the reinvestigation.
722.

Pursuant to their joint venture agreement, CBS and Critical Content knowingly

agreed to participate in the Documentarys fraudulent portrayal of a reinvestigation of the murder


of JonBent.
723.

Pursuant to their joint venture agreement, CBS and Critical Content knowingly

agreed to present the ultimate conclusion of Kolars Foreign Faction, and the supposed
reinvestigation was merely a charade.
724.

Pursuant to their joint venture agreement, CBS and Critical Content knowingly

agreed to accuse Burke of killing JonBent.


725.

Pursuant to their joint venture agreement, CBS and Critical Content knowingly

and intentionally took a responsible part in the publication of the Documentary, including the
false and defamatory statements imputing to Burke that he killed JonBent.
726.

Pursuant to their joint venture agreement, CBS and Critical Content knowingly

and intentionally published false and defamatory statements conveying that Burke killed
JonBent, engaged in a criminal cover up with his parents and lied to the police.
WHEREFORE, Plaintiff, Burke Ramsey, respectfully requests that this Court enter
judgment, jointly and severally, against Defendants, awarding Burke Ramsey compensatory
damages in an amount not less than $250 Million ($250,000,000.00) and punitive damages to
punish and deter Defendants in an amount not less than $500 Million ($500,000,000.00) and
granting such other and further legal or equitable relief deemed appropriate.

Page 106 of 108

Respectfully submitted,
By: /s/ John A. Lesko
John A. Lesko (P55397)
JL@DetroitCounsel.com
134 N. Main St.
Plymouth, MI 48170
(734) 652-1338
L. LIN WOOD, P.C.
L. Lin Wood (pro hac vice pending)
lwood@linwoodlaw.com
Nicole Jennings Wade (pro hac vice pending)
nwade@linwoodlaw.com
Jonathan D. Grunberg (pro hac vice pending)
jgrunberg@linwoodlaw.com
G. Taylor Wilson (pro hac vice pending)
twilson@linwoodlaw.com
1180 West Peachtree Street
Suite 2400
Atlanta, Georgia 30309
404-891-1402
404-506-9111 (fax)
Attorneys for Plaintiff
Dated: December 28, 2016

Page 107 of 108

JURY DEMAND
Plaintiff hereby demands a trial by jury on all claims in this action triable by jury.
Respectfully submitted,
By: /s/ John A. Lesko
John A. Lesko (P55397)
JL@DetroitCounsel.com
134 N. Main St.
Plymouth, MI 48170
(734) 652-1338
L. LIN WOOD, P.C.
L. Lin Wood (pro hac vice pending)
lwood@linwoodlaw.com
Nicole Jennings Wade (pro hac vice pending)
nwade@linwoodlaw.com
Jonathan D. Grunberg (pro hac vice pending)
jgrunberg@linwoodlaw.com
G. Taylor Wilson (pro hac vice pending)
twilson@linwoodlaw.com
1180 West Peachtree Street
Suite 2400
Atlanta, Georgia 30309
404-891-1402
404-506-9111 (fax)
Attorneys for Plaintiff
Dated: December 28, 2016

Page 108 of 108

E
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16-017577-CZ
FILED IN MY OFFICE
WAYNE COUNTY CLERK
12/28/2016 2:13:24 PM
CATHY M. GARRETT

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16-017577-CZ
FILED IN MY OFFICE
WAYNE COUNTY CLERK
12/28/2016 2:13:24 PM
CATHY M. GARRETT

@OO2

DISTRICT ATTORNEY'S OFFICE


TWENTIETH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
MARY I KEENAN.DISTRICf ATTORNEY

April

7,

2003

I have carefully
reviewed
the Order of United
States
District
Court Judge Julie
Carnes in the civil
case of Wolf
v. John Ramsey and Patricia
Ramsey.
I agree with the
Court's
conclusion
that
"the weight of the evidence
is more
consistent
with a theory
that an intruder
murdered JonBenet
than it is with a theory
that Mrs. Ramsey did So."
Although
issued in the context
of a civil
case,
the
Court's
ruling
is a thoughtful
and well reasoned decision
based on the evidence
that was presented
by the parties
in
that case.
It should be read in its entirety.
John and patricia
Ramsey have been the focus of an
exhaustive
investigation
with regard to the murder of their
daughter,
JonBenet,
for more than six years.
People
charged with a crime are presumed to be innocent
until
proven guilty
in court.
Since Mr. and Mrs. Ramsey have not
even been charged,
much leas convicted,
they must be
presumed innocent
and must be treated
accordingly.
For several
months,
my office
has been investigating
new and other unpursued leads,
most of which involve
the
possibility
that an intruder
committed
this crime.
We are
proceeding
with the full
cooperation
of the Ramseys,
Detective
Lou Smit,
and the Boulder
Police Department.
We
are all
focused
on the apprehension
and successful
prosecution
of the killer
of JonBenet.

Bouldcr Oftice: JusticeCentcr. ]7776'.Street. Boulder,Colorado80302. (303)441-3700. Fax: (303) 441-4703


LongmontOfficc: ]035 Kimbark .Longmont, Colorado80501 .(303) 441-~700.Fax: (303)682-6711
'i'DDN (303)441-4774. Internet: http:/www.co.boulder.co.us/da
.E-mail: bouJder.da@co.boul.der.co.us

E
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16-017577-CZ
FILED IN MY OFFICE
WAYNE COUNTY CLERK
12/28/2016 2:13:24 PM
CATHY M. GARRETT

9/26/2016

DNAClearsFamilyInJonBenetSlaying-CBSNews
LogIn

CBSNews / CBSEveningNews / CBSThisMorning / 48Hours / 60Minutes / SundayMorning / FaceTheNation / CBSN

Video

US

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By CBSNEWS / CBS/AP / July9,2008,3:27PM

DNA Clears Family In


JonBenet Slaying

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Comment / Share /

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ProsecutorsclearedJonBenetRamsey'sparentsandbrotherWednesdayinthe
1996killingofthe6-year-oldbeautyqueenandtoldthefamilytheywere"deeply
sorry"forputtingtheRamseysunderacloudofsuspicionformorethanadecade.
ThedistrictattorneysaidnewDNAtestspointtoamysteriousoutsider.
"Totheextentthatwemayhavecontributedinanywaytothepublicperception
thatyoumighthavebeeninvolvedinthiscrime,Iamdeeplysorry,"Boulder
CountyDistrictAttorneyMaryLacywroteinalettertothelittlegirl'sfather,John
Ramsey."Noinnocentpersonshouldhavetoenduresuchanextensivetrialinthe
courtofpublicopinion."
Lacysaidnew"touchDNA"testsonskincellsthatwereleftbehindonJonBenet's
longunderwearpointtoan"unexplainedthirdparty"andnotamemberofthe
family.

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ReadBoulderDA'slettertotheRamseyfamily.
JohnRamsey,asoftwareentrepreneurwhonowlivesinMichigan,said
WednesdayheishopefulthekillerwillbefoundbasedontheDNAevidence.
"Ithinkthepeoplethatareinchargeoftheinvestigationarefocusedonthat,and
thatgivesmealotofcomfort,"hetoldKUSA-TVinDenver.Headded:"Certainly
wearegratefulthattheyacknowledgedthatwe,basedonthat,certainlycouldnot
havebeeninvolved."
Foryearsaftertheslaying,tabloidsandcrimeshowswentafterthecouple,and
Lacy'spredecessorasdistrictattorney,AlexHunter,saidin1997thattheparents
wereunderan"umbrellaofsuspicion."Newsreportsalsocastsuspicionon
JonBenet'solderbrother,Burke,whowas9whenhissisterwaskilled.

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/dna-clears-family-in-jonbenet-slaying-09-07-2008/

play VIDEO

Clinton'spreparations

1/4

9/26/2016

DNAClearsFamilyInJonBenetSlaying-CBSNews

"Theonlyevidencethatsuggestedthattheymighthavehadsomethingtodowith
thiscrimewasthemerefactthattheyhappenedtobeinthehomethenighttheir
daughterwasbruatallymurderedfourfloorsbelowtheirbedroom,"saidL.Lin
Wood,anattorneyfortheRamseyfamily,ontheCB SNew sEa r ly Show .
ThesuspicionsoutlivedJonBenet'smother,Patsy,whodiedinJune2006of
ovariancanceratage49inAtlanta,wherethefamilymovedafterJonBenet's
death.
"MyfirstthoughtwasobviouslyIwishPatsyRamseywasherewithustobeableto
atleastsharevindicationofherfamily,"saidWood."Therearemanypeoplein
thiscountry,ifnotaroundtheworld,thatalsooweJohnandPatsyRamseyand
BurkeRamseyanapology."
"Thisisalongtimecoming,"PatsyRamsey'ssister,PaulettePaugh,toldCB S
affiliateW GCL-TVinAtlanta."Wealwaysknewnooneinthefamilyhad
anythingtodowithit.It'snicetoheartheBoulderCountyDistrictAttorney's
officeisfinallycomingforwardwiththisinformation...Ihopethepersonwhodid
thisisstillalivesowecanmeethimfacetoface."
"Patsywasaveryresilientperson,veryfaithfultohergodandsheknewinher
heartwhatthetruthwas,"PaughtoldCB SNew sEa r ly Show anchor Maggie
Rodr igu ez."Shewenttohermakerknowingshehadaclearconscienceandafull
heart."
Earlyintheinvestigation,policefoundmaleDNAinadropofbloodonJonBenet's
underwearanddetermineditwasnotfromanyoneinherfamily.ButLacysaid
investigatorswereunabletosaywhoitcamefromandwhetherthatpersonwas
thekiller.
Then,latelastyear,prosecutorsturnedoverlongunderwearJonBenetwas
wearingtotheBodeTechnologyGroupnearWashington,whichlookedfor"touch
DNA,"orcellsleftbehindwheresomeonehastouchedsomething.
Thelaboratoryfoundpreviouslyundiscoveredgeneticmaterialonthesidesofthe
girl'slongunderwear,whereanattackerwouldhavegraspedtheclothingtopullit
down,authoritiessaid.TheDNAmatchedthegeneticmaterialfoundearlier.

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LacysaidthepresenceofthesamemaleDNAinthreeplacesonthegirl'sclothing
convincedinvestigatorsitbelongedtoJonBenet'skillerandhadnotbeenleft
accidentallybyaninnocentparty.
"ItisthereforethepositionoftheBoulderDistrictAttorney'sOfficethatthis
profilebelongstotheperpetratorofthehomicide,"shesaidinastatement.Inher
lettertotheRamseys,shesaidtheDNAevidence"hasvindicatedyourfamily."
ShesaidinvestigatorshopesomedaytofindaDNAmatchintheever-expanding
nationalDNAdatabank.
"ThiscaseisgoingtobesolvedonedaybyarandomhitontheDNAinthe
database,"familyattorneyL.LinWoodtoldCB SEveningNew sanchor K atie
Cou r ic."Asyouknow,manycasesthathavebeengoingoncoldcasesforyears,in
fact,aresolvedyearslaterbyarandomDNAhit."
Throughaspokeswoman,Lacydeclinedtocommentanyfurther.
THE

JohnRamseyfoundhisdaughter'sstrangledandbludgeonedbodyinthe
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basementofthefamily'shomeinBoulderonDec.26,1996.

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ThefactthatJohnandPatsyRamseywereinthehouseatthetimeofthekilling
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/dna-clears-family-in-jonbenet-slaying-09-07-2008/

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fueledspeculationthatoneofthemwrotethebizarrethree-pagenotefoundatthe
scene.Itwaswrittenonapadthatcamefromthehouseanddemandedaransom
thatwasclosetothebonusJohnRamseyhadreceivedthatyear:$118,000.
"Weshouldhavejuststoodrightupthereinthebeginningandsaid,'Okay,charge
me.Youthinki'mguilty?Chargeme,orclearme,'"Ramseytold48Hou r s
cor r espondentEr inMor iar tyin2006.
Lacyhadpreviouslyexpresseddoubtsthattheparentswereinvolved.In2003,a
federaljudgehandlingadefamationlawsuitinAtlantainvolvingtheRamseyssaid
evidenceinthecasewasmoreconsistentwiththetheorythatanintruderkilled
JonBenet,andLacysaidsheagreed.
LessthantwomonthsafterPatsyRamseydied,thecaseappearedtoblowwide
openwiththearrestinThailandofJohnMarkKarr,asometimeteacherobsessed
withthelittlegirl'sslaying.Karrmadebizarre,detailedconfessionstothekilling,
butauthoritiessaidDNAevidenceshowedhedidnotcommitthecrime.

2008CBSInteractiveInc.AllRightsReserved.Thismaterialmaynotbepublished,broadcast,
rewritten,orredistributed.TheAssociatedPresscontributedtothisreport.

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By CBSNEWS / CBS/AP / July10,2008,11:35AM

"Touch DNA" Cleared


JonBenet's Kin
Comment / Share /

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CrimesceneDNAistypicallyrecoveredfrombloodorsemenstains,buttheDNA
thatexoneratedmembersofJonBenetRamsey'sfamilyinhermurdercamefrom
invisibleskincells.
Thisso-called"touchDNA"isleftbehindwhenpeopletouchthings,becausethey
naturallyshedskincellsastouchthings,andthosecellscontainthegenetic
material.
Inthiscase,thenewDNAwasrecoveredbyguessingwhereJonBenet'skiller
mighthavehandledthelongjohnsshewaswearing.
"It'snotastain,youcan'tseeit,"saidAngelaWilliamson,directorofforensic
caseworkatBodeTechnologyGroupinLorton,Virginia.That'sthecompanythat
recoveredthenewDNAmaterial.SheledtheworkonJonBenet'stouchDNA.
TofindsuchDNA,"youhavetohaveagoodideaofwheresomeonehasbeen
touched,orinthiscase,whereyouthinkthesuspectwouldhavetouched"
JonBenet'sclothing,shesaid,or,sheexplainedtoco-anchorHar r ySm ithon
TheEa r ly Show Thursday,"ifthevictimissurviving,to(havethem)tellyou
wheretheyweregrabbed,wheretheywerehelddownduringtheassault."
Investigatorssuggestedthatsomebodypullingdownherpantswouldhave
touchedthewaistbandandthesidesofthelongjohns,Williamsonsaid.SoBode
scientistsscrapedthesurfaceofthoseareaswithasharpbladetoseeiftheycould
findDNA.

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therewasenoughtobeprocessedintheroutinewayDNAisanalyzed,Williamson
said.(Inothercases,so-called"lowcopynumberDNA"hastobeprocessedina
differentway).

DemonstratorsDemandMorePolice
ShootingVideo

DNAfromtwositesonthelongjohnsmatchedgeneticmaterialfromanunknown
malethathadpreviouslybeenrecoveredfrombloodinJonBenet'sunderpants.
ThematchingDNAfromthreeplacesontwoarticlesofJonBenet'sclothing
convincedthedistrictattorneythatitbelongedtothekiller,andhadn'tbeenleft
accidentallybyathirdparty.

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WilliamsonsaidBodehasdonethousandsoftouchDNArecoveriesoveratleast
threeyears.
JohnRamseyfoundhisdaughter'sbodyinthebasementofthefamily'shomein
Boulder,Colorado,onDec.26,1996.Achildbeautyqueen,shewas6andhad
beenstrangled.
2008CBSInteractiveInc.AllRightsReserved.Thismaterialmaynotbepublished,broadcast,
rewritten,orredistributed.TheAssociatedPresscontributedtothisreport.

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16-017577-CZ
FILED IN MY OFFICE
WAYNE COUNTY CLERK
12/28/2016 2:13:24 PM
CATHY M. GARRETT

E
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I
B
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16-017577-CZ
FILED IN MY OFFICE
WAYNE COUNTY CLERK
12/28/2016 2:13:24 PM
CATHY M. GARRETT

E
X
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I
B
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16-017577-CZ
FILED IN MY OFFICE
WAYNE COUNTY CLERK
12/28/2016 2:13:24 PM
CATHY M. GARRETT

E
X
H
I
B
I
T

16-017577-CZ
FILED IN MY OFFICE
WAYNE COUNTY CLERK
12/28/2016 2:13:24 PM
CATHY M. GARRETT

E
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16-017577-CZ
FILED IN MY OFFICE
WAYNE COUNTY CLERK
12/28/2016 2:13:24 PM
CATHY M. GARRETT

Transcription of The Case of: JonBent Ramsey


EPISODE ONE
September 18, 2016
WARNING: This program is for mature audiences only and contains graphic images that may be
disturbing to some viewers and young audiences. It also contains recreations. Viewer discretion
is advised.
(EXCERPTS FROM HOME VIDEO FOOTAGE)
PATSY RAMSEY (PATSY): Hello, Im Patsy Ramsey. Daddys not here, but this is
JonBent, shes four. Burke is seven, and wed like to welcome you to our home and wish you a
very merry Christmas! Wave, JonBent.
(END OF FOOTAGE)
OPERATOR: Hello 9-1-1 Emergency.
PATSY: Police. We have a kidnapping. Hurry, please.
OPERATOR: Explain to me whats going on, okay?
PATSY: There . . . We have a . . .Theres a note left and our daughters gone.
OPERATOR: A note left and your daughter is gone?
PATSY: Yes.
JIM CLEMENTE (CLEMENTE): On December 26, 1996 at 5:52 am, six-year-old JonBent
Ramsey was reported kidnapped by her mother. Later that day, she was found dead in her home.
UNKNOWN NEWSCASTER: In Boulder, Colorado, the parents of six-year-old JonBent
Ramsey say there is a child killer on the loose.
CLEMENTE: Soon pictures of this little girl became public, igniting a media frenzy and the eyes
of the world focused on this shocking case.
FORMER DISTRICT ATTORNEY ALEXANDER HUNTER (DA HUNTER): The list of
suspects narrows. Soon there will be no one on the list but you.
CLEMENTE: But the investigation stalled, and they never found the killer.
PATSY: Keep your babies close to you. Theres someone out there.

Page 1 of 84

CLEMENTE: Twenty years later, this homicide remains unsolved. Im Jim Clemente, Im a
retired FBI profiler. Im an expert in the area of child sex crimes, child abductions, and child
homicides.
LAURA RICHARDS (RICHARDS): My names Laura Richards. Im a criminal behavioral
analyst and Ive been trained by new Scotland Yard and the FBI.
CLEMENTE: I joined the FBIs Behavioral Analysis Unit in 1998 and we did a cold case review
of the JonBent Ramsey homicide. Originally it looked like a traditional kidnapping because
there was a ransom demand. We found out: it clearly was not a kidnapping case. Within eight
hours, the daughter was found in the house.
RICHARDS: My lens is firmly fixed. Im a victim advocate. I want to get to the truth on behalf
of JonBent. Its something thats always stayed with me. Just wondering, you know, was this a
predatory stalker? Was this an intruder? Was this a domestic violence or child abuse situation?
CLEMENTE: Our goal is to finally get to the truth and tell the world what actually happened to
JonBent Ramsey.
PATSY: Oh my God, please, hurry hurry hurry.
OPERATOR: Patsy? Patsy? Patsy?
CLEMENTE: Were really fortunate to have this space where we can actually build our war
room and work.
RICHARDS: So this is really our think room, you know being able to go through the hypothesis,
go through all the information and the facts, and I think that part is going to be invaluable.
CLEMENTE: What we need to do is a complete re-investigation. Starting right from scratch
with the 911 call, the crime scene
RICHARDS: --ransom note, and the sequence of events. You know, its really important that we
get that timeline absolutely clear in our own heads.
CLEMENTE: We hope to get the truth out about how she died.
RICHARDS: And thats the biggest question mark around this case.
CLEMENTE: So lets talk about what we know about the Ramseys: John, Patsy, JonBent, and
Burke. John Ramsey is in his second marriage, he had three kids from his first marriage.
RICHARDS: So Beth, John Andrew, Melinda.
CLEMENTE: Beth was killed in a car accident.

Page 2 of 84

RICHARDS: So that was kind of the package that John came with. Patsy was actually fourteen
years younger than him, so when they met they started courting each other. She was twenty-one,
twenty-two.
CLEMENTE: She had been Ms. West Virginia.
RICHARDS: Right.
CLEMENTE: And so for him she was quite a trophy wife.
RICHARDS: She also graduated with a degree in journalism, so she was pretty smart herself at
the University of West Virginia.
CLEMENTE: Didnt she work for John at one point?
RICHARDS: She did. John had a rising career in the computer industry. Access Graphic had a
billion dollar turnover that very year that JonBent was killed, so dont forget the lifestyle. They
had two planes at one point and a thirty foot yacht. To everybody else they almost had the
perfect family exterior.
CLEMENTE: This crime happened almost twenty years ago. JonBent was just six-years-old,
she would be twenty-six now. A grown woman. Maybe she would have her own family. And
her brother Burke was almost ten-years-old at the time. Hes 29 now, a grown man.
RICHARDS: And then, of course, after JonBents death, tragedy strikes again when Patsy is
diagnosed with Grade 4 ovarian cancer, and Patsy dies in 2006. You know, we really do need to
understand them as people, and speak to as many people who can give us an understanding of
who they were and the dynamics between them.
CLEMENTE: The most important thing is to go where the evidence takes us. The great thing is
the people that weve been able to assemble. Many of us were involved in the initial
investigation and the investigation over the last twenty years. Dr. Henry Lee, world-renown
criminalist. He is so good at drilling down into the little details and scientific fact and
reconstructing crimes.
RICHARDS: Jim Fitzgerald, who is a profiler and hes a forensic linguist. He was a former
police officer too.
CLEMENTE: James Kolar was actually hired by the District Attorneys office. He
reinvestigated the entire case. Stan Burke is somebody who actually teaches Statement Analysis
at the FBI Academy.
RICHARDS: Then theres Dr. Werner Spitz.
CLEMENTE: He has an amazing background in forensic pathology.
Page 3 of 84

RICHARDS: And of course with this case we really need to understand the autopsy report and
what he can tell us about it. Twenty years on, putting together this elite and renown team, and
actually bringing these minds into one room, this has never been done before. And when you
join up everybodys experience accumulatively, its over 250 years of experience working in law
enforcement.
DR. HENRY LEE (LEE): This case somehow touched my heart,. I wish some way can have a
conclusion. Not really for the public. For JonBent Ramsey.
JIM FITZGERALD (FITZGERALD): This is the one case that stuck in my craw. We have so
much evidence, yet we just quite havent put it together.
CLEMENTE: What wed like to do is start up with the actual first thing that started the
investigation, that is the 9-1-1 call. It was 5:52 am. Patsy calls the police.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: 911 emergency.
PATSY: Hi we need . . . police. 755 15th Street.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Whats going on there, maam?
PATSY: We have a kidnapping. Hurry, please.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Explain to me whats going on, okay.
PATSY: There . . . We have a . . . Theres a note left and our daughters gone.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: A note was left and your daughter is gone?
PATSY: Yes.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: How old is your daughter?
PATSY: Shes six-years-old. Shes blonde. Six-years-old.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: How long ago was this?
PATSY: I dont know, I just found the note, and my daughters gone.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Does it say who took her?
PATSY: What?
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Does it say who took her?
PATSY: I dont know, theres theres a ransom note here.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Its a ransom note?
Page 4 of 84

PATSY: It says S.B.T.C. Victory. Please.


9-1-1 OPERATOR: Okay. Whats your name? Are you Pat
PATSY: Patsy Ramsey, Im the mother. Oh my God! Please.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Okay, Im sending an officer over, okay. Do you know how long shes been
gone?
PATSY: No I dont! Please, we just got up and shes not here. Oh my God, please.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Okay. Calm
PATSY: Please send somebody.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: I am, honey.
PATSY: Please.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Take a deep breath for me okay.
PATSY: Please hurry hurry hurry!
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Patsy? Patsy?
CLEMENTE: Theres six seconds of something thats inaudible.
FITZGERALD: Patsy thought the phone call was ended, the last thing she ever thought was
somebody was still listening to her.
(COMMERCIALS)
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Patsy? Patsy? Patsy? Patsy?
RICHARDS: Because the 9-1-1 call plays such a significant part in this case, Jim Fitzgerald is
exactly the right person to be able to provide analysis.
FITZGERALD: There are, you know, many factors, that are very interesting from a forensic
linguistic perspective. The fifth word used is the plural pronoun we.
PATSY: We have a kidnapping.
FITZGERALD: We have a kidnapping. What does that even mean? Wheres the ownership?
PATSY: Shes blonde. Six-years-old.
CLEMENTE: She doesnt mention her daughters name, she says my daughter, my six-year-oldblonde.
Page 5 of 84

RICHARDS: Im the mother


CLEMENTE: Im the mother.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Are you Pat
PATSY: Patsy Ramsey, Im the mother.
CLEMENTE: These are behavioral things that, I think, are extremely unusual.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Take a deep breath for me, okay?
PATSY: Please hurry hurry hurry!
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Patsy? Patsy?
STANLEY BURKE (STANLEY): The hanging up, if you will when you make that phone
call, someone close to you has disappeared, youre sending out that phone call for help. Ive
looked at a lot of 9-1-1 calls over the years. Theyll hold on until the police get there, thats your
lifeline, that help indicates hope. The moment you hang up that phone, you end the hope. And
for that phone to be hung up, youve got to ask yourself why.
FITZGERALD: Right. And if theyre legitimately hoping for their child to be taken care of,
rescued, saved, whatever. If there is something else going on then you have a different set of
parameters involved.
CLEMENTE: And its interesting that Patsy thought she had hung up the call and disconnected it
while the dispatcher was actually calling out her name because she wanted to talk to her more,
and keep her on the phone until the police arrived.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Patsy? Patsy?
CLEMENTE: But she did not hang up the phone.
LEE: In the background, we heard some voices.
CLEMENTE: Some more voices. Who do you hear? In the 90s they tried to do enhancements
of that tape.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: 9-1-1 emergency.
CLEMENTE: Theres been a lot of controversy about what theyve actually uncovered on the
tape. And most of the general public has never heard the enhanced version. We want to use
todays technology to actually nail down what exactly was said and by whom in those final
moments of that tape.
PATSY: Oh my God!
Page 6 of 84

9-1-1 OPERATOR: Patsy?


AUDIO ENGINEER: Its really distant.
RICHARDS: Its hard to make it out.
CLEMENTE: Yeahwhat can you do to bring that up?
AUDIO ENGINEER: We could try a little noise reduction on that.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Patsy? Patsy?
(SCREEN SHOWS INAUDIBLE)
CLEMENTE: Some real
AUDIO ENGINEER: Its really distant. Yeah.
RICHARDS: Its hard to make it out.
CLEMENTE: Lets try that again.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Patsy? Patsy?
CLEMENTE: Can you slow it down?
AUDIO ENGINEER: So this is the noise reduced.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Patsy?
CLEMENTE: Oh, wow. I think I hear a man say, Were not speaking
RICHARDS: speaking to you
CLEMENTE: to you.
(SCREEN FLASHES WERE NOT SPEAKING TO YOU)
CLEMENTE: I think thats John Ramseys voice.
JOHN RAMSEY (JOHN): JonBent and I had a very close relationship, I will miss her dearly
for the rest of my life.
CLEMENTE: We are not speaking to you.
(SCREEN FLASHES WERE NOT SPEAKING TO YOU)
RICHARDS: Well the tone is a parent talking to a child.
Page 7 of 84

CLEMENTE: Yeah. Ive never heard that before. Okay, so why dont you play it from there?
(AUDIO PLAYBACK RECORDING)
RICHARDS: Theres another voice
CLEMENTE: Wow, yeah.
RICHARDS: a female voice.
CLEMENTE: Can you blow that up and slow it down a little bit? Just a little bit.
(AUDIO PLAYBACK RECORDING)
CLEMENTE: I dont know.
RICHARDS: It sounds like Patsys voice to me.
PATSY: I did not kill JonBent. I love that child.
(AUDIO PLAYBACK RECORDING)
CLEMENTE: Just, can you stretch it out a little bit more?
(AUDIO PLAYBACK RECORDING)
RICHARDS: Im getting Oh, something, Jesus, and then it repeats it.
CLEMENTE: I hear either Holy Jesus, or Help me, Jesus.
AUDIO ENGINEER: What I heard is What did you do? What did you do? Thats what it
sounds like to the speakers. I didnt listen on the headphones.
CLEMENTE: You wanna?
AUDIO ENGINEER: Yeah, yeah. Sure.
(AUDIO PLAYBACK RECORDING)
AUDIO ENGINEER: I do hear the Jesus the, the second time. Lets put that through this
noise reduction.
CLEMENTE: Okay, great.
AUDIO ENGINEER: Im showing it, just the noise in between the speech.
CLEMENTE: Got it.
AUDIO ENGINEER: So hopefully it just takes that out and leaves the speech. Here it comes
Page 8 of 84

CLEMENTE: You could be right.


(AUDIO PLAYBACK RECORDING)
CLEMENTE: Its the same number of syllables but when you pointed that out, I think I hear the
difference between the two sentences.
(SCREEN FLASHES WHAT DID YOU DO? HELP ME, JESUS.)
CLEMENTE: The first part is a little blurry but certainly, What did you do? is a very real
probability here. Okay, so, lets go on to the next part.
(AUDIO PLAYBACK REORDING)
CLEMENTE: Stop there. Can you spread that out?
(AUDIO PLAYBACK RECORDING)
CLEMENTE: Oh, my god! What did you find?
RICHARDS: What did you find?
(SCREEN FLASHES WHAT DID YOU FIND? WHAT DID YOU FIND?)
CLEMENTE: Right. What did you find. It sounds like a smaller voice thoughit doesnt
sound like a blooming adult.
RICHARDS: Right.
UNKNOWN VOICE: What did you find? What do you find?
RICHARDS: There were only four people in that house.
CLEMENTE: Right, one of them was dead.
RICHARDS: I believe weve heard John Ramseys voice.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Patsy?
UNIDENTIFIED MALE VOICE: Were not speaking to you.
(SCREEN FLASHES WERE NOT SPEAKING TO YOU)
RICHARDS: Weve heard Patsys voice
UNIDENTIFIED VOICE: What did you do? Help me Jesus.
(SCREEN FLASHES WHAT DID YOU DO? HELP ME, JESUS.)
Page 9 of 84

RICHARDS: So we know the only other person in the address at the time is Burke.
CLEMENTE: Right.
UNIDENTIFIED VOICE: What did you find?
(SCREEN FLASHES WHAT DID YOU FIND?)
RICHARDS: This is hugely significant.
CLEMENTE: Oh, my god.
RICHARDS: I mean this changes things because their account is that Burke was asleep at the
time.
CLEMENTE: They made a point of saying he was asleep and he had nothing to do with it and
that they never even asked him whether he heard anything.
9-1-1 OPERATER: Patsy? Patsy?
UNIDENTIFIED VOICES: Were not speaking to you. What did you do? Help me, Jesus.
What did you find?
CLEMENTE: Not that weve heard this on the tape, its really important that we speak to the 91-1 operator who received the call, Kim Archuletta. I really hope that we can talk to her to get
her insights about any kind of behavior that she picked up that the tape might not have captured.
How you doing, Kim? This is Jim Clemente. We would love to actually sit down and interview
you, and Im sure that you have a lot of things to say about what happened that day but also what
happened subsequently.
KIM ARCHULETTA (ARCHULETTA): Yeah, um, Ive always been under a gag order so
Ive never really talked to anybody. Um, so my side of the story has never really been heard.
(COMMERCIALS)
ARCHULETTA: Hi.
CLEMENTE: How you doing?
ARCHULETTA: Laura?
RICHARDS: Laura Richards, yeah, nice to meet you.
ARCHULETTA: Laura, nice to meet you.
CLEMENTE: Shes Laura and Im Jim Clemente.

Page 10 of 84

ARCHULETTA: Jim Clemente, nice to meet you.


CLEMENTE: So nice to meet you.
ARCHULETTA: Kimberly Achuleta. This is the first time that anyones asked for my opinion.
RICHARDS: In 20 years.
ARCHULETTA: In 20 years.
RICHARDS: So I want to play first of all in full
ARCHULETTA: Okay.
RICHARDS: so that we can hear, hear it
(EXCERPTS FROM AUDIO TAPE)
ARCHULETTA: 9-1-1 emergency.
PATSY: (UNINTELLIGIBLE) We have a kidnapping. Hurry please.
ARCHULETTA: Explain to me whats going on, okay?
PATSY: Therewe have a; theres a note left and our daughters gone.
ARCHULETTA: A note was left and your daughters gone?
PATSY: Yes.
ARCHULETTA: Does it say who took her?
PATSY: What?
ARCHULETTA: Does it say who took her?
PATSY: I dont know, itstheres a, theres a ransom note here.
ARCHULETTA: Its a ransom note? Okay, whats your name? Are you Pat
PATSY: Patsy Ramsey, Im the mother. Oh, my god! Please. Hurry, hurry, hurry.
ARCHULETTA: Patsy? Patsy? Patsy? Patsy?
(END OF EXCERPTS)
RICHARDS: Whats your initial reaction to that, Kim?

Page 11 of 84

ARCHULETTA: I just remember having that sunken feeling like something wasnt right. The
problem was if you hear the frantic in her voice as shes speaking to me where she couldnt even
answer my questions, it immediately stopped.
(EXCERPTS FROM AUDIO TAPE)
ARCHULETTA: Whats your name? Are you Pat
PATSY: Patsy Ramsey, Im the mother. Oh, my god! Please. Hurry, hurry, hurry.
ARCHULETTA: Patsy? Patsy? Patsy? Patsy?
(END OF EXCERPTS)
RICHARDS: Was there a shift in kind of tone from sort of being very hysterical to suddenly
ARCHULETTA: Right, right.
RICHARDS: something quite different.
ARCHULETTA: Right. What bothered me immensely, it sounded like she said Okay, weve
called the police, now what? And that disturbed me. So I remained on the phone trying to hear
what was being saidsounded like there were two voices in the room, maybe three different
ones. I had a bad feeling about this. To me it seemed rehearsed. Mm-hmm.
CLEMENTE: And thats your distinct memory; and has that stayed with you
ARCHULETTA: Always.
CLEMENTE: the entire 20 years?
ARCHULETTA: Yes. Thats never changed. I know they did an enhancement, right?
CLEMENTE: Yeah. We did enhance the end of it.
RICHARDS: And its interesting cause there are some bits that we cant quite make out but
there are some very clear bits that we can.
CLEMENTE: Yeah, when we cleaned it up, we hear a man say Were not speaking to you, and
hes very stern, and then, I think we hear Patsy saying something like what did you do? Help
me Jesus, or Help me Jesus. Help me Jesus. And then Burke I think say What did you find?
ARCHULETTA: I wanted that case solved. I wanted someone to come talk to me, I wanted
someone to get my testimony. When they did the grand jury nobody talked to me.
CLEMENTE: Really? You werent, you didnt testify in the grand jury?

Page 12 of 84

ARCHULETTA: No. I had an investigator come to my house, told me theres a gag order. Do
not talk about this until we go to court. And I never was talked to again. And it never went to
court.
RICHARDS: What did you make of that? I mean
ARCHULETTA: Thats one of the reasons why I even stayed on until they disconnect because
there were things being said that somebody needed to know.
RICHARDS: Right.
ARCHULETTA: It was never addressed. I think it really would have turned the case around.
RICHARDS: We spoke to Kim Archuletta who was the 9-1-1 dispatcher at the time and she said
that, the thing that stayed with her was the, as Patsy thought she had disconnected and she was
typing up the call, she could hear a gear shift, an instant gear shift which was in direct contrast to
the emotion of the call and she basically said that what she heard Patsy say was Okay, weve
called the police, now what?
CLEMENTE: And then she said it went on, there was a conversation she could hear other voices
but she couldnt necessarily make that out. However, when we got the tape enhanced what we
heard was a little different.
RICHARDS: You had John saying Were not talking to you, very clipped. And then it could
have been, What did you do? and Help me, Jesus, from Patsy. And then the young boys
voice saying Well, what did you find? And we must remember that they did say in their
statements that Burke was asleep. Why say hes asleep when hes clearly not. I believe we heard
his voice on the 9-1-1.
CLEMENTE: And that absolutely changes the entire focus of this investigation and we should
keep that in mind as we evaluate the rest of this evidence. So lets talk ransom note. Although the
9-1-1 call actually initiated this investigation, when the police arrived the first piece of physical
evidence was that ransom note or letter because of the length of this particular note.
FITZGERALD: In the 380 some words in this ransom note, theres a treasure trove of
information thats unprecedented in the annals of criminal justice, history, as far as I know that
both a ransom note requesting money and the body is left behind at the scene.
RICHARDS: Mr. Ramsey, listen carefully. Were a group of individuals that represent a small
foreign faction. We respect your business but not the country that it serves. At this time we have
your daughter in our possession. She is safe and unharmed and if you want her to see 1997, you
must follow our instructions to the letter.
CLEMENTE: You will draw $118,000 from your account. $100,00 will be in hundred dollar
bills and the remaining $18,000 in 20 dollar bills. Make sure you bring an adequate size attache
Page 13 of 84

to the bank. When you get home youll put the money in a brown paper bag. I will call you
between eight and ten a.m. tomorrow to instruct you on delivery. The delivery will be exhausting
so I advise you to be rested. If we monitor you getting the money early we might call you early
to arrange an earlier delivery of the money and hence, an earlier pick up of your daughter.
FITZGERALD: Any deviation of my instructions will result in the immediate execution of your
daughter. Youll also be denied her remains for proper burial. Two gentleman watching over
your daughter do not particularly like you so I advise you not to provoke them. Speaking to
anyone about your situation such as the police, FBI, etc will result in your daughter being
beheaded. If we catch you talking to a stray dog she dies. If you alert bank authorities, she dies.
If the money is in any way marked or tampered with, she dies. Youll be scanned for electronic
devices and if any are found she dies.
STANLEY: You can try to deceive us but be warned we are familiar with law enforcement
countermeasures and tactics. You stand a 99 percent chance of killing your daughter if you try to
outsmart us. Follow our instructions and you stand a one hundred percent chance of getting her
back. You and your family are under constant scrutiny as well as the authorities. Dont try to
grow a brain, John; you are not the only fat cat around so dont think that killing will be difficult.
Dont underestimate us, John. Use that good southern common sense of yours. It is up to you
now, John. Victory. S.B.T.C.
CLEMENTE: I think this is one of the most important pieces of forensic evidence in this entire
investigation. Stan, what do you think about the beginning of the letter?
STANLEY: I find it fascinating because first, it addresses, you know, it, the addressee, Mr.
Ramsey. But then the next two words are Listen carefully. And if we, we look at the letter
here, this jumps out at me simply because, number one, its a letter. What are we listening to?
RICHARDS: Right.
CLEMENTE: So it should say read carefully.
STANLEY: And I wouldnt even expect to read carefully.
CLEMENTE: Right.
STANLEY: You have a missing child, youre gonna read this carefully. Thats a given.
CLEMENTE: There seems to be multiple motives embodied in this document so you first start
out with this foreign factionthats always stuck out in my mind.
FITZGERALD: And what is a faction? Its just made up. So, what do you make of the amount
and these really specific instructions about what size the bills should be?

Page 14 of 84

STANLEY: The amount 118 is very close to the bonus Mr. John Ramsey would have received or
did receive that year.
CLEMENTE: Right.
STANLEY: Thats a unique number The fact that its so specific makes it stand out.
RICHARDS: Hes a millionaire.
CLEMENTE: Yeah.
RICHARDS: I mean if youre gonna do this, you go large. I mean why would you go for $118
when you can go for a million?
STANLEY: Right.
FITZGERALD: When the Boulder investigators came to me and showed me this letter, I noticed
some quotes in here that I said, Well, I recognize them from somewhere. And it was sort of
early in the internet days and it wasnt as easy to search things back then. But I rented a few
movies that I thought I recognized these lines from and the first of em comes from these four
sentences Im about to read. So if you follow along with here, on the second page we have some
borrowed from a cinematic version of a kidnapping of a young girl, the 1972 movie Dirty
Harry.
CLEMENTE: One of the things that we know from the actual crime scene video, was that the
house was filled with movie posters.
FITZGERALD: If we catch you talking to a stray dog, she dies. In the movie, instead of it
actually being a dog, a dog breed is actually mentioned. If you alert bank authorities, she dies,
she dies, she dies. Well, were not done. Last page, Dont try to grow a brain, John. A certain
character who was an LAPD police officer who was on a runaway bus, was talking to a mad
bomber on a cell phone. The movie was Speed.
STANLEY: This here, If you alert bank authorities, she dies. You told us early on follow your
instructions or shell be beheaded, executed, beheaded, so why do you have to keep telling us
over and over again? 76% of this is extraneous.
CLEMENTE: Really?
RICHARDS: 76%?
STANLEY: Its not necessary. To me, theyre trying to sell this now. Its a sales job.
CLEMENTE: This whole thing couldve been done in four lines. We have your daughter.
Withdraw $118,000; put the money in a paper bag. I will call you between 8 and 10 AM. Dont,
call the FBI or the police, or shell die, S.B.T.C.
Page 15 of 84

FITZGERALD: What you just said from historical perspective, is essentially what we have in
the three ransom notes going back to Lindbergh, Weinberger and Whiles and one other
mitigating factor in these other three kidnappings, the person was actually missing, wasnt dead
in the house somewhere. We just have so much in the way of variation between these particular
historical kidnappings and this letter.
CLEMENTE: Why dont we start actually building a linguistic profile? What were trying to do
is figure out who wrote this whole entire letter.
FITZGERALD: Writing ability I would say is high. We have an advanced writing style
expressed throughout this letter. The only mistakes are found in the first paragraph. We had the
concept of foreign faction up here in the second sentence. Well, right below it we have the word
business and if youll notice its misspelled. Theres an extra s in here. Perhaps someone
who is not a native English speaker would in fact insert that extra s. So what I noticed early on
is that this was a purposeful mistake. This was done to tie in somehow to the concept that this
person is a foreigner and perhaps does not speak English as their native tongue.
CLEMENTE: Particularly, enforcement, countermeasures, theyre all spelled properly.
FITZGERALD: What it tells me is theres an element of disguise involved. These misspellings,
they were inserted for a reason to make it look like its somebody other than who it really was.
Language one, and I would clearly say its English.
CLEMENTE: So theyre native English speakers.
FITZGERALD: Yes. The first language they learned in life was English. I have no doubt about
that. Age is not always easy to determine, but I would certainly say this persons an, an adult. No
indication of sort of teenage slang, vernacular, so I would say we have someone, an adult, 30 or
older. The last one and part of a linguistic profile is gender and this can be one of trickiest ones
to determine. There are at least six examples of what I would call maternalistic language. The
very first sentence is already circled. Can you picture a mother telling their young child Listen
carefully, when you get home not when you get back to your house, not when you get to your
residence, when you get home. Do not particularly like you, would a guy necessarily care if
someone likes them or not in this context? I find in the thousands of cases I have worked over
the years, when someone puts a statement in like that, it turns out to be a female.
(COMMERCIALS)
STANLEY: The less information you give in a ransom letter or note, the less of a chance you
have of being caught. You dont want to leave clues.
RICHARDS: Right.
STANLEY: This does just the opposite.
Page 16 of 84

RICHARDS: Right and this is high risk behavior, leaving such a long letter and the time it takes
to write something like this, which
CLEMENTE: Yeah and that, the fact that it was written in the house, not before the fact in
preparation for a kidnapping, which you would think they would do, right?
STANLEY: Right, thats, thatsyoure riexactly right, CLEMENTE.
DR. HENRY LEE (LEE): The paper, the investigator found a pad. Also found two practice
note.
CLEMENTE: That pad was actually Patsys pad, right, from her little writing desk in the
hallway.
FITZGERALD: Thats my understanding, yes.
CLEMENTE: And the pen was actually found underneath
FITZGERALD: The phone.
CLEMENTE: the phone. Whoever wrote this, managed to commit a murder, find the pad, find
the pen, practiced a couple times because they didnt want to show bad penmanship or
something, write it and then put the pad and pen back to where they normally are kept.
FITZGERALD: It makes no sense at all to do that, unless its something other than what the note
is making it appear to be.
RICHARDS: You know to go through all of this trouble and time, writing this note, so, Id like
us all just to write out the letter and Im gonna put it to time.
STAN: Im ready.
RICHARDS: Okay, lets begin. Its not about speed but it is about exactly what they have
written in the note. A hand cramp. Were doing it a lot quicker and without dotting all the Is
which noticeably, all the Is are dotted in this.
STAN: Wow, lots of uh
RICHARDS: And that takes more time because youre being exact.
FITZGERALD: I didnt understand your instructions and I used all uppercase so I had no Is
to dot.
RICHARDS: All right, Im done.
STANLEY: (INAUDIBLE).
Page 17 of 84

CLEMENTE: (Exhales), finally.


RICHARDS: 21 minutes.
CLEMENTE: Just mechanically, it took 21 and a half minutes just to write this thing. If it were
original text, it wouldve taken so much longer cause somebody is thinking of what to write. But
even if they did it this fast, thats 21 and a half minutes that they couldve been caught.
STANLEY: Mm-hmm.
CLEMENTE: 21 and a half minutes that they stayed in the house longer than they needed to.
FITZGERALD: Assuming this is done by an outside person who broke into the house for the
purposes of a kidnapping.
CLEMENTE: I think we can all agree, this letter, is clearly staged. What we have to decide
through our investigation, is whether it was staged by somebody in the family or somebody who
came into this home. Because this case is an open investigation on the books, we have to be the
investigators and dig up what we can find. Ron.
RON WALKER (WALKER): Hi Jim, good to see you.
CLEMENTE: Thanks for coming out. Ron Walker was the only FBI agent to visit the crime
scene on that day. Its incredibly important for us to talk to him and get his insight. I was just
telling RICHARDS that unlike any of the other people who, who were first responders to the
scene, you went as a behavioral analyst.
WALKER: Right.
CLEMENTE: You had already had that training, years of experience, you knew what to look for.
WALKER: Once it became obvious that it was a (STAMMERS) murder case rather than a
kidnapping, then, the FBI really didnt have primary jurisdiction in the case.
RICHARDS: You know looking back, only one homicide a year was kind of what they were
dealing with.
WALKER: Right.
RICHARDS: So they didnt have the knowledge and your, expertize.
CLEMENTE: What wed like to do is build a timeline of what happened over that day. But the
first day is the most critical.
RICHARDS: Youre gonna have the answers to some of the gaps that weve got.

Page 18 of 84

WALKER: Well, at some point uh, that morning, uh, the Boulder police department notified the
FBI about a kidnapping for ransom of a child. Thats the only information that they conveyed to
me at that point. 5:52, the 911 call was made, next are the calls to the Ramsey friends, the
Fernies and the Whites. Next one that I have is actually the arrival of Officer French and
sometime after 6 o clock, but an unknown time, is uh, the Ramsey friends arrive. And then the
next thing and I dont have a time associated with this is the crime scene investigators and
victims advocates arrive. 8:10 is the time that uh, Arndt arrived at the house.
RICHARDS: Yeah.
WALKER: Uh, I got contacted around between 8:15, 8:30. I drove to the uh, to the FBI office in
Denver to pick up the equipment that I thought I would need. 11 oclock I arrived at the Boulder
police department. 11:45 is the first time I have a discussion with uh, Sergeant Larry Mason. We
discussed all the information that we had up to that point. Whats going on at the house? Whats
going on with the police department? Whos doing what?
CLEMENTE: Once you got in there, howd it progress from there?
WALKER: Well, uh, once I got in to the command post, I got a look at the ransom note. You
know, first thing that caught my eye about the note itself was the length of the note, highly,
highly unusual in uh, the realm of kidnappings.
RICHARDS: Right.
CLEMENTE: Yeah.
WALKER: A couple of things jump out at you right away at least from my perspective. Number
one is uh, the whole idea of a small foreign faction. If youre gonna kidnap somebody, what
youre gonna want to do is convey uh, an image of authority and power.
CLEMENTE: Right.
WALKER: You know were a large group of terrorists who uh, have your daughter and were
gonna kill her unless you meet our demands.
CLEMENTE: Right.
WALKER: Not a small foreign faction.
RICHARDS: Right.
CLEMENTE: And it, it competes against itself.
WALKER: It does.
CLEMENTE: In general, abductions of children for a ransom is an extremely rare event.
Page 19 of 84

WALKER: Right and much more prominent are the parental kidnappings
CLEMENTE: Correct.
WALKER: of a non-custodial parent or by a non-custodial parent. So it was my belief at this
juncture that as I said, the, the uh, the ransom note was a red herring and that uh, it was staging.
So its even more important at that point for the detectives to maintain visual contact with the
family. I wasnt so much concerned about Patsy because Patsy was in the solarium and she was
surrounded by the family friends and she was crying. She wasnt gonna go anywhere and at this
point uh, Larry Mason and I start talking about well, what are we gonna do to try to make sure
the detectives there maintain visual contact with the family?
CLEMENTE: You want to patrol the crime scene.
WALKER: Well, more importantly, I want to control the movements of the people in that crime
scene. About noon, Linda Arndt calls in to Mason and tells him that uh, Ramsey has been out of
pocket for about an hour and a half.
RICHARDS: First when he reappears, his demeanor has changed.
CLEMENTE: Hes agitated.
RICHARDS: Hes agitated.
WALKER: The Boulder Police were still trying to get the detectives to come in, kind of an
overwhelming scene or sense of confusion.
RICHARDS: The fact that was reported as a kidnapping, those officers that were available were
actually focusing their energy and their time and their resources outside of the house.
WALKER: I thought that Linda Arndt should grab John Ramsey and tell John, Were going to
search the house from top to bottom and from my perspective that was nothing but kindergarten
make-work. Uh, I wanted him to be busy
RICHARDS: Right.
WALKER: but I wanted him to be busy in Linda Arndts presence.
CLEMENTE: In the presence of her.
RICHARDS: Right.
WALKER: In the presence of the office.
CLEMENTE: Got it.

Page 20 of 84

WALKER: That way were not gonna run into the situation where for an hour and a half he goes
missing again.
RICHARDS: Right.
WALKER: But what I learned later on from Linda is that when she tells John, Were going to
search the house top and bottom and were gonna start at the top. Ramsey is there with Fleet
White. He grabs Fleet by the arm and makes a b-line for the basement door. John Ramsey opens
the door, says something about finding his daughter and then turns the light on. Virtually every
staged murder case that I have seen the perpetrator manipulates the arrival of friends or other
family memebers who are then put in the situation where they actually discover the body
RICHARDS: Right.
WALKER: or they are with the perpetrator as the body is discovered.
CLEMENTE: They bring somebody along. They discover the body, but with a witness who can
testify to their shock an awe and horror at what they find.
WALKER: So John Ramsey brings the body upstairs. He puts her down right here.
CLEMENTE: He puts her down on the ground, but right here is a living room couch, a coffee
table, chairs. Why would he put her on the floor?
WALKER: By the time go I got there her body is in the living room.
RICHARDS: Right.
WALKER: uh near the Christmas tree.
RICHARDS: So shes been moved again.
WALKER: Well Linda Arndt moved her the second time. Uh, she and Officer French are the
only two people there now at this point.
RICHARDS: Shes effectively having to control people walking through the crime scene?
WALKER: The way I learned this is uh, when Larry and I walked in the entrance, Officer
French was standing right there.
CLEMENTE: Mm hm.
WALKER: And, and I asked them, I said, Hey were you standing here when the body was
found? And hes says, Yeah. He says, Ramsey brought the body up and put it right there. I
looked down at my feet and I said to French, I said, You mean right here? And he says, Yeah,
right there. What Im thinking is crime scene contamination. I mean who else has walked on
Page 21 of 84

that carpet? You know all the people in that day, the people that were there last week, uh
traipsing in and out and now the bodys put down there and now the bodys picked up and
moved yet again. So thats when it really first hit me about the nightmare
CLEMENTE: Yeah.
WALKER: that the forensic people were gonna have.
(COMMERCIALS)
CLEMENTE: Wow, massive. Part of doing a criminal investigative analysis is doing a crime
scene reconstruction.
RICHARDS: Were rebuilding key rooms that relate to this case and those rooms are JonBents
bedroom. You know that was the last place that she was seen alive, the spiral staircase where the
ransom letter was found, the kitchen, and the basement including the wine cellar where
JonBents body was eventually found.
EDDIE SCHMIDT: We cant turn back turn back time inside the real house, but what we can do
here, as much as we can clinically and scientifically try to put it together.
RICHARDS: Reproduce it and put us in it.
CLEMENTE: Its incredibly important for us to actually see and feel what that house looked like
and actually forming a hypothesis and a theory of how the crime was actually committed.
RICHARDS: I feel like its taking me back in time.
WALKER: Uh, youve done a good job with the, the duplication.
RICHARDS: So this is where the letter was found, third step on the spiral staircase.
WALKER: Correct. Now a stranger would typically think the most logical place to find a note
would be on a desk, on a table in the kitchen.
RICHARDS: The kitchen counter.
WALKER: Uh on the kitchen counter.
CLEMENTE: Why dont you take us through how you actually went through the basement?
WALKER: It took Sargent Mason and me only a few minutes to get from the police department
to the Ramsey house.
RICHARDS: And what sort of time was this? This is around sort of
WALKER: Uh, 1:20.
Page 22 of 84

RICHARDS: Okay
WALKER: Somewhere around that time frame
RICHARDS: So quite close to the body being discovered?
WALKER: Oh yeah. Larry Mason and I came downstairs. I was actually following his lead. I
was trying to orient myself because I had never seen the basement before and walked into the uh,
the room that, I call it a game room. I think they call it a train room. And as I came back in this
particular part of the room, the first thing I noticed obviously was the three sets of windows in
the wall up there, uh and I noticed the broken window and the suitcase. When I see a blue
suitcase below a window, the first thing that Im thinking was the intent eventually by the, the
perpetrator to put the body in a suitcase and remove the body from the crime scene? Did things
move too quickly? Was the perpetrator who had that as his motive overtaken by events?
RICHARDS: Right, or what about concealing the body for a time too?
WALKER: Or concealing the body, right.
CLEMENTE: Right.
WALKER: I have to tell you that the first thing that jumped in my mind.
CLEMENTE: So where did you go next?
WALKER: Were looking around and Larry Mason pointed back there and he said, Thats the
room where JonBents body was found. So at that point we both walked back to that particular
room. Its just an odd feeling, almost like youre transported back to that particular room and
time.
CLEMENTE: Feels like a tomb.
RICHARDS: It does.
WALKER: When Larry Mason and I came down here, the lights were on.
CLEMENTE: Right.
WALKER: Probably because John Ramsey had turned them on after he had opened the door.
CLEMENTE: Right, so you can go ahead and turn it on.
WALKER: By the time I got there her body is in the living room.
RICHARDS: John brings her up
WALKER: John brings her up.
Page 23 of 84

RICHARDS: takes off the duct tape and the white blanket.
WALKER: Yeah, lays her down there. We didnt step into the room very far. Larry probably
came over to this particular area here
CLEMENTE: Uh huh.
WALKER: and I just kind of stepped in the doorway to the left, didnt want to walk too much
further into the room simply because this was the room where the child had been deposited for
some period of time.
CLEMENTE: The statements that were made said that John called out that she was here before
he turned the light on.
WALKER: From my perspective now I can look in here and see objects.
CLEMENTE: Right.
WALKER: But I dont know that I can necessarily identify objects.
CLEMENTE: Right.
WALKER: Now this just looks like a jumble of cloth.
CLEMENTE: Right. And how would you know that that was actually your daughter wrapped up
in there?
WALKER: As I recall, hes never been asked those questions.
RICHARDS: Why was that?
WALKER: It was my belief that the philosophy that was kind of laid out for the police
department that day, was we have to treat them with kid gloves. Treat them with deference. Treat
them as victims and not as suspects.
RICHARDS: What was the reason given?
WALKER: They were influential. They were wealthy.
RICHARDS: From what I can see, the influence here really had a very significant impact as to
why people were allowed to come and go from the house.
WALKER: Yeah. Going through the list of things that initially puzzled me, but then I started
thinking, when you add them all together, I started thinking, well, theres something really
bizarre and odd about all of this.
CLEMENTE: Right.
Page 24 of 84

WALKER: Right around the time that I was there, there was another detective there that I think
had overheard John making a call for his airplane. This is after the body has been discovered.
RICHARDS: Right.
WALKER: Why does John Ramsey want to leave so quickly when he has to understand that
theres going to be a police investigation, and his daughter has just been killed.
RICHARDS: You know, for me this isnt just a red flag, this is an absolute anomaly.
WALKER: First thing you do in a homicide case, if you have witnesses, is you separate them,
you take them some place, and you get a statement.
RICHARDS: Right.
WALKER: And you have to get the Ramseys interviewed by the police, in that first 24 to 36
hours.
CLEMENTE: And the only problem is, they didnt get interviewed by the police.
WALKER: No they didnt.
RICHARDS: Thats why we need to speak to Fleet, because I really want to know what was
going on in that house. Fleet and Priscilla White are what we would call significant witnesses.
They were best friends to the Ramseys at the time, and they were at that home during those hours
as it all unfolded.
CLEMENTE: I got a message from Fleet White. I think the important thing that we want to talk
to Fleet about is the Ramseys behavior that morning.
RICHARDS: I certainly find that a very curious decision, why you would invite your friends to
your home address when youre in crisis and chaos.
CLEMENTE: Especially if they think that somebody actually came into their home and abducted
their child. Why are they bringing in other friends?
RICHARDS: Right.
CLEMENTE: I know that the Whites are very concerned about talking openly about this case
because theyve had a really bad experience.
RICHARDS: Fleet was one of the first people to question John, and told him categorically to
stop hiding behind his lawyer and to cooperate with the police.

Page 25 of 84

NEWSCASTER: In a fourteen page open letter, Fleet White criticized the Boulder District
Attorney and took particular aim at the Ramseys. White says the investigation has failed because
the Ramseys have refused to fully cooperate with investigators.
CLEMENTE: So were gonna go meet Fleet, but he said no cameras, so were going to have to
stop filming. Its more important that we have it than we have it documented.
RICHARDS: Agreed.
EDDIE SCHMIDT (PRODUCER): You can tell him weve got a camera crew nearby, like we
can actually come up, now, we can do it now. Or if weve got time at the end of the day. And if
those times dont work, well do it any other time. We really, really want their story.
CLEMENTE: Alright.
EDDIE SCHMIDT: Well see ya.
(COMMERCIALS)
EDDIE SCHMIDT: Wait, is this them? This is them! So what happened?
RICHARDS: Well, its fascinating. They have so much knowledge, but theres a lot of pain
here.
(ARCHIVE FOOTAGE)
FLEET WHITE: My wife Priscilla and I lived in Boulder since 1994. We were present at the
Ramsey home when JonBents body was found.
PRISCILLA WHITE: Our family were publicly branded as murderers, torturers of young
children, pedophiles, and perjurers.
(END ARCHIVE FOOTAGE)
RICHARDS: You know, they did have reservations. They are afraid and they dont want to see
this ever happen again.
EDDIE SCMIDT: Do you think they understood how committed you really are?
CLEMENTE: Yeah, theyre willing to talk to us, but they just dont want to do it on camera.
And when we were leaving Fleet took me aside and he said, Jim, I really think we have some
really important information that will help you. And I said, of course you do, thats why were
here, and well keep coming back here as much as we have to to convince you that this is the
right thing to do, because we really feel it is.
RICHARDS: So we need to strategize, we need to plan.
Page 26 of 84

EDDIE SCHMIDT: Okay, well you guys are embedded.


RICHARDS: Our hope here is to try and get what we call community intelligence, to knock on
their doors and unlock some of these secrets to try and crack this case wide open. (ON PHONE)
I was wondering if I could just speak to you for a couple of minutes. Im over here in the U.S.
reinvestigating the JonBent Ramsey case.
WOMAN: Well, let me stop you here. It was just a terrible thing that happened. But I dont
want to talk to you about it.
WOMAN 2: Wed prefer not to talk about it. Yeah.
RICHARDS: Its incredibly frustrating when youre talking to people and not getting any
answers. This is the Ramseys church. Im over here because Im reinvestigating the JonBent
Ramsey case.
UNIDENTIFIED VOICE: We just dont comment on that.
RICHARDS: My names Laura Richardsand a lot of people have beenif I could just tell you
a little bit about who I amand.
UNIDENTIFIED MALE VOICE: I think it might open a can of worms again. Look, were just
trying to get our life back together.
RICHARDS: You just get a sense that people are fearful to speak out. (ON PHONE, LEAVING
MESSAGE) Id like to really like to try and have a conversation with you so, please could you
give me a call back please give me a call back many thanks, many thanks, many thanks. Im
getting a bit fed up with this.
CLEMENTE: Its critical for us to talk with people who can give us insight into the Ramseys
private world. People who knew them, worked with them, and spent time in their home. When
did you start working for the Ramseys?
BRIAN SCOTT (BRIAN): It might have been 94. That summer Patsy Ramsey gave me the
job, hired me.
CLEMENTE: Really?
BRIAN: One of the things I remember was, she wanted pristine gardens. And Im thinking to
myself, okay. It seemed like a pretty good job, I could do, use my own hours and...
CLEMENTE: So how frequently did you see John?
BRIAN: Not very frequently at all. Once a season, maybe.
CLEMENTE: Did you ever run into the kids?
Page 27 of 84

BRIAN: Yeah. Not Burke so much, but JonBent would come out and she would often, I dont
know, be playing relatively close to where I would be working. One of the biggest things that
stands out is when I would be raking the leaves, in the fall.
CLEMENTE: Oh yeah?
BRIAN: I had all the leaves in a pile and she wanted to jump on them. I remember her saying it
reminded her of the time she spent with her dad, you know.
CLEMENTE: Oh really?
BRIAN: Yeah.
CLEMENTE: So she didnt mind, you know, getting dirty, or messing up her hair?
BRIAN: No she didnt mind. She seemed like a normal kid who just likes to play, and misses
her father. I remember that.
CLEMENTE: Because everybodys image of her is, sort of dressed and made up to the max.
BRIAN: I dont know too much about pageantry, but I would think it demanded a lot of
discipline and you know, focus on just certain talents that she had to hone in and get right. I do
remember seeing her practicing the violin.
CLEMENTE: Oh, really?
BRIAN: And Patsy was out talking to me, and then I think she went back and checked in, said
Hey you have to keep practicing, you know, dont put that down.
CLEMENTE: Oh really? And with respect to Burke, did he ever come out and play outside? Did
you ever see him?
BRIAN: What I remember is he stuck to himself, he seemed a little more introverted. She was
more engaging and more outgoing than him.
CLEMENTE: And so your first impression of Patsy what was she like when you first met her?
BRIAN: Oh, she was very pleasant, very nice.
CLEMENTE: Did she ever come out?
BRIAN: She came out once in a while and we would talk about whatever. One of the things I
remember was when they announced the OJ verdict.
(ARCHIVE FOOTAGE)
FOREMAN: We the Jury find the defendant not guilty of the crime of murder.
Page 28 of 84

(END FOOTAGE)
BRIAN: I was at their house.
CLEMENTE: You were outside working on their garden.
BRIAN: Patsy came out and told me that OJ was declared innocent.
CLEMENTE: Really?
JOHNNY COCHRAN: If it doesnt fit, you must acquit.
BRIAN: I just remember, she came out and started talking to me about it.
CLEMENTE: Patsy?
BRIAN: Yeah. She thought OJ got away with murder. She didnt like that one bit. She did say,
you can get away with murder in this country.
RICHARDS: Speaking to people who know the family, getting an understanding of who they
were, what was going on prior is so important.
CLEMENTE: Were going to go now to see Patsys friend, she was a photographer.
RICHARDS: She did the family portraits and she seemed to be pretty close with Patsy.
JUDITH PHILLIPS (JUDITH): Well, I first me the Ramseys in Atlanta, and we were more
social friends.
RICHARDS: Right.
JUDITH: In Boulder we became even closer friends because we were on a softball team
together, Moms Gone Bad, of all things thats the name of our team. We had lots of friends.
Lots and lots of friends, from Boulder. They were both really good hosts. You always felt really
welcome when you walked through the door. Patsy was really fun to be around. She was a
showgirl, so her clothing, her home she is a girl that never compromised.
CLEMENTE: Did your daughter play with JonBent?
JUDITH: Even though my daughter was Burkes age, she ended up playing with JonBent.
(LAUGHS).
RICHARDS: Right.
JUDITH: Cause Burke was kind of, oh girls, you know. There was one time when my
daughter was playing with JonBent and my daughter inquired about all the awards that were on

Page 29 of 84

display. She goes whats that for, JonBent? And she goes, oh, Im in the pageant system. But
she didnt make a big deal out of it.
RICHARDS: Right.
JUDITH: And, uh, she said, but they really belong more to my mom.
JUDITH: Theyre more my moms trophies than they are mine.
CLEMENTE: Mm-hmm.
JUDITH: I remember one particular Christmas party, thats the first time JonBent came down
with a beautiful dress
CLEMENTE: Really?
JUDITH: and bleached blonde hair. I was shocked and I took Patsy aside and said, Youre
not dying her hair are you? And she said, Oh, no, Judith thats from the summer sun in
Charlevoix, Michigan.
CLEMENTE: You think that was
JUDITH: Oh, are you kidding?
CLEMENTE: Um, you were there. Im not
JUDITH: I was there. It was, Youre lying to me.
CLEMENTE: Mm-hmm.
JUDITH: It bothered me that she had to lie to me. Why didnt she just tell me the truth?
CLEMENTE: Mm. Can you tell us about when you saw Patsy after JonBents death?
JUDITH: She was not the same person that I had ever known. She looked exhausted and she kept
repeating over and over again, Who couldve killed my baby? Who couldve done this?
RICHARDS: Was there any interaction that you had with Patsy or with the family after that?
JUDITH: No. That was it. I was cut off. We were told in, in our circle of friends in Boulder, Do
not talk to reporters. Do not talk to the police.
CLEMENTE: Told by who?
JUDITH: I was called by one of the friends in the circle of friends.
CLEMENTE: What did that make you think?
Page 30 of 84

JUDITH: I was surprised. My first thought was If there was anything that I knew that could
help with the investigation, Im not gonna be silent. I felt a duty to the memory of JonBent. I
loved her very much. Youre gonna make me cry. Um, I opened my doors up to reporters and
then talked to the police twice and uh, they just cut me off as a friend. They felt I wobetrayed
them. You know at the time, I, I didnt understand but in hindsight its because I told theyou
know, I, I didnt obey what all the other friends did.
CLEMENTE: How did you feel though when you saw them actually doing the opposite? They
went on CNN.
JUDITH: I felt that they were hippocrites. And when Patsy said Hold your babies close to you,
theres a, a murderer in town, it frightened my daughter so much that she couldnt sleep in her
own bedroom for several months.
CLEMENTE: What did you think about that?
JUDITH: I thought it was bogus.
CLEMENTE: Really?
JUDITH: Yeah. In fact, Patsy asked a favor of me to go to the mayor.
CLEMENTE: Mm-hmm.
JUDITH: I knew the mayor because I had photographed her. Patsy said, Please ask for
protection for my family. So I went to the mayors office and I said, Patsy wants protection
and she said Theres no murderer out there.
RICHARDS: How does it make you feel now when you think 20 years have passed?
JUDITH: I feel angry.
CLEMENTE: Mm.
JUDITH: I feel angry that that little girl, still, after all these years, has not gotten justice. And I
dont believe she ever will.
(COMMERCIALS)
CLEMENTE: Although the statistics say if a child of that age is killed within their own home, it
is most likely a family member that did it. The fact is, the brutality of this particular attack, says
the exact opposite. This is a very bizarre dichotomy. It fights itself right from the beginning.
Another critically important part of any murder investigation is, understanding how a person was
killed.
RICHARDS: So, Ramsey 96 JonBent.
Page 31 of 84

CLEMENTE: Oh wow. Look at this.


RICHARDS: Yeah, the autopsy.
CLEMENTE: Cause of death of this six-year-old female is asphyxia by strangulation,
associated with cranial cerebral trauma. During the original autopsy, the medical examiner
thought that the cause of death was asphyxiation by strangulation due to the rope tied around her
neck. This is the kind of thing were gonna have to ask Werner Spitz about
RICHARDS: Mm-hmm.
CLEMENTE: because that word associated with, its very general.
RICHARDS: Yeah.
CLEMENTE: And is it before, is it after, is this
RICHARDS: Were they both fatal? I mean
CLEMENTE: Right.
RICHARDS: you know I guess only Werner can tell us that.
CLEMENTE: We brought Dr. Spitz in. Hes an incredibly experienced forensic pathologist. His
experience goes back all the way to the J.F.K. assassination and he was involved in the initial
investigation brought in by the Boulder police department.
DR. WERNER SPITZ (SPITZ): You know Ive seen some 60 thousand cases, so if I dont
RICHARDS: 60 thousand?
SPITZ: YeahI dont know everything. But this case, it made an impression on me. The
Boulder police department called my office and asked would I agree to come to Boulder. You
know as a forensic pathologist, I want to have firsthand information, where is what in the house?
CLEMENTE: I think we all feel the same way. We totally agree.
SPITZ: Exactly. But we did not get permission to get in.
CLEMENTE: Who wouldnt let you in?
SPITZ: I believe the family. The police had to get permission from them. They told the police
No dice. Hes not coming to this house. They did not want me in the house. Maybe, may just
be, that I would figure something out that nobody else knows.
CLEMENTE: But then you reviewed the autopsy findings and the injuries and the sequencing.
Can you tell us a little bit about that?
Page 32 of 84

SPITZ: Well, she had a blow to the head on the right side. The bone underneath that area showed
a perfectly rectangular defect. I didnt know at the time what caused this.
CLEMENTE: Okay.
SPITZ: But then I looked at the photographs and saw a three mag flashlight sitting on the kitchen
counter.
CLEMENTE: Right.
SPITZ: And uh, I said, Well I have to check whether that may have been the cause. And so
CLEMENTE: And did you do experiments to
SPITZ: I did that, yeah. Ill show you what I did.
CLEMENTE: Okay.
SPITZ: This is what I had an artist draw for me. This is how the flashlight fits to perfection
approximately half an inch through the bone.
RICHARDS: So Dr. Spitz, this is the house that you didnt get to go and see. Were now in the
kitchen.
CLEMENTE: The phone that she actually made the 911 call.
SPITZ: Its uncanny.
RICHARDS: So a lot of the detail that we have here
SPITZ: Flashlight.
RICHARDS: flashlight.
SPITZ: Yeah.
CLEMENTE: Youve been thinking about this case for 20 years, right? What does that make you
feel?
SPITZ: Well, it makes me feel eerie.
CLEMENTE: Eerie.
SPITZ: I relived this, you know, because this, this answers questions that I had at one time
CLEMENTE: Really?
SPITZ: and then never materialized.
Page 33 of 84

RICHARDS: That must feel frustrating for you as well, not being allowed in and
SPITZ: Oh yeah. It made me wonder what is being put away, hidden?
RICHARDS: Right.
SPITZ: And why?
RICHARDS: Do you believe that she was alive when she was struck on the head?
SPITZ: Oh yes.
RICHARDS: And she was also alive when she was choked, strangled?
SPITZ: Please understand this, when a very severe injury to the brain occurs, because the heart
has its own ability to produce contractions, to cause a false impression of life existing.
CLEMENTE: So she was virtually dead when the garrote was applied. So asphyxiation was not
the way she actually passed away.
SPITZ: Yes. That is my advantage as a forensic pathologist. They did not know that so they
applied a mechanism of death that at face value that, oh she was strangled. And then of course
she has a blow to the head, so which is it? Well, its very simple when I explain to you that yes,
she was strangled to make believe that was the cause of death. She already was brain dead.
CLEMENTE: Theres a few more injuries that we need to talk about, the neck injuries and the
ligatures because I think this is also kind of really important, the fact that her hands were tied in
this way with a slip knot.
CLEMENTE: Was it 15 or 18 inches between?
SPITZ: Fifteen and a half.
CLEMENTE: So this is where the next knot should be? Let me put this around. So you see this?
The rope is actually over her sweater. Its not on her wrists.
SPITZ: Thats right, she doesnt have any marks.
CLEMENTE: She doesnt have any marks. Could you help me with that?
RICHARDS: Well thats very unusual for it to be over clothing.
CLEMENTE: So if shes not unconscious, why doesnt she just do this?
RICHARDS: Or if she had duct tape on her mouth.
SPITZ: Yeah, but if shes dead
Page 34 of 84

CLEMENTE: So what does that tell you? This was staging.


SPITZ: Youre totally correct.
CLEMENTE: So, lets look at the garrote?
SPITZ: Why does anybody need this contraption? Why do you need the stick?
RICHARDS: Right.
SPITZ: You can just put that around your hand and then do the same thing on the other hand,
totally unnecessary. When you break into a house, isnt time of the essence?
RICHARDS: Right.
SPITZ: You want to come in, do your killing and, and leave. So why do you need this?
RICHARDS: It just complicates things. You spend more time there
SPITZ: Its leaves evidence around.
RICHARDS: and it leaves evidence.
SPITZ: You dont need that.
RICHARDS: Yeah and the knots interesting because it does look to me like its quite
complicated.
SPITZ: It is. Was somebody who knows how to make knots.
RICHARDS: Right.
SPITZ: So this is a common knot
RICHARDS: Right.
SPITZ: from a sailor. The way I looked upon it is, this by itself without anything else
wouldve told me this is a make believe type scene. Why do you need any garrote when a hand
of an adult can squeeze a child like that?
CLEMENTE: Right. Okay, so the ultimate conclusion is, the garrote isnt what actually caused
the death.
SPITZ: Correct.
CLEMENTE: The blow to the head did.
SPITZ: Correct.
Page 35 of 84

LEE: I just want to play a devils advocate.


CLEMENTE: Yeah sure, thats what were here for, to discuss it.
LEE: We should find tissue and blood on the flashlight and also should have broken hairs. This
area we should have trace evidence, blood, hair, tissue. Thats why I suggest them to do some
DNA and try to find tissue and blood. Apparently they did not find anything.
SPITZ: The skin is extremely elastic
LEE: Yeah.
SPITZ: so it would go with the impact and not hold on to the impact.
CLEMENTE: So the blow to her head was strong enough to break her skull, but not strong
enough to break the skin?
SPITZ: The skill may break but the skin may not.
CLEMENTE: Right.
SPITZ: I have seen that so many times.
CLEMENTE: Right, so then that can explain why this was not a bloody crime scene.
SPITZ: There would not have been any blood
CLEMENTE: Right.
RICHARDS: Right.
SPITZ: not from that, anyway.
LEE: It could be the flashlight. Im not saying its not the flashlight, but anything similar to that
shape, that width, with force can cause that, so I agree with you totally. The cause of the death is
brain injury by blunt object.
CLEMENTE: We need to determine whether or not that flashlight couldve made the fracture in
the skull of JonBent Ramsey and whether or not it took a tremendous amount of force to create
that kind of fracture.
LEE: We dont have the complete picture.
(COMMERCIALS)
(VIEWER DISCRETION NOTICE)

Page 36 of 84

WARNING: This program contains graphic images that some viewers may find disturbing.
VIEWER DISCRETION IS ADVISED.
(EXCERPTS FROM VIDEOTAPE)
REPORTER: A vital piece of missing evidence has reportedly been found in the JonBent
Ramsey murder case. Time Magazine is reporting police in Boulder, Colorado have found a
flashlight that may have been used in JonBents murder.
(END OF EXCERPTS)
FITZGERALD: Id like to think if I was one of the first investigators on the scene, all of a
sudden theres a big 15 inch or so Maglite in the middle, Id at least wanna say, Hey who does
that belong to?
RICHARDS: This flashlight was never claimed, I believe, by anyone living at the address or by
the police.
KOLAR: None of the officers claimed it was theirs. It was my understanding that it was a gift
given to them and it was kept in the kitchen drawer.
CLEMENTE: And that is presumptively how it got in the house. The reason why we want to do
impact test is to determine whether or not that flashlight couldve made the fracture in the skull
of JonBent Ramsey and whether or not it took a tremendous amount of force to create that kind
of fracture.
SPITZ: On the right side of the head there was an impact. The flashlight hit in the back of the
head somewhere around on the right side, but towards the back where Im showing her with my
finder.
RICHARDS: Right.
SPITZ: The brain was bruised along the entire right side. Where the brain was bruised, energy
waves went through the entire brain from the right side all over thethis is called a concussive
impact that caused a concussion to the brain, in this case, a fatal concussion. The fracture to the
skull preserved the appearance, the dimensions of the flashlight that was on the counter in the
kitchen. Forensic pathologists always look for patterns because a pattern opens the door to what
type of instruments were used.
CLEMENTE: Mm hm.
SPITZ: But one thing is important, there was not a drop of blood on the outside. Why was there
not a drop of blood? Because there is an elasticity to the skin, so this is all blunt. Nothing here
will cut the skin. When the flashlight came down if the flashlight went in for about half an inch,
the skin was pushed in, broke the bone and did not cause any damage to the skin.
Page 37 of 84

RICHARDS: Is there any way we can replicate that?


SPITZ: Remember that the human skull is an involved structure wheres theres a uh solid bone,
very thin, in a six year old maybe a sixteenth of an inch in thickness. Then there is a layer of
spongy bone marrow, then there is another layer, so.
CLEMENTE: Mm hm, but we can do a representation of that.
SPITZ: Okay, you want to do it?
CLEMENTE: Sure, Ill try it. Okay.
(HITS BOARD)
CLEMENTE: So thats just like, like this diagram that you have?
SPITZ: Thats exactly right, like that. See the main thing about this one is, the fact that its
totally rectangular. The head of the flashlight easily falls into that defect leaving no space. Ive
seen a lot of different kinds of injuries and this instrument here can be an amazing weapon.
RICHARDS: So would it take tremendous strength to do this?
SPITZ: No because this is a heavy object with three batteries in it. The skull of a six year old, we
call them eggshell skulls.
CLEMENTE: Got it.
RICHARDS: So you dont need much forceI mean I think thats just-SPITZ: You dont need such huge amount of force. No that is a mistake. It could be an adult. It
could be a child that did it.
(EXCERPT FROM DEATH OF INNOCENCE PG. 363)
The tremendous blow to JonBents head would have required the strength of a man.
John & Patsy Ramsey.
(END OF EXCERPT)
CLEMENTE: Okay, so this would be exactly how tall JonBent was
RICHARDS: Right.
CLEMENTE: and
RICHARDS: Three foot eleven.
SPITZ: Yes.
Page 38 of 84

RICHARDS: So Dr. Spitz, we have a skull, but with pig skin over the top of it to act sort of like
the scalp to see what it looks like if somebody hits it with a flashlight. Were trying to sort of
simulate this
SPITZ: I know.
RICHARDS: as closely as we can as a sort of a scientific experiment, but this is quite hard to
do, but we do need to do this just to see it, what it looks like.
SPITZ: Okay.
CLEMENTE: Because theres so much controversy about whether or not a child is actually
capable of creating the defect in the skull. We thought it would be good if we actually bought in
a child who is about ten years old to actually do the demonstration with him.
SPTIZ: Sure.
RICHARDS: Were going to ask you to strike the skull. Where, where do you think Dr. Spitz,
around about here?
SPITZ: Okay, do it here.
RICHARDS: Around about there, okay.
CLEMENTE: Are you ready.
BOY: Yep.
RICHARDS: Okay.
(BOY HITS DUMMY SKULL WEARING BLONDE WIG)
CLEMENTE: Well just take it off here. Were just gonna peel this back.
RICHARDS: Oh wow.
CLEMENTE: And you can see how its broken. Its very similar to the type of break that we saw
on JonBent.
SPITZ: The impact of the demonstration was a convincing confirmation of the association of the
flashlight with that injury in the head.
LEE: For any injury, its velocity. Velocity squared times the mass give you the energy. This is a
lot of energy.
SPITZ: There was in my view, no doubt that this flashlight or one exactly like it caused that
injury.
Page 39 of 84

RICHARDS: And it didnt take tremendous strength to do that.


SPITZ: It did not.
(COMMERCIALS)
PATSY: There is a killer on the loose
JOHN: Absolutely.
PATSY: I will tell my friends to keep, keep you babies close to you.
RICHARDS: Within days of JonBents body being found the Ramseys speak to CNN before
theyve even given interviews to the Boulder Police department.
PATSY: Theres someone out there.
CLEMENTE: So we have the first interview that the Ramseys did on January 1st on CNN.
RICHARDS: Its probably one of the most important because it was right at the start within days
after their daughter being found murdered and they invite the media in and I think its really
interesting what they actually said at that press conference as well. Its not just about them being
proactive. Its the content of what they said.
CLEMENTE: Right and they have not sat down with the police department to do separate
interviews in order to rule them out as suspects in this crime, yet theyre sitting down with CNN.
Wed like to get your insights into what their behavior tells you and the words that are coming
out of their mouths. With the help of Jim Fitzgerald doing forensic linguistic analysis and Stan
Burke doing statement analysis were gonna take a look at media appearances that the Ramseys
have made over the years in the same way we deconstructed the ransom letter.
REPORTER: Why did you decide you wanted to talk now?
PATSY: We have to find out who did this.
JOHN: Not because were angry, but because weve got to go on.
RICHARDS: Someones breaking into your home, someone has killed and abused your child.
STANLEY: Youre gonna be angry and youre gonna want to find out who did it and you want
to see punishment. Thats the natural response.
RICHARDS: Fitz and Stan are incredibly unique in their expertise. Jim Fitzgerald analyzes and
dissects language choice. Stan Burke looks at things like the content of her statements and how
much of it is potentially misleading.

Page 40 of 84

REPORTER: Are you fully convinced that you daughter was kidnapped by some outsiders
outside your family or circle of friends?
JOHN: Yes.
CLEMENTE: Shaking her head no. Shaking her head no, and then when John says yes
she changes her head to a nod up and down.
STANLEY: What I find interesting here, Jim, is he said yes. Thats an answer to that question.
REPORTER: Are you fully convinced that your daughter was kidnapped?
JOHN: Yes.
STANLEY: Do you see anything else?
JOHN: Its just so hard to know what, but we are, our family is a loving family, its a gentle
family.
STANLEY: Why throw that in there? Its not necessary; you have your answer yes.
CLEMENTE: Right.
STANLEY: But he wants to make sure the listener or the viewer hears we are a loving and gentle
family. Gentle, thats the message thats being sent here. For our grief to resolve itself we now
have to find out why this happened.
CLEMENTE: I mean why is it they why thats important?
RICHARDS: Its a very odd turn of phrase isnt it?
JOHN: We cannot go on until we know why.
FITZGERALD.: This is probably a very honest question John and Patsy Ramsey are asking
themselves. Its very likely they know who did it and they may still be trying to figure out why
did this happen?
RICHARDS: Its like an unconscious utterance in a way.
FITZGERALD: Absolutely.
STANLEY: Its almost like he jumped past that conclusion as to who did it, and now he wants to
know
JOHN: Until we know why.
STANLEY: Why.
Page 41 of 84

PATSY: There is a killer on the loose.


JOHN: Absolutely.
PATSY: I dont know who it is, I dont know if its a he or a she, but if I were a resident of
Boulder I would tell my friends to keep, keep your babies close to you. Theres someone out
there.
CLEMENTE: Well let me ask you this, John Ramsey and Patsy Ramsey got on national TV
ELLIOT ZARET (ZARET): Right.
CLEMENTE: Was there anything that they said that struck you as odd?
ZARET: The whole thing was odd at that time and
CLEMENTE: How did that affect the community here?
ZARET: I dont think people believed her.
CLEMENTE: What did you know about the Ramseys as a family? What was known in the
community about them at that point?
ZARET: Very little. Its not like O.J. Simpson. They werent famous people. Yeah. They had
money, he has a successful company but they werent nationally famous, so there was no
compelling reason why this shouldve become the big sensation that it was. But it was the week
after Christmas before New Yearstheres no news. Its a very quiet time for national news and
that was when the 24 hour news cycle was still pretty young.
CLEMENTE: Mm-hmm.
ZARET: The idea of how you fill in this 24 hour gap when nothings happening for a whole
week drove, I think, a lot of what happened next which is there were these videos of this little
girl in the pageants with the makeup on dancing almost seductively in a way that just seemed to
the regional morays to be wrong and sexual in a way that a six-year-old shouldnt be. Growing
up in the northeast pageants were not common. In the deep south, in Georgia where theyre from,
thats a normal thing for little girls to do.
RICHARDS: It sounds like it was a media circus very early on.
ZARET: Within days.
REPORTER: The murder of JonBent Ramsey. Police should be looking for suspects.
Worldwide media frenzy. JonBenes body was found here.

Page 42 of 84

ZARET: It was every national newspaper, national newsmagazine. Three networks and every
tabloid.
RICHARDS: I dont knowI was thinking about sort of with post O.J. I mean that context at the
time is probably quite important in this particular case.
ZARET: Absolutely. I thought at the time that that had an influence potentially on what the
police and district attorney were doing; especially, I think, more the D.A. But they didnt want to
fall into some of the same pitfalls that the prosecutors in Los Angeles had. Being burned in court
because the police didnt dot all the Is and cross the Ts.
CLEMENTE: Mm-hmm.
REPORTER: Four months after their daughters murder, the parents of JonBent Ramsey have
submitted to interviews with police. Patricia and Jon Ramsey met separately with Bolder
Detectives for more than eight hours. JonBents body was discovered in the family home
December 26thbut the Ramseys had not agreed to formal interviews with police until now.
JOHN: Weve been anxious to do this for some time and I can tell you, um, why its taken us so
long. We felt from the beginning an obligation to talk with the Boulder Authorities, let them do
their formal interrogation of Patsy and I. Uh, that is, I think as you know, been successfully
accomplished yesterday
STANLEY: Stop right there. Why is that such an accomplishment to go and talk to the police
about the possible resolution of your daughters homicide? What
FITZGERALD: A hundred and twenty days after it happened.
STANLEY: Right. Why is that a successful accomplishment.
JOHN: For those of you who may want to ask, let me address very directly, I did not kill my
daughter JonBent. JonBent and I had a very close relationship. I will miss her dearly for the
rest of my life.
PATSY: Im appalled that anyone would think that John or I would be involved in such a
hideous, heinous crime. But, let me assure you, that I did not kill JonBent. I did not have
anything to do with it. I love that child with my whole of my heart and soul.
FITZGERALD: This last 30 to 60 second snippet we just watched, they are very convincing,
quite frankly to me in those basic declarative statements.
PATSY: I did not kill JonBent.
JOHN: I did not kill my daughter JonBent.
FITZGERALD: I havent seen John or Patsy be as adamant about any statement than these two.
Page 43 of 84

RICHARDS: And they do come across, I have to say very well, you know in terms of the, the
posturing in a way they present themselves.
REPORTER: What does it do to you to hear that somebody close to you may have done this to
your daughter?
JOHN: It, as a, as a, um, person I think it makes you very um, much more guarded, um. We, we
um, felt we lived in a safe community, we still do.
STANLEY: Compare this statement that hes making right now hemming and hawing, umming
and awing to what he said about four minutes ago. I did not kill my daughter. Patsy, I didnt
murder my daughter. Now all of a sudden hes not even answering the question and, and the
non sequiturs hes throwing out there he cant even put in cogent sentences. And what I find in
situations such as this its not just important what is said, it can also be just as important, if not
more so, what is not said.
(EXCERPTS FROM TOMORROWS EPISODE - OMMITTED)
(STATEMENT)
The killing of JonBent Ramsey is a crime that, to this day, remains unsolved. The opinions and
conclusions of the investigators who appear on this program about how it may have occurred
represent just some of the number of possible scenarios. John Ramsey and Burke Ramsey have
denied any involvement in the crime including in recent televised interviews. We encourage
viewers to reach their own conclusions.
(END OF EPISODE)
(SHOW CREDITS OMMITTED)

Page 44 of 84

EPISODE TWO
September 19, 2016
(VIEWER DISCRETION DISCLAIMER)
CLEMENTE: Previously on The Case Of: JonBent Ramsey.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: 9-1-1 emergency?
PATSY: Uh, we have a kidnapping.
CLEMENTE: On December 26th, 1996, at 5:52 AM, six-year-old JonBent Ramsey was reported
kidnapped by her mother. Later that day, she was found dead in her home. Im Jim Clemente.
Im a retired FBI profiler. Im an expert in the areas of child sex crimes, child abductions and
child homicides.
RICHARDS: My names Laura Richards. Im a criminal behavioral analyst and Ive been trained
by New Scotland Yard and the FBI. Im putting together this elite and renowned team. This has
never been done before.
CLEMENTE: What we need to do is a complete reinvestigation, starting right from scratch.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Whats going on there maam?
PATSY: We have a kidnapping. Hurry, please.
9-1-1 OPERATOR: Okay, whats your name? Are you Pat
PATSY: Patsy Ramsey, Im the mother. Oh my, god!
KIM ARCHULETTA (ARCHULETTA): To me it was suspicious. It sounded like there were
two voices in the room, maybe three.
CLEMENTE: We got the tape enhanced.
AUDIO ENGINEER: We could try a little noise reduction on this.
DISPATCHER: Patsy? Patsy?
UNIDENTIFIED VOICE: (INAUDIBLE).
JOHN: Were not speaking to you.
CLEMENTE: I think thats John Ramseys voice.

Page 45 of 84

JOHN: JonBent and I had a very close relationship. Were not speaking to you.
STANLEY: You didnt testify in the grand jury?
ARCHULETTA: Nobody asked me.
CLEMENTE: Although the 911 call actually initiated this investigation, when the police arrived,
the first piece of physical evidence was that ransom note.
RICHARDS: Were a group of individuals that represent a small foreign faction.
FITZGERALD: From historical perspective, this is uncharacteristic of any kind of kidnapping
letter Ive ever seen.
STANLEY: Out of 370 words, 76% is extraneous.
CLEMENTE: This whole thing couldve been done in four lines. Theyre trying to sell this now.
Its a sales job.
FITZGERALD: So I would say we have someone, an adult, 30 or older. When someone puts a
statement in like that, it turns out to be a female.
WALKER: So it was my belief that the ransom note was a red herring. The philosophy that was
kind of laid out for the police department, that day, was we have to treat them with kid gloves.
FEMALE REPORTER: Police in Boulder, Colorado have found a flashlight that may have been
used in JonBents murder.
SPITZ: The flashlight fits to perfection.
MALE INTERVIEWER: Are you fully convinced that your daughter was kidnapped? Yes.
FITZGERALD: Shaking her head, No.
CLEMENTE: And then
FITZGERALD: Its not just important what is said. It can also be just as important if not more so
what is not said.
RICHARDS: So were all here almost 20 years later and were on a fact-finding mission. This is
a reinvestigation and of course weve got some of the best brains, not just in the US, in the
world, around the table trying to understand, you know, what went on in the house that night.
This is a six-year-old girl who lost her life.
CLEMENTE: Do you believe that pieces of evidence point us outside the house to a kidnapper
or somebody whos trying to make people believe theyre a kidnapper or inside the house
towards the family?
Page 46 of 84

RICHARDS: On the one hand, John and Patsy were suspects, but then on the other, we have all
the speculation around other possible suspects; very mixed motive, very different things.
CLEMENTE: We need to keep an open mind as to whether this is an intentional murder or
whether theres something else that was made to look like an intentional murder.
RICHARDS: So lets discuss the potential for the intruder theory.
CLEMENTE: So the intruder theory basically is that somebody was able to surveil the family
and find a time when they werent in the house and get into the house and then when everybody
else went to sleep, they write a ransom letter and then they took JonBent, possibly used a stun
gun to subdue her and then took her down to the basement, tied her up, killed her, but still left a
ransom note.
LOU SMIT (SMIT): The person who killed JonBent, sexually assaulted JonBent. He did
stun gun her. He did build a specialized garrote to kill her. Why he did all these things, I dont
know, but JonBent died a very brutal death in the furthest corner of the basement of that house.
CLEMENTE: In 2001, Lou Smit went on national television and this, for a lot of people,
cemented the validity of the intruder theory.
RICHARDS: So one of the key issues with this case is the theory of an intruder coming through
the basement. That was Lou Smits theory, right?
KOLAR: Yes. Lou Smit, he was a Colorado Springs homicide investigator.
CLEMENTE: And he was hired by?
KOLAR: By Alex Hunter.
CLEMENTE: The district attorney at the time.
KOLAR: He spent about a week looking at, at the crime scene photos and such and came up
with the theory of the, of the intruder.
RICHARDS: He was a good and respected homicide detective
KOLAR: Oh, absolutely.
RICHARDS: ain, in terms of, you know, hes getting results and clear (UNINTELLIGIBLE).
KOLAR: Absolutely.
RICHARDS: And because there was no history of abuse, no domestic violence child abuse, in
the house, ergo, he thought it must be an intruder.
CLEMENTE: Yeah. Why does it only have to be those two things?
Page 47 of 84

RICHARDS: Two theories.


CLEMENTE: Parents can be involved in another way other than murder. Its not one or the
other. Theres a bunch of shades in-between and we have to look at every one of those. Thats
the responsibility of an investigator.
KOLAR: And, and thats something that seemed to escape a lot of the people who thought
intruders were involved.
CLEMENTE: So why dont we look at the crime scene video? This is the stairway going down
towards the basement.
RICHARDS: The children played down there.
CLEMENTE: Mm-hmm.
RICHARDS: And thats the window that hes saying that somebody came through and intended
to go back out, right?
KOLAR: Right.
RICHARDS: So you can see thatI mean it doesnt open fully.
KOLAR: And theres, theres some type of a chase in the ceiling there.
RICHARDS: You would have to have your body over this direction.
CLEMENTE: Which window was actually broken?
KOLAR: Its the middle window thats open right there.
CLEMENTE: John did that to get into the house because on a number of occasions hed locked
himself out. But it was clearly before the death of JonBent.
KOLAR: Oh, oh exactly, it was earlier that year. The pane had just never been replaced. The um,
cobwebs in that corner, there you go.
CLEMENTE: Oh wow, okay, stop. Here you can see that all this dust and debris is already
caught in it. Its weathered. Its got materials in it. Its very clear that this is not a brand new
web.
KOLAR: That would not have survived someone going through that window.
SMIT: Notice Katie, too, that this a area thats real hidden from view.
CLEMENTE: So this is Lou Smit opening the window.

Page 48 of 84

KOLAR: So look, his entire hips fill that window.


RICHARDS: Mm-hmm.
CLEMENTE: Right. Go back where hes in the window sill and freeze it, please. When hes
coming through, if there was a cobweb going across here, he wouldve knocked it out.
RICHARDS: And he fills the entire space.
CLEMENTE: And look where his hand is. His hand is holding the corner there, exactly where
that spider web was.
KOLAR: Uh, I can imagine just the type of maneuvering you would have to make to get through
climbing out and what type of destruction wouldve taken place with that.
CLEMENTE: Well, well try to do that and well see what happens.
RICHARDS: We certainly tried to get access to the house, but a lot of the layout had changed.
So it made much more sense to actually recreate the house. Given that so much of the theories
are speculative, we think its so important to test out each hypothesis to establish whether it is
even possible.
CLEMENTE: Laura, are you up there?
RICHARDS: Yep, Im here, Jim.
CLEMENTE: Hows your view from up there? How well can you see into this area?
RICHARDS: So not particularly well, and if we also think that this is a rod iron grate on top with
some foliage as well, youre not really gonna get much of a vantage point
CLEMENTE: So you cant
RICHARDS: to know what youre going into.
CLEMENTE: And you know what? This happened at night, so were gonna have to cut the
lights to simulate that.
RICHARDS: Right. So hed have to lift up the rod iron grate.
CLEMENTE: And lean it against the house.
RICHARDS: Yep. So all the foliage wouldve been disturbed.
CLEMENTE: Right. How tight of a space is that there?

Page 49 of 84

RICHARDS: Well, coming into it, I mean it feels pretty small and of course theres probably
easier ways of getting in. So this doesnt open a huge amount.
CLEMENTE: Right.
RICHARDS: Its a tricky entry point. But there is a space.
CLEMENTE: All right, so, its possible.
RICHARDS: To actually come through here, your body does have to come to the side because I
dont have movement here. I mean I can hold on to here, but Im gonna have to drop my body
through.
CLEMENTE: Ah, all right. Cobwebs here, and some of the debris
RICHARDS: Would be on mythe soles of my shoes as Im walking through. In the crime
scene video, this was completely intact and of course heres a photo showing that it was. And I
was trying to be careful, but Im not sure if the intruder or intruders, if they were coming through
would really be thinking, Hang on, theres a cobweb there. I must leave that intact.
CLEMENTE: Right.
RICHARDS: Particularly when so many other things were left at the crime scene.
CLEMENTE: The whole theory Lou Smit espouses is that this suitcase was left here in order for
the intruder or intruders to get out through this window. You gotta figure out a way to get out of
there and not further disturb whats left of these spider webs.
RICHARDS: Right. So Im gonna give this a go.
CLEMENTE: Youve completely wiped out that whole corner of spider webs.
RICHARDS: Right.
CLEMENTE: I mean its just completely gone now. And look at the disturbance that youve
made. This wouldve been very obvious to the crime scene investigators, but they did find the
web here and they didnt find that disturbance.
RICHARDS: Right. So it makes no sense.
(COMMERCIALS)
RICHARDS: Certainly over the last few months, weve heard about all the theories that this was
someone outside the family, an intruder, coming through the basement, who assaulted her
sexually.

Page 50 of 84

CLEMENTE: It says in the autopsy that there was some signs of this. Dr. Spitz, you reviewed
the autopsy findings and the injuries and the sequencing. Can you tell us a little bit about that?
SPITZ: An autopsy technician brought for me a microscopic slide that was from the genital tract
of this young lady
CLEMENTE: Mm-hmm.
SPITZ: uh, JonBent.
CLEMENTE: Okay.
SPITZ: And I looked at that in the microscope. The amount of damage is almost nonexistent.
There is a few fibers of wood in this microscopic slide.
LEE: Really look at that size, its microscopic.
SPITZ: You probably wouldnt even have seen with the naked eye.
CLEMENTE: I think theres two possibilities. One is that that piece of wood was actually
inserted there and the other is that its secondary transfer.
LEE: A secondary transfer could be anything even during transfer the body, because dont forget
the body had been moved up then moved quite a few times
CLEMENTE: Right.
LEE: in different locations, then the blanket was put on, so many manipulations at the scene.
KOLAR: But what would account for the blood in her underwear?
LEE: Underwear was only spot, could be from any other transfer. Its really no sexual assault
here.
SPITZ: No. This finding is not indicative of a sexual assault.
RICHARDS: Theyre looking for the wrong type of person if this was not
LEE: Exactly.
RICHARDS: a sexually motivated crime, which we believe that it was not.
LEE: Mm-hmm.
MALE REPORTER: Police in Boulder, Colorado are reportedly investigating some new
suspects.
MALE NEWS ANCHOR: Sources close to the case say the suspect had lived in Boulder.
Page 51 of 84

FEMALE REPORTER: Investigators moved in John Mark Karr.


RICHARDS: Certainly JonBent being in the beauty pageant circuit and the pictures that were
seen of her, made up, could have you believe that this was a sexually motivated crime and many
people bought into that.
CLEMENTE: What about the other injuries, the two marks on JonBents lower back?
SPITZ: The two marks could have been from a stun gun.
RICHARDS: The stun gun played a very key part in Lou Smits theory.
CLEMENTE: Lou Smit suggested that a stun gun, possibly an air taser, was used to subdue
JonBent. Were gonna actually do a demonstration with a stun gun to try to determine if it
leaves marks that are consistent with this or not consistent at all.
KOLAR: This is the sergeant with my department whos volunteered to be tased today. Um,
weve all been tased previously during our law enforcement training.
CLEMENTE: We appreciate you being a test subject for us and were gonna take this very
seriously. We have medical personnel standing by in case theres any problem.
KOLAR: Jay, you get up on the pad here and face the other direction.
CLEMENTE: If the same amount of voltage goes through an adult male, or a forty-five pound
six year old child, would the effect be magnified on a small person versus a large
SPITZ: Sure, sure. Its magnified.
KOLAR: When you are ready you can say ready, but look that way.
JAY: Im ready.
KOLAR: So in the long enforcement setting were usually are indicating Taser, taser!
JAY: Ah! Im okay.
CLEMENTE: How did that make you feel?
JAY: Adrenaline rush. Hard to stand still right now.
CLEMENTE: Are you subdued at all?
JAY: No, I just wanted to get away from it.
CLEMENTE: Would you mind if we looked at your back?
RICHARDS: Yeah, you can see the two marks now quite clearly.
Page 52 of 84

SPITZ: This looks to me like an irritation.


RICHARDS: Its a lot wider than what I thought it would be. So it projects out.
CLEMENTE: Jay, generally, how much to you weigh?
JAY: 215.
CLEMENTE: Okay, 215 pounds. Thats like almost five times what JonBent Ramsey weighed.
What do you think the experience would have been like for a 6 year old girl who only weighed
45 pounds?
JAY: I think especially if you were asleep when that happened, it would be fear and you know,
screaming and trying to get away from it.
CLEMENTE: The whole theory was that it would subdue her, or make her unconscious.
RICHARDS: It does the actual opposite. It just doesnt make any sense. I mean, do we want to
try a second round?
CLEMENTE: Well I think thats
RICHARDS: Depends on how Jays feeling, but weve obviously, that particular one we did
over your clothing.
CLEMENTE: When youre ready, Jay, well
KOLAR: Taser, taser.
JAY: Oww! Oh, God!
RICHARDS: That was even more violent.
CLEMENTE: So how does it feel?
JAY: This soon afterwards, I just feel everything. I mean, my hearts still slowing down.
RICHARDS: Does it make you feel energized, or ?
JAY: Yes.
RICHARDS: It does.
CLEMENTE: They dont look anything like that.
SPITZ: If this were done to this kid, you would have a scream from this kid that would have goes
through the entire building. Everybody in that house would have heard it.
Page 53 of 84

(COMMERCIALS)
(EXCEPTS FROM NEWS FOOTAGE)
NEWSCASTER: The investigation of JonBent Ramseys murder is focused on her parents, but
the boulder district attorney says no more. New DNA evidence clears the Ramsey family. In a
letter she writes, To the extent that we may have contributed in any way to the public perception
that you might have been involved in this crime, I am deeply sorry.
(END OF EXCERPTS)
CLEMENTE: DNA technology has evolved significantly since 1996. Today trace DNA, or what
some people call touch DNA, can actually be found in multiple situations and you have to
actually understand what is the significance in any particular case. Since twenty years ago,
DNA has gone from the science where we needed a lot of material in order to find something
LEE: The first generation DNA.
CLEMENTE: Right. But now we only need one or two cells.
RICHARDS: Significantly, there is a foreign DNA profile found in JonBents underwear. Due
to this many people believe this DNA profile one day will match to the killer.
LEE: The panty, heres some foreign DNA was found but not to any family members. That
DNA maybe has no forensic value, it just has some innocent explanation got there. Its not a true
piece of physical evidence to link somebody or to exonerate somebody. Come to my Institute of
Forensic Science Center laboratory. Should test again for DNA. That can shed some light on the
whole case.
(EXCERPTS FROM NEWS FOOTAGE)
NEWSCASTERS: DNA evidence clears the Ramsey family. DNA found in JonBents
underwear has strong evidence of an intruder. Police should be looking for suspects outside of
the Ramsey family.
(END OF EXCERPTS)
CLEMENTE: The DNA that was found on her panties and in her underwear tested against
hundreds of people, and it hasnt matched any of them. What does that tell you about the
circumstances of this?
LEE: Many times DNA not prove somebody guilty or innocent. Its not. Where the DNA was
from, how that was transferred. You have to put all the pieces together.
CLEMENTE: Right.
Page 54 of 84

LEE: Like a puzzle. Any reconstruction or scientific examination of the case will have to go
through that rigorous testing.
CLEMENTE: The flashlight was found in the kitchen. The garrote, in the knots. The clothing.
All of those things could be re-tested today, and I believe that more evidence would be found.
These are not the actual items of evidence. We are doing representative tests on these and what
you can find, how you find it, how you collect the evidence, and what it tells you.
SPITZ: A blow to the head on the right side the flashlight fits to perfection.
LEE: Flashlight and batteries.
CLEMENTE: So should I take off my gloves and see what I leave on there?
LEE: Exactly.
CLEMENTE: When it was recovered, this flashlight didnt have any prints on it at all. Seems
like any time somebody would push this button youd leave a pretty good thumbprint there, but
lets just try it. So what Im going to do is Im going to open this up, and Im going to pick up
these batteries and Im gonna put them in and just handle them like I normally would.
LEE: Lets collect that.
CLEMENTE: So youre trying to get samples from all the areas.
LEE: Battery surface actually is excellent for fingerprints.
CLEMENTE: And they didnt find any fingerprints on the battery surfaces. Thats unusual,
because once theyre put into the cylinder here, theyre fairly protected, and you would think that
any fingerprints would stay on them. Its possible somebody used gloves, wiped down the
outside of this, and then wiped down the batteries and then put them back in.
RICHARDS: (UNINTELLIGBILE) the flashlight. Did the family claim it?
CLEMENTE: There was a gift, of a flashlight given by John Andrew, Johns son from the first
marriage that was at least described in the same way.
LEE: So its so crucial to establish this is from the home, or somebody else brought that. We
should check DNA.
CLEMENTE: Right.
LEE: Not only outside. Also the battery.

Page 55 of 84

CLEMENTE: On the original garrote we know there may be on the part of the knot that is tied
up, there may be DNA in there that we cant get access to if the knot is never untied. It seems to
be pretty strong, weve got to pull it tight.
LEE: If we get the real evidence, we can get the DNA from this area.
CLEMENTE: So these are packages that you bought, you purchased from different stores?
RICHARDS: Yeah.
LEE: The principle of this is to find out a new panty, whether or not we can find foreign DNA.
CLEMENTE: Right.
LEE: What we do, we make a microscopic examination, look at any indication and body fluid.
So this has just come out of the package, nobody touched this package?
RICHARDS: No.
DR. LEE: Try to see any material, can you see that?
RICHARDS: Mhm.
CLEMENTE: Yeah.
LEE: Can you see that two dot? That even could be a blood stamp, too. DNA found on the
panty, not necessarily the suspect deposited.
RICHARDS: Right.
LEE: Because this is a new panty, we know nobody wear it. So we just collect a sample. If we
have DNA, then that DNA has to be during the manufacture process.
CLEMENTE: Right. Certainly if somebody packaged that in Thailand and sent it over here and
left their DNA on it, they had nothing to do with this crime, they werent even in this country.
LEE: Thats a possibility. We collect all this evidence, then were going to analyze. Once we
get the results, Im going to see you in Colorado, maybe answer some of the questions, whether
or not this transferred DNA can be explained.
CLEMENTE: Dr. Lee, how are you doing?
LEE: We got some results.
CLEMENTE: Oh, really? Thats good to hear. These are not the actual items of evidence, but
we wanted to see what evidence you could get off the flashlight, the garrote, and panties.

Page 56 of 84

LEE: So the first is the garrote.


CLEMENTE: The part of the knot that is tied up, there may be DNA in there.
LEE: That shows XY, thats a male. Its you, CLEMENTE.
CLEMENTE: Okay.
LEE: In addition, all these markers.
CLEMENTE: Wow.
RICHARDS: Thats fascinating.
LEE: Now well look at the flashlight. The battery gave results.
RICHARDS: And now would you have seen this back in 1996 or is this all now, about
technology advancing?
LEE: At that time, for some reason they only did four markers. But here we did sixteen markers.
CLEMENTE: Thats a very strong sample then.
LEE: Very strong sample.
CLEMENTE: The DNA in the new technology is sensitive enough. Easily detect. Some of the
samples clearly match one of us, or a mixture. And some, for example, the panties, did not
match any of us because we did not touch. New, never worn before but had DNA on them.
CLEMENTE: The new panties
LEE: The new pantiesjust random packageremember we opened it up?
CLEMENTE: Yes.
LEE: We all wear the gloves, so nobody touched the panty, and the panty had DNA.
CLEMENTE: Right.
LEE: Which indicative that DNA was left on during the manufacture process, when a worker
handled the panty. And more likely a female because we found an X chromosome.
CLEMENTE: So a female worker either sewed them together or packaged them, and left
transferred DNA on there. What the district attorney at the time, Mary Lacy said, was we do not
consider your immediate family including you, your wife Patsy, and your son Burke to be under
any suspicion in the commission of this crime.

Page 57 of 84

RICHARDS: She says, unexplained DNA on the victim of a crime is powerful evidence. The
match of male DNA on two separate items of clothing worn by the victim at the time of the
murder makes it clear to us that an unknown male handled these items.
CLEMENTE: Dr. Lee, isnt it true that DNA can transfer from one garment thats worn on top of
another garment? That just the friction pulling it on, wearing it, moving back and forth can
transfer.
LEE: There are some studies even say, send a shirt to laundry sometimes can have a transfer
come back.
CLEMENTE: It seems like District Attorney Lacey should not have exonerated anybody based
on just transferred DNA.
LEE: Im not a lawyer, so I dont know. I only look at the scientific evidence.
CLEMENTE: Got it.
LEE: DNA recovered from the case sample probably should be ignored. The DNA on the
garrote is more important, the note, the pen. If they still have the flashlight, its not too late.
RICHARDS: We really want to get the Boulder Police Department to work with you to reexamine everything.
CLEMENTE: I think they have to take your recommendations and re-test with newer
technology, with more reliable DNA tests, all the evidence that they have. DNA is reliable
evidence if you interpret it properly.
LEE: We can all look at it, and once we get the result we should let the evidence speak for itself.
STANLEY: You know from looking at everything that weve discussed, going back to the very
basics, someone has died inside this house, okay. How did it happen and whos responsible for
it?
CLEMENTE: When we put it all together, is there anybody here that has any opinion about
whether or not this was a staged crime scene?
RICHARDS: (UNINTELLIGIBLE)
FITZGERALD: It is not a foreign faction who committed this crime.
CLEMENTE: All right, but what are the circumstance under which people stage crime scenes?
RICHARDS: Attention to be focused elsewhere.

Page 58 of 84

CLEMENTE: Yeah, to push the attention somewhere, to redesignate what happened as


something other than it was
RICHARDS: Something else
CLEMENTE: or cover up to try to protect. Protect themselves. Protect somebody else.
FITZGERALD: To me this crime happened within the four walls of that home.
SPITZ: Yes, I believe this is an inside of the house killing.
LEE: So I think you can eliminate the outside intruder hypothesis. So more likely its cover up
something. What to cover up?
(COMMERCIALS)
GRETCHEN SMITH (ON THE PHONE): Hello.
CLEMENTE: Hello Gretchen, its Jim Clemente. I called you yesterday.
GRETCHEN (ON THE PHONE): Where did you get my name from?
CLEMENTE: Do you know James Kolar?
GRETCHEN (ON THE PHONE): I do. So hes working with you?
CLEMENTE: Yes he is.
GRETCHEN (ON THE PHONE): Okay
CLEMENTE: Hello.
GRETCHEN: Hello.
CLEMENTE: How you doing?
GRETCHEN: Hi, come on in.
CLEMENTE: Im Jim Clemente.
GRETCHEN: Im Gretchen Smith. Hi.
CLEMENTE: Gretchen, nice to meet you.
KOLAR: Im Jim. Gretchen how are you?
GRETCHEN: Hi. I remember you.
KOLAR: Nice to see you.
Page 59 of 84

GRETCHEN: I was hired on to Boulder Police Department in 1990; just regular patrol and I
worked the streets for several years.
CLEMENTE: What did you think about the fear in the community that theres a killer on the
loose?
GRETCHEN: Well the fear from inside the department was not felt because some people felt
that they knew who the murderers were
KOLAR: Mm hm.
GRETCHEN: however we wanted to make the community feel comfortable, so we would do
extra patrol
CLEMENTE: Mm hm.
GRETCHEN: diligently.
CLEMENTE: I noticed going through the press releases that the Boulder Police made, they were
pretty bold in saying they did not believe that there was a killer on the loose and the community
was safe.
GRETCHEN: I think there was not a killer on loose or not some random killer roaming the
neighborhoods looking for little girls.
KOLAR: There had been no other similar cases in the metro area either, either leading up to or
after this event.
GRETCHEN: No, nothing. This was a one of a kind.
KOLAR: So that mustve been pretty frustrating to see what was reported in the media about a
killer being on the loose.
GRETCHEN: I think the media was led to believe that. There were other voices speaking to the
media.
CLEMENTE: Who was that?
GRETCHEN: Uh, there was the DAs office
ALEX HUNTER: I want to say something to the person or persons that committed this crime.
GRETCHEN: Even though that may not have been the attitude of what was actually going on in
the case.
ALEX HUNTER: We will see that justice is served in this case and that you pay for what you
did.
Page 60 of 84

GRETCHEN: The JonBent case destroyed moral completely.


CLEMENTE: Really?
GRETCHEN: There was no moral. You know when youre a police officer; you want to work
with the District Attorneys office.
CLEMENTE: Sure.
GRETCHEN: You should be partners in your job
CLEMENTE: Because the goal
GRETCHEN: and we werent at all. The goal is to find the bad guy and put him behind bars.
CLEMENTE: What do you think was the basis behind that?
GRETCHEN: Well, the parents of the child, they had money. The District Attorneys office and
some of the administration did not want to hear that an affluent member of the community was
guilty of a crime like this. They didnt want to hear that. I dont think they wanted to solve this
crime. And if they had to go down a different path that might not have been the truth, I think they
were willing to do that.
ALEX HUNTER: We do not have sufficient evidence to warrant the filing of charges against
anyone who has been investigated at this time.
REPORTER: Police detective Steve Thomas left the case and left behind a condemning
resignation letter. Thomas implied the Ramseys had intimidated the DAs office saying quote,
Attempts to gather evidence were met with refusals and instead it was suggested that we ask for
permission from the Ramseys before proceeding.
RICHARDS: Steve Thomas was certainly determined and committed to find out who killed
JonBent. Good to meet you. Thank you
STEVE THOMAS (THOMAS): Pleasure to meet you, Steve Thomas. This is likely the last
time Im going to talk about the case publicly, but Ive been told that law enforcement uh and
very credible and professional people were trying to make a difference and I knew that after this
20 year milestone, this might be the last opportunity, uh to be on the record. So I appreciate you
having me.
CLEMENTE: So why dont we just get right down to it?
THOMAS: You bet.
RICHARDS: So what did your investigation reveal about Patsys involvement?

Page 61 of 84

THOMAS: I think she was the author of that ransom note. We know that was her pad. Her
fingerprints were on that pad. The Sharpie pen we located that and ink matched it to the Ransom
note which bore handwriting characteristics that some experts said were remarkably similar to
Patsys. If we found that body of evidence in the possession of any third party, uh thats pretty
damning evidence, but in this case, for some reason, uh the district attorney wanted to create
some parallel universe why it wasnt hers. I find it preposterous.
CLEMENTE: Did you feel you were hamstrung from the beginning?
THOMAS: Ah, its the understatement of the, of the day Jim.
CLEMENTE: Andokay so who was responsible for that?
THOMAS: The District Attorney.
CLEMENTE: The District Attorney?
THOMAS: Of course. We never got search warrants for uh phone records, for credit card
records. We were forced to search tens of thousands of Home Depot receipts by hand.
CLEMENTE: The DA never gave you any kind of warrants to get credit card records?
THOMAS: No.
RICHARDS: And that would just be standard practice
STEVE: Standard phone, phone records.
RICHARDS: in a case like this.
THOMAS: The police department engaged me to conduct the first official interviews with the
Ramseys, uh and I was, as was the FBI, furious when we learned, uh that they had been provided
uh, copies of police reports to prepare for a police interview uh, just contradictory to everything.
CLEMENTE: The whole point of the interview is to get their information from them
THOMAS: Thats exactly right.
CLEMENTE: to find out exactly what happened before their tainted with other information.
THOMAS: Thats right. I, I, I dont disagree with you. In June of 98 the core team of detectives
along with the FBI agents and the personnel from the DAs office congregated in a small
classroom, uh because we had been suggesting, we need a grand jury. People are slamming the
doors in our face. Uh we need subpoena power. We need to collect evidence and I remember
leaning against this cinderblock wall as your former colleague Bill Hagmaier
CLEMENTE: He used to be my boss, yeah.
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THOMAS: said and Im think Im quoting verbatim, Mr. District Attorney, no disrespect
intended, but a little girl is moldering in the ground and something needs to be done. Are you
going to call a grand jury? And Ill never forget Alex Hunter, the elected District Attorneys
response, I need to get with my people. This is a political decision. I leaned back after working
this case for two years, against that cinderblock wall and thought to myself, I cant do this
anymore. I wont do this anymore. The next day the FBI agents who were so vital and integral to
this investigation said, We can no longer be a part of this.
CLEMENTE: So, but he did eventually convene a grand jury?
RICHARDS: They hear from key and significant witnesses and then what happens?
THOMAS: Uh, well Iin October of 1999 the District Attorney, upon the grand jury
concluding, had a press conference and Ias much of an insider as anybody on this case
CLEMENTE: Sure.
THOMAS: was led to believe that the grand jury had disbanded uh with, without any further
comment or vote. Knowing that all of the persons involved were sworn to a lifetime of grand
jury secrecy, he folded those true bills up in effect, put them in his pocket, gave that carefully
worded press conference that fooled me and everybody else. And for 14 years, nobody had any
idea until a grand juror stepped forward and disclosed, Hey we voted. We voted to indict.
FEMALE REPORTER: The Boulder District court judge today approved the release of
documents in the JonBent Ramsey case.
MALE REPORTER: The Boulder Daily Cameras reported earlier this year that a grand jury had
voted for an indictment of the little girls parents John and Patsy Ramsey. Alex Hunter, the
District Attorney at the time of the grand jury chose not to prosecute the Ramseys.
THOMAS: Some cases in particular never leave you. How can you look back at this case now 20
years on uh, and not be angry?
RICHARDS: Everyone forgot about JonBent.
THOMAS: Thats right.
RICHARDS: It became about politics and agendas and creating a smoke screen. Why?
THOMAS: Welcome to the Ramsey Investigation.
(COMMERCIALS)
RICHARDS: If the grand jury, those who heard all the evidence and heard from all the witnesses
felt that there were a grounds to indict the Ramseys then Alex Hunter, you would, you know, its
surprising that he decided not to prosecute them.
Page 63 of 84

ALEX HUNTER: The Boulder grand jury has completed its work and will not return. No
charges have been filed. Yet, I must report to you, that I and my prosecution task force believe
we do not have sufficient evidence to warrant the filing of charges against anyone who has been
investigated at this time.
CLEMENTE: So in light of the fact that we now know the grand jury did sign the two charges
for Patsy and the two charges for John. It really puts in a different light the statement that Alex
Hunter made in 1999 when the grand jury concluded its proceedings. The way he said it was
very misleading as if they did not want to file any charges; but then later, he says I and my task
force decided that theres not enough evidence to charge anybody. But he made it sound like the
grand jury also agreed with him, not that he was actually totally contradicting what the grand
jury did.
RICHARDS: Right, I mean, the words seemed to be very carefully chosen.
CLEMENTE: Yeah.
RICHARDS: It was in the public interest to know that actually the grand jury did return and
recommends the charges for Patsy and John, but you would never understand that as we never
did at the time.
CLEMENTE: Hello, is this Alex Hunter? How you doing? My names Jim Clemente, Im a
retired FBI Agent. Im actually trying to help bring closure to the JonBent Ramsey case. You
know, were going into it with an open mind cause obviously we dont want to predetermine
results but we do want to talk to anybody who has actual experience on the case so I wondered if
you would be willing to talk to me? Okay, well, the call ended. I dont know if he ended it or,
RICHARDS: I would call back
CLEMENTE: or it just broke.
RICHARDS: cause it couldve just been reception.
CLEMENTE: Yeah, Im sorry, I dont know what happened either, it could be my bad service,
um. Well, I mean, we literally just want totheres a lot of just misdirection and we want to, you
know, we want to just sort of cut through all that. What are the, whats really going on, what
really happened when you were at the helm.
RICHARDS: Mention Dr. Lee.
CLEMENTE: Um, the difference is though Im, Im working with Dr. Lee andyeah, hes a
great guy and he speaks very highly of you. Hmm, and what, Im sorrywhat statute is that, um,
about? But the, the statute actually prevents you from talking about the evidence? Okay. Bye,
bye. He said that the difficulty is that its very hard to talk about this case without getting into
grand jury information and, of course, he cannot discuss that.
Page 64 of 84

ALEX HUNTER: Under no circumstances will I or any of my advisors discuss grand jury
proceedings today or ever unless ordered by the court.
CLEMENTE: Laws in each state vary dramatically so its really important for us to talk to an
attorney who has not only worked in law, but in Boulder, Colorado to tell us the nuances of how
that law is applied.
RICHARDS: So on or between December 25 and December 26, 1996, John Bennet Ramsey did
unlawfully, knowingly, recklessly and feloniously commit a child to be unreasonably placed in a
situation which posed a threat of injury to the childs life or health which resulted in the death of
JonBent Ramsey. The other count was John Bennet Ramsey did unlawfully, knowingly and
feloniously render assistance to a person with intent to hinder, delay and prevent the discovery,
detention, apprehension, prosecution, conviction and punishment of such a person knowing the
person being assisted has committed and was suspected of the crime of Murder in the First
Degree and Child Abuse Resulting in Death.
CLEMENTE: Does that mean that theyre charging John with assisting Patsy if she did it and
theyre charging Patsy with assisting John if he did it.
LISA POLANSKY (LISA): Its legally possible in the state of Colorado for John to be
assisting Patsy, Patsy to be assisting John.
CLEMENTE: Wouldnt they both then also be charged with the underlying crime, as opposed to
just
LISA: Yes. Normally, if they do an accessory charge which here is generally after the fact, its
usually somebody else. My opinion would be that theres a third person.
CLEMENTE: The only third person thats left is Burke Ramsey.
LISA: And its a complicated area. Colorados minimum age for prosecution is ten; ten years
old. The science behind it, of course, would be that the child under ten is not psychologically
able to commit a crime and they use the, the old common law term which is infancy which is to
say that they cannot form the intent. If you look at the brain science, um, as we know the frontal
lobe is not fully developed and thats where the executive functioning occurs. And so, its
difficult to say well, a kid clearly made a decision to do x, y, z with regard to Burke. He was
nine
CLEMENTE: Nine and eleven months.
LISA: at the time of the crime.
CLEMENTE: Right.
LISA: So you have to go with the time of the crime.
Page 65 of 84

CLEMENTE: Right.
LISA:I dont know how they would prosecute him because of that floor, that minimum age of
10. Lets just say it was, you know, you could say negligent homicide. Even if he was, you
know, prosecuted now, you cant even prosecute him for that because he was not yet ten.
CLEMENTE: This is the screening room; itll be a lot better than, than to look at it from a
laptop.
RICHARDS: After JonBent was killed, Burkes interviewed two weeks later by someone from
the Department of Social Services at the behest of the family. They put the condition on it that it
cannot be a Boulder police officer or detective.
CLEMENTE: Im gonna be really interested in, in looking at his behavior. Im a retired FBI
Profiler, Im an expert in the areas of child sex crimes, child abductions and child homicides.
RICHARDS: So this is the interview with Dr. Suzanne Bernhardt. As a criminal behavioral
analyst, Ive reviewed and advised on thousands of cases and I have a Masters in Forensic and
Legal Psychology.
CLEMENTE: Lets look right at the beginning.
(EXCERPTS FROM VIDEOTAPE)
DR. SUZANNE BERNHARDT: So what did they tell you about why they wanted you to come
talk to me?
BURKE: To see if they can find who you know what.
DR. BERNHARDT: Well, let me tell you a couple things, Burke, first. My job is partly to get to
know you as best as I can. Um, and make sure that youre okay cause things are kind of been
hard, I imagine. Okay. Are you going to school?
BURKE: No, because were trying to stay away from the press. My friend said that after school
theres all these media people waiting there going Hello, hello. Did you see Burke in class
today? Um, no, I did not. I think he was absent. Oh, thanks.
DR. BERNHARDT: So do you feel like youre pretty safe?
BURKE: Yeah.
DR. BERNHARDT: Yeah? Do you ever worry about it?
BURKE: Not really.
DR. BERNHARDT: No?
Page 66 of 84

BURKE: Im usually just playing my Nintendo.


DR. BERNHARDT: Yeah.
(END OF EXCERPTS)
RICHARDS: Alright, stop right there.
CLEMENTE: Well, I havent seen any indication yet that this child has been through a recent
trauma.
RICHARDS: He seems to have gone into sort of playful mode and the tone of it is completely
off.
CLEMENTE: His sister disappears in the middle of the night; she ends up dead in the basement
and he doesnt
RICHARDS: Worry about himself or worry that they may come back for him. I mean thats
another thing that normally plays on a childs mind.
CLEMENTE: Sure, especially somebody whos that young. I mean theyre still very vulnerable.
RICHARDS: He was in the house at the time and doesnt seem to be
CLEMENTE: Concerned at all.
(EXCERPTS FROM VIDEOTAPE)
DR. BERNHARDT: Do you have any secrets do you think?
BURKE: Um, I probably do
DR. BERNHARDT: You do.
BURKE: but I dont really remember them.
DR. BERNHARDT: Yeah.
BURKE: And if I did remember anything I dont think Id tell you.
DR. BERNHARDT: Why not? Im a good person to tell secrets to.
BURKE: Because theyre secrets.
DR. BERNHARDT: Thats true. I was just kidding.
(END OF EXCERPTS)

Page 67 of 84

CLEMENTE: Alright well, whats interesting here, a couple of things. Any trained child
interview specialist should know that the most important things are the things that people tell
children are secrets. Those are generally the crimes that are committed against them and the
crimes that they witnessed. Over the course of my career Ive actually attended training and
given training to child interview specialists. I dont know why she just totally gave up on that.
RICHARDS: Do you think she might circle back to it?
CLEMENTE: I dont know, well see.
(EXCERPTS FROM VIDEOTAPE)
DR. BERNHARDT: So have things changed at your house a lot?
BURKE: Uh, a lot, yeah.
DR. BERNHARDT: Yeah, whats changed?
BURKE: Well, you know, police have it blocked off and stuff.
DR. BERNHARDT: Well, what about for you and your parents?
BURKE: You know, my parents are sometimes crying.
DR. BERNHARDT: Yes.
BURKE: But, Im, Im basically just going on with my life, you know?
(END OF EXCERPTS)
RICHARDS: Thats an odd turn of phrase to just go on with your life when your sisters been
murdered and found in your house. Im not sure you can just go on with your life. I mean
children are very resilient and they do get on with things but this is right in the eye of the storm;
everything has just happened. This is life-changing, this event, even for a nine-year-old boy.
(EXCERPTS FROM VIDEOTAPE)
BURKE: Im basically just going on with my life, you know?
DR. BERNHARDT: So what do you think happened?
BURKE: I know what happened.
DR. BERNHARDT: You mean when she got killed? How do you think that happened?
BURKE: I think, well, I, I, I, I asked my dad where did they find her body? And my dad, my dad
said I found it down in the basement, and so
Page 68 of 84

(END OF EXCERPTS)
CLEMENTE: Alright, hold up. So I know what happened, alright, when she was killed,
right? And he said, I asked my dad where did they find the body.
RICHARDS: You know its what hes not saying, what he would logically expect at that point is
asking what happened to her.
(EXCERPTS FROM VIDEOTAPE)
DR. BERNHARDT: So what do you think happened?
BURKE: I know what happened.
DR. BERNHARDT: You mean when she got killed? How do you think that happened?
BURKE: I think, well, I, I, I, I asked my dad where did they find her body? And my dad, my dad
said I found it down in the basement, and soI think that someone took her very quietly and
tiptoed down the basement and then maybe maybe took a knife out and he went. You know,
something like that.
DR. BERNHARDT: Do you think thats how she died?
BURKE: Or maybe a hammerhit her in the head maybe.
(END OF EXCERPTS)
CLEMENTE: You see that? Thats, thats a physical demonstration. Let me back that up just a
couple of seconds. Lets see that again.
(EXCERPTS FROM VIDEOTAPE)
BURKE: and then maybe took a knife out and he went. You know, something like that.
DR. BERNHARDT: Do you think thats how she died?
BURKE: Or maybe a hammerhit her in the head maybe.
(END OF EXCERPTS)
RICHARDS: You know its just odd that hes acting it out at all anyway. I mean most children
would not kind of future project this or reenact it in a room.
CLEMENTE: And then on top of it all, there is no emotion, no appropriate emotion at all about
this happening to his sister.
(EXCERPTS FROM VIDEOTAPE)
Page 69 of 84

DR. BERNHARDT: Do you think thats how she died?


BURKE: Or maybe a hammerhit her in the head maybe.
(END OF EXCERPTS)
JUDITH PHILLIPS: When Burke was born he was the apple of his parents eyes. He could do
no wrong, he got the full treatment of gifts and clothes and trips and you name it. But then when
JonBent came along and especially as she got older and her destiny was to be in the pageant
system
(EXCERPTS FROM VIDEOTAPE)
JONBENT: My name is JonBent Ramsey and Im five-and-a-half.
(END OF EXCERPTS)
JUDITH: That attention that Burke had switched from him to JonBent.
CLEMENTE: And how did he react to that? Do you know?
JUDITH: I think he had a bad uh, Burke had a bed temper. Its like he had a chip on his shoulder.
He had hit JonBent.
CLEMENTE: When was that?
JUDITH: Before the murder I would have to say it was probably a year and a half. They were
playing in the yard and apparently he hit her with a golf club right here.
CLEMENTE: And how did you find out about this?
JUDITH: Oh, I think I asked Patsy at the time when I was photographing them, what the scar
was. She said that the kids were playing and Burke lost his temper and hit her with a golf club.
After the murder, I took my daughter, Lindsay and myself,Cause Lindsay wanted to see Burke
and they open the door and escorted me into the living room and Patsy came in. You know after
talking to patsy for about ten minutes I went to get my daughter and there was Burke and I
walked up to him and he said in this terse voice Get away from me! Dont touch me. Leave me
alone. And I put up my arms and said, okay. I wont, I wont touch you. There was something
wrong.
(EXCERPTS FROM VIDEOTAPE)
DR. BERNHARD: So what did your parents tell you about your sister dying?
BURKE: I just now when I got there to the house for the kind of funeral type thing. My dad
says JonBent is in Heaven now. Just kinda burst into tears.
Page 70 of 84

DR. BERNHARD: Ill bet. How are they dealing with it now?
BURKE: I dont know, I kind forget about it cause Im just going beep.
DR. BERNHARD: Youre just playing videogames all the time.
BURKE: Go, go, go, go, go, go.
(END OF EXCERPTS)
(COMMERCIALS)
KOLAR: Burke not really receiving a lot of attention, the distancing that he seemed to indicate.
He might have developed some resentment and some anger, maybe perhaps toward his sister.
He never asked Detective Patterson, who interviewed maybe an hour after JonBent was found,
if his sister had been found, what happened to her, you know when theyre going to get her back.
Nothing about his sister.
RICHARDS: Given than JonBent was in the pageant circuit, and obviously that was Patsys
passion. So Patsys attention was very focused and taken up with JonBent, and of course I
wonder how that would have felt for Burke.
CLEMENTE: One other connection, internal, in this family that we havent discussed there
were reports that Burke had a history of scatological problems.
KOLAR: One of the former housekeepers, as we mentioned, had talked about him smearing
feces on a bathroom wall.
CLEMENTE: And there was a softball-sized ball of feces found in JonBents bed at some
point. After they sealed off JonBents room, the crime scene technicians went through it. They
apparently found feces spread on a box of candy that she had gotten the day before for
Christmas.
RICHARDS: The media perception or community perfection can be that theyre the perfect
family, but once you start to scratch the surface, you see that thats not the case.
CLEMENTE: Alright, so lets move on to the Schuler interviews. This is about 18 months after
JonBent died. Burke is now 11-and-a-half-years-old and hes being interviewed by Detective
Schuler.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: You know its been a long painful process for you up to now, hasnt
it? With your mom and dad?
BURKE: Probably.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: Why do you think youre here?
Page 71 of 84

BURKE: You wanna find out who killed my sister.


CLEMENTE: Its pretty clear that Burke is sort of acting like a smart aleck here, like Im smart
and Im proud of myself. You know, he lays back, so lets see how and if that changes.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: Did you hear mom and dad talking?
BURKE: I heard mom like going psycho.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: Going psycho?
BURKE: Yeah, like all like, you know.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: Did you go down to see whats going on?
BURKE: No, just stayed in bed.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: So what went through your mind then?
BURKE: That I thought, maybe JonBent was missing. But thats not that likely, so, you know,
what are the chances of that happening?
DETECTIVE SCHULER: Is there anything about that night, that if you can remember hearing
anything that night?
BURKE: I dont remember anything. Because I was sleeping, you know.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: Did you sleep
Burke: I always sleep really deeply and I can never hear anything.
CLEMENTE: When he says really deeply, never hear anything thats overselling. Hes
trying to convince Schuler rather than just convey that information, and typically when we see
that kind of overselling its because somebody is deceiving.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: What did you do next?
BURKE: Laid in bed with my eyes closed, trying to get to sleep. I was kind of wondering if
something bad happened, you know. Well something bad happened, but what, I was trying to
think of what might have happened.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: So you were curious?
BURKE: Yeah.
DETERCTIVE SCHULER: When youre curious about something, what do you normally do?
BURKE: Try to find out what the answer is.
Page 72 of 84

DETECTIVE SCHULER: Did you try and do that after mom came into the room?
BURKE: No, I figured somebody would probably come in and tell me or I would find out later
in the day.
RICHARDS: He knows that something is unfolding. Most children would jump out of bed,
probablyunless theyre being told stay where you areyou would expect him to be asking and
not just be accepting of when something unusual is unfolding.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: Now, when you go to bed at night, what was your normal routine? I
mean, would you get a snack before you went to bed?
BURKE: Um, I might get a snack. Not usually.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: If you got a snack what would you normally get? Or what would
mom let you have?
BURKE: Pudding or yogurt.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: Pudding and yogurt? Some parents let kids have cookies and candies
and cereal, fruit and things like that.
BURKE: Yeah, she would suggest like fruit.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: So what kind of fruits would you typically have at home?
BURKE: Like pineapple, maybe.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: Yeah, do you like that?
BURKE: Yeah.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: Okay. Is that your favorite fruit?
BURKE: Probably.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: What was JonBents favorite snack?
BURKE: I dont think she had a snack.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: What about pineapple? Did she like pineapple.
BURKE: Yeah, she liked pineapple a lot.
RICHARDS: So one of the key issues with this case comes back to something that might look
quite innocuous and inconsequential, but it also tells us a lot about what probably went on.

Page 73 of 84

CLEMENTE: In JonBents small intestine, there was a piece of organic material that looks like
pineapple.
LEE: I want to know the condition of the pineapple.
SPITZ: You mean, degree of digestion? Did the pathology report indicate what the pineapple
looked like, or the gastric contents?
CLEMENTE: What it says is, the proximal portion of the small intestine contains fragmented
pieces of yellow to light green tan apparent vegetable or fruit material which may represent
fragments of pineapple.
RICHARDS: The remainder of the small intestine is unremarkable.
LEE: Which means, its way after the meal.
SPITZ: They had just had been for dinner at the Whites. That suggests that the meal had been
ingested some time to allow digestion, and evacuation from the stomach.
CLEMENTE: So she completely digested her dinner, and after that, she then ate this pineapple.
SPITZ: Correct, thats correct. Chances are she ate a modest amount of food that day, but she
digested it, so youre talking about hours.
LEE: So you start linking all those dots, it gives us a possible timeline.
SPITZ: Yes, you approximately know the time that they came back home.
KOLAR: JonBent was asleep when they got back.
RICHARDS: We know that John Ramsey put her to bed.
SPITZ: The pineapple was ingested subsequently.
CLEMENTE: We do know that JonBents, reportedly, her favorite dessert was pineapple and
milk. Theres a bowl that looks like its pineapple with milk sitting on the table.
LEE: The bowl of pineapple really had quite a few pieces, so something interrupted them
CLEMENTE: Interrupted.
LEE: they did not finish eating.
CLEMENTE: Dr. Spitz, do you want to look at the dining room?
SPITZ: Yeah, I would like to see the bowl with the pineapple.
CLEMENTE: There we go.
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RICHARDS: So, Dr. Spitz, this is the original picture of the pineapple.
CLEMENTE: What we know from forensics is that both Burkes and Patsys fingertips are on
the bowl, and Burkes are on the teacup. Patsy had said, I think, that she actually could not have
prepared this because this size spoon is actually too big for a bowl like that, so she would never
have done that. Did Burke prepare himself some tea and pineapple and milk?
RICHARDS: There are fingertips on the bowl, and on the tea.
SPITZ: Were JonBents fingerprints on any of this?
RICHARDS: They were not.
CLEMENTE: But its certainly reasonable to believe that JonBent may have snatched one
piece.
SPITZ: Right, directly with her fingers. For estimating time of death, this is important.
CLEMENTE: Isnt it possible that JonBent came down and saw that Burke was eating this, and
took one piece? She didnt touch the bowl, she didnt touch the spoon
SPITZ: You know, I have three grandchildren myself. Kids will do that. Theyll go by and pick
out a piece with their fingers.
RICHARDS: Right. And being a bit cheeky, and then maybe running off.
SPITZ: Swallowing is a voluntary act.
RICHARDS: Right.
SPITZ: You have to want to swallow. If she was wanting to swallow, she was alive and
conscious.
CLEMENTE: Do you think this could have been the tipping point that started the the entire rest
of the cascade of events that happened on the day she died?
SPITZ: Could be.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: Can you tell me what this picture is?
BURKE: Thats the dining room table.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: Can you describe that to me?
BURKE: Its a bowl ofohsomethinglooks like glass with a tea bag in it.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: Does that look like cereal inside there?
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BURKE: No, it looks a little big, one piece right there for cereal. Maybe like fruit, there
wouldnt be a spoon in it. I dunno.
RICHARDS: Such a simple question to ask, so why isnt he just saying what it is? Hes evading
any answer and is uncomfortable about answering. This should be an insignificant conversation.
CLEMENTE: He looks like hes about to jump out of his seat, and he was like leaning all the
way over the picture. It was really weird how he did that. Its a very dramatic change in
behavior. I think hes aware that that piece of pineapple in JonBents stomach actually creates a
major problem in terms of the timeline of when and how she was killed.
(COMMERCIALS)
DETECTIVE SCHULER: Would you ever go downstairs in the basement and play?
BURKE: Yeah, I had a train, electric train there.
DETECTIVE SCHULER: How about the last year you lived there? Did you play there much?
BURKE: Umsort of.
KOLAR: When the Boulder Police Department asked me to investigate the JonBent case, I was
looking at the stun gun, and the abrasions. And the autopsy described them as abrasions versus
burn marks. Even the Taser company said, these are not the type of marks that would have been
left by one of their stun guns. When I asked for the one to one photos to be done of these, with
the air Taser and as youve seen the stun gun marks did not align with the weapon that was
being proposed.
RICHARDS: Right.
KOLAR: And I thought that was pretty significant.
RICHARDS: Right. And these, these particular wounds, theyre on her side.
KOLAR: They were on her lower left back if I recall.
RICHARDS: Right.
KOLAR: And so a Sargent at my office said, hey I might have found something that could
possibly be responsible for these injuries. He talked about the O-gauge track, and I asked
Boulder PD to do some one to one photos with this as well as with the train tracks. These pins
that connect the tracks together, you can see that the scaled pictures of the two outside pins of the
train track matched exactly to the injuries on JonBent. Youve got this train room and pieces of
track here in this room, and then there were pieces of train track in the crime scene video that
were on the floor in Burkes room as well. I thought it was an incredible discovery, to find a toy
in the house that could have been responsible for these injuries.
Page 76 of 84

SPITZ: If you look carefully at those two marks in her back, there is a central defect within each
of the marks. That defect is from something penetrated through the skin. She was obviously
without a blood circulation at the time, and the reason is that she had no circulation is that there
was no evidence of blood in the pictures that were taken of those two marks.
RICHARDS: So if we think that JonBent took the blow to the head, you know shes on the
floor, she doesnt seem to be breathing or shes not conscious then somebody using a piece of
train track
KOLAR: Trying to see if they can get a response from her, waking JonBent. Is this something
an adult would try to use to get a response from an unconscious girl? An adult would have been
calling 9-1-1 for an ambulance.
RICHARDS: Right.
KOLAR: Like the note pad, and the pen that was used for the ransom note, this was another
piece of evidence that could have been used n this assault on JonBent, and it was in the home,
in the train room downstairs as well as in Burkes bedroom.
DR. SPITZ: You know, I would have to conclude that its either this or something like it.
(COMMERCIALS)
RICHARDS: Jim and I have certainly tried to speak with John and Burke and really just give
them an opportunity to speak.
CLEMENTE: Weve called John and a number of times, left a number of messages on his
voicemail and they just did not want to talk to us. So from the statements that the Ramseys have
made, we need to look at what happened according to the family.
KOLAR: So, the morning of Christmas.
JOHN: Our normal tradition is that I go downstairs, turn on the Christmas tree lights. The kids
came down. We opened presents.
RICHARDS: They both got very nice gifts. JonBent got the bike and a doll.
KOLAR: After Christmas celebration and breakfast, they went to the White dinner party.
SPITZ: Well, then they came back home.
JOHN: Uh, JonBent was asleep in the back of the car. I carried her upstairs and put her to bed.
RICHARDS: And we know Burke is playing with a toy and he was with John.

Page 77 of 84

JOHN: He was putting together a little plastic toy that hed gotten for Christmas. I helped him
finish it so he could get off to bed and uh, then I went to bed myself.
KOLAR: Its the next morning, Patsy, she got up to go downstairs to put on some coffee.
LEE: Supposedly, when Mrs. Ramsey comes downstairs, she found a note on the stair steps.
CLEMENTE: Right. Either before she saw the note or after she saw the note, depending on
which statement she gave, she looked in JonBents room, saw she was gone.
FITZGERALD: John woke up. At some point she woke him up.
JOHN: I heard Patsy scream. I ran downstairs. She told me that JonBent was missing, that
there was a ransom note. I said call the police. Sometime during that frantic period we checked
on Burke. He appeared to be asleep to us.
CLEMENTE: They claim that he was asleep the entire time, that they never woke him up, never
asked him if he heard anything, never asked him if he knew where JonBent was.
KOLAR: Right.
CLEMENTE: Right after Patsy makes that 9-1-1 call, she calls two family friends, the Fernies
and the Whites and invites them to come over. This is when the police arrived.
KOLAR: And then its my understanding that John went downstairs in the basement.
JOHN: I was trying to determine how someone could have gotten into our house. I saw a
partially open window with broken glass and a suitcase beneath the window.
CLEMENTE: Then John came upstairs and apparently Detective Arndt asked him to search the
house from top to bottom. So again, John went down to the basement with Fleet White. He
went into the wine cellar.
JOHN: I opened the door and found JonBent.
CLEMENTE: When they find the body, he disturbs the crime scene, takes the tape off of her
mouth, uh, undoes one of the ligatures and then brings the body upstairs. He puts her on the
floor and then Linda Arndt moves the body to the living room on the floor there. Eventually the
body ends up in the morgue and an autopsy is performed.
SPITZ: In my view, this would have been so easy to figure out if they had not used lawyers who
shut the door to any additional uh
CLEMENTE: Investigation.
SPITZ: investigation.
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CLEMENTE: Yeah, I believe the Ramseys distanced themselves from the investigation while at
the same time claiming to the world through media appearances that they were fully cooperating.
JOHN: We spoke with the police approximately eight hours on the 26th, another two hours on the
27th. The impression that we havent spoken with the police is, is totally false.
CLEMENTE: Now that weve been investigating for months, weve been working together as a
team, I think we need to actually try to piece together everything that happened. Anybody who
does a legitimate investigation will look at all the evidence and see where that evidence takes
you. So we have to test every theory and the ones that remain, are the ones that are supported by
the evidence.
RICHARDS: I think some people have the theory that actually what had happened that night was
that after a stressful day of Christmas, that there was potentially an accident. JonBent, you
know, wet herself or the bed and that Patsy just sort of snapped.
FITZGERALD.: As we know in profiling, uh, past behavior is the best indicator of future
behavior and from my understanding of the Ramsey family, I dont believe theres been any
indicators of a violent domestic abuse.
STANLEY: That child is a huge investment for her. You know, a lot of time, a lot of effort has
gone into that child.
FITZGERLAD.: Money.
STANLEY: They had plans for that child, a lot of money, a lot of resources.
FITZGERALD: She seemed to uh, be living vicariously in, in some ways through her, her
daughter with the whole beauty pageant thing going on.
STANLEY: And just to, to snap and, and just all of a sudden take that away
FITZGERALD: Basically from zero to a 120
STANLEY: Yeah
FITZGERALD: with a hammer over the head, for mom.
LEE: I agree with you.
RICHARDS: Weve discussed the intruder theory that this was somebody from outside the
house.
SPITZ: No I dont believe that it was somebody from the outside.

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CLEMENTE: I dont think the evidence that stands up, to scientific or behavioral scrutiny,
indicates, that somebody came in from outside that home and killed JonBent.
RICHARDS: And of course, you know, the media is speculating on a pedophile or a sex
offender. Dr. Lee said that the DNA evidence in this case is totally erroneous.
LEE: That DNA has no forensic value. Its really no sexual assault here.
RICHARDS: James Im interested to know what exactly you think happened in the house that
night.
KOLAR: My hypothesis was that I think the Ramseys came home around 9:30, 10 oclock. I
think JonBent was asleep. I think John did carry her upstairs. Patsy remained downstairs with
Burke and served him the tea and the pineapple. I think that accounts for the physical evidence
as well as the latent prints. Then I think she got JonBent up to make sure she used the toilet so
she didnt wet the bed that night. JonBent was up, she may or may not have brushed her teeth.
That stuff was out on the counter. And then I think she was up and awake enough, but she
maybe was still hungry and she went downstairs. In the meantime, Patsy continued packing for
the Michigan trip. I think if Burke was upset about circumstances or Christmas presents, he
probably wouldve been upset about her trying to snag a piece of pineapple. Out of anger he
may have struck her with that flashlight.
SPITZ: I think we all agree on that.
CLEMENTE: Yeah.
FITZGERALD: Yes.
RICHARDS: Absolutely.
LEE: Sure, yeah, I agree with that.
SPITZ: Okay.
(USE OF FICTIONAL RECREATIONS VISUALLY DEPICTING KOLARS STATEMENTS)
LEE: However I think its not the intentional murder.
CLEMENTE: I agree. Theres no evidence to support it.
STAN: So you dont think there was malice of forethought? Something happened and caused
her death.
LEE: Spur of the moment or something like that.
CLEMENTE: Or accidental death. It doesnt necessarily have to be a murder.
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SPITZ: How can that be an accidental death?


FITZGERALD: I, I know I
SPITZ: I cannot see anybody, even a child, taking a heavy object like a flashlight and hitting it
on somebodys head, as an accident.
CLEMENTE: Maybe in anger he swung it faster than he thought it would. Were talking about a
ten year old, who by the way, had hit the same person in the head with a golf club and what
happened?
SPITZ: Nothing happened.
CLEMENTE: Nothing happened, so
SPITZ: Yeah because he didnt hit that with that same force that he used the flashlight.
CLEMENTE: Well, yeah, and that isthats, thats assuming that he understood.
FITZGERALD: A golf club is designed to be swung and hit a ball, maybe accident. A flashlight
is designed to shed light.
LEE: Yes, for adult.
STAN: Right.
LEE: Lets say Dont steal my pineapple!
RICHARDS: In the blink of an eye.
SPITZ: You dont die from that.
LEE: Yeah, thats not theI dont think thats an intent kill.
CLEMENTE: Maybe it comes down to what accident means to you. For me, legally, what an
accident means is if somebody who did not form the intent to kill
SPITZ: But still
CLEMENTE: did something
SPITZ: still hits you with a lot of impact.
CLEMENTE: That could be a fact, but what you dont know
UNKNOWN: Not necessarily.
CLEMENTE: is whats going on in his head.
Page 81 of 84

SPITZ: But you dont know that either.


LEE: Well, nobody knows! I dont think here have any elements of an intent to kill.
CLEMENTE: I dont think so either. But I think what we do find though is an intent to
mislead
LEE: Mislead.
CLEMENTE: -- an intent to cover up.
STANLEY: I think early on we discussed the lack of the family actually getting involved with
the investigation to begin with. And that is so atypical of what I see in a case where someone
close to you has passed away. Youll do whatever you can to get the case resolved. We didnt see
that here, but maybe we did. Maybe we saw it with her brother. Do everything we can to protect
this child. We see it in the letter. Its a sales job, trying to take the cops down a certain avenue
and we see it in the press conferences.
PATSY: God knows who you are and we will find you.
STANLEY: Every step along the way we see it.
KOLAR: I thought Patsy made a couple telling statements. One was during one of the other
interviews she said that they loved their children, They would do anything for their children. In
the DSS interview where she said she would have nothing left to live for if she lost Burke. That
seemed to me motive for a cover up and I know there was some debate as to whether or not both
parents are involved in the cover up right away, but I think the mixed motives is in the ransom
note. You know whether its a sexual assault pedophile or
CLEMENTE: Terrorism or
KOLAR: terrorism.
RICHARDS: Political.
KOLAR: Mixed motives make it pretty clear that both parents are involved.
CLEMENTE: Yeah I mean I think from a profiling perspective, mixed motives tells us that its a
high probability that its more than one person involved in staging, right?
FITZGERALD: Arguably, yes and thats been the experience that weve had looking at staged
crime scenes uh, over the years. And I think thats what we have here in the language utilized, as
well as the crime scene itself, the body and everything else. Within an hour of this crime being
committed, theres probably a cover-up starting with whatever they did to the body and certainly
the writing of this letter, the 9-1-1 call, everything that happened later. But I dont think Burke
Page 82 of 84

was involved in the cover-up. He was not directly involved in writing letters. He certainly didnt
do the phone call to 9-1-1. He may have been there in the room as we found out later.
BURKE: What did you find?
RICHARDS: The only other person in the address at the time, is Burke.
CLEMENTE: Right.
FITZGERALD: Now was he interviewed later on by uh, investigators and child psychological
experts and did he perhaps say some things that perhaps were not exactly true that happened that
night, thats very possible.
BURKE: I dont remember hearing anything because I was sleeping, you know. But I, I always
sleep real deeply. I can never hear anything.
FITZGERALD: But as far as the cover up itself, I would say primarily, its John and Patsy who
were involved in that.
CLEMENTE: I think the most likely probability is that the adults in that family, John and Patsy
Ramseyand this is consistent with what the grand jury wanted to indict them forstaged this
to look like a monster predator had come in their house and killed their daughter. Its my opinion
that the Ramsey family did not want law enforcement to resolve this case and thats why it
remains unsolved.
FITZGERALD: 100% agree.
SPITZ: But what do you expect to accomplish by bringing this ca-case back to life?
FITZGERALD: In the 20 years since this horrendous death, I have no doubt someone involved
in this homicide talked to someone about what happened and uh, I would only hope at some
point, the persons who may have heard something from John Ramsey, from Burke Ramsey,
perhaps the late Patsy Ramsey, would still come forth. Id love to hear from them.
(COMMERCIALS)
CLEMENTE: This is it. I cant imagine what it was like for the first responders here to find a
six-year-old girl dead.
RICHARDS: This is a young girl who has become a footnote in her own murder.
CLEMENTE: This case has both haunted me since the beginning and pissed me off.
RICHARDS: Its just so sobering in the reality that a six-year-old child lost her life.

Page 83 of 84

CLEMENTE: I think in the end this was about two parents, deeply cared for the daughter they
lost and wanted to protect the child they had remaining.
JOHN: JonBent and I had a very close uh relationship. Uh I will miss her dearly for the rest of
my life.
PATSY: I loved that child with my whole of my heart and soul.
(STATEMENT)
The killing of JonBent Ramsey is a crime that, to this day, remains unsolved. The opinions and
conclusions of the investigators who appear on this program about how it may have occurred
represent just some of the number of possible scenarios. John Ramsey and Burke Ramsey have
denied any involvement in the crime including in recent televised interviews. We encourage
viewers to reach their own conclusions.
(END OF EPISODE)
(SHOW CREDITS OMMITTED)
(END OF SHOW)

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CATHY M. GARRETT

The Window well

The Window (i.e., the center window)

The window to the right of Window

The window to the left of the Window

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CATHY M. GARRETT

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CATHY M. GARRETT

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