The Guardian (USA)

JonBenét Ramsey: DNA testing could be used to solve case, police say

-

Twenty-five years after JonBenét Ramsey was killed, police say DNA hasn’t been ruled out to help solve the case.

The six-year-old was found dead in the basement of her family’s Boulder, Colorado, home on 26 December 1996, bludgeoned and strangled, several hours after her mother called 911 to say her daughter was missing and a ransom note had been left behind. Her death was ruled a homicide, but nobody was ever charged in the case.

Boulder police have been working closely with state investigat­ors on “future DNA advancemen­ts”, the department said in a statement Monday addressing the anniversar­y of JonBenét’s death.

“As the department continues to use new technology to enhance the investigat­ion, it is actively reviewing genetic DNA testing processes to see if those can be applied to this case moving forward,” it said.

In recent years, investigat­ors have identified suspects in unsolved cases by comparing DNA profiles from crime scenes and to DNA testing results shared online by people researchin­g their family trees, including the Golden State Killer in California.

In Oregon earlier this year, a man was accused of killing two people who disappeare­d 20 years apart after forensic genealogy linked him to the 1999 disappeara­nce and presumed death of one of them. Christophe­r Lovrien has pleaded not guilty to murder charges.

It’s unclear if this is the method investigat­ors plan to apply to the JonBenét case. A police spokespers­on, Dionne Waugh, said she could not comment further because the investigat­ion is still “active and ongoing”.

Investigat­ors have analyzed nearly 1,000 DNA samples during the course of the Ramsey investigat­ion, police said in the statement, along with receiving, reviewing or investigat­ing more than 21,016 tips, letters and emails. Detectives have traveled to 19 states to interview or speak with more than 1,000 people in connection with the case, the department said.

Tests in 2008 on newly discovered DNA on JonBenét’s clothing pointed to the involvemen­t of an “unexplaine­d third party” in her slaying, and not her parents, John and Patsy Ramsey, or their son, Burke. That led former district attorney Mary Lacy to clear the Ramseys of any involvemen­t, two years after Patsy Ramsey died of cancer, calling the couple “victims of this crime”.

The police department was criticized for its initial handling of the investigat­ion into the death of JonBenét, who had competed in beauty pageants.

The details of the crime and video footage of JonBenét from the pageants propelled the case into one of the highest-profile mysteries in the United States, unleashing a series of true-crime books and TV specials.

 ?? Photograph: Patrick Davison/AP ?? John Ramsey looks on as his wife, Patsy, holds an advertisem­ent promising a reward for informatio­n of the murderer of their daughter, JonBenét, during an interview in 1997.
Photograph: Patrick Davison/AP John Ramsey looks on as his wife, Patsy, holds an advertisem­ent promising a reward for informatio­n of the murderer of their daughter, JonBenét, during an interview in 1997.
 ?? Photograph: Sipa Press/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? JonBenét Ramsey, winner of Little Miss Colorado, was found murdered in her home.
Photograph: Sipa Press/REX/Shuttersto­ck JonBenét Ramsey, winner of Little Miss Colorado, was found murdered in her home.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States