JonBenet's Aunt: Wait And See On Karr
She Says Ramsey Family 'Optimistic' About Arrest Of Suspect In 1996 Killing
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Play CBS Video Video JonBenet Suspect's E-mails The suspect arrested in the JonBenet Ramsey murder case e-mailed a University of Colorado journalism professor about her death for years. Kelly Cobiella reports.
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Video Is Karr Really A Murderer? Only On The Web: CBS News legal analyst Andrew Cohen discusses whether John Mark Karr, the man who confessed to the murder of 6-year-old JonBenet Ramsey, is actually guilty.
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Video Next Step In JonBenet Case? Trip DeMuth investigated JonBenet Ramsey's murder as a deputy district attorney. He joins Julie Chen to discuss Boulder, Colo., district attorney Mary Lacy's statements on the case.
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This image made from an undated family video shows JonBenet Ramsey performing during a beauty pageant. (AP)
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Sources tell CBS News that John Mark Karr, seen here in police custody in Bangkok, has already been given a DNA test to compare to evidence from the JonBenet Ramsey crime scene. (Getty Images/Saeed Khan)
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Murder suspect John Mark Karr, left, is led from the detention center to a police news conference at Immigration office in Bangkok, Thailand, on Aug. 17, 2006. (AP Photo/Apichart Weerawong)
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A notice for persons who wish to visit John Mark Karr is pasted at the inner gate of the detention center at the Immigration office in Bangkok, Thailand, on Aug. 18, 2006. (AP Photo/Apichart Weerawong)
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Interactive Stunning Hoax Photos, timeline and more on John Mark Karr, the man who falsely claimed he was with JonBenet when she "accidentally" died.
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Interactive The JonBenet Case Review the murder and investigation, see those involved, and take a peek inside the Ramsey house where the crime occurred.
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Photo Essay Patsy Ramsey Funeral Mother, who died of ovarian cancer, is buried next to daughter JonBenet
"We are optimistic, but it's wait-and-see," said Pamela Paugh, sister of JonBenet's mother Patsy Ramsey, outside her family's Roswell, Ga. home. "We've been patient for nine and a half years; what's a few more months?"
Karr remained jailed in Thailand on Friday, one day after his public proclamation there that he was with JonBenet when she was killed in Boulder, Colo., in 1996. He is due back in the U.S. on Sunday.
A Thai police general said, "The tickets for 41-year-old John Mark Karr's departure are ready."
Karr said Thursday that he wasn't innocent in the case, but questions have been raised about some of his claims.
Paugh, who has acted as her family's spokeswoman since the arrest, said the family has its own concerns about Karr's statements but remains confident in the work of Boulder County District Attorney Mary Lacy and other investigators.
"She would never do something (haphazardly) when she knows the world's eyes are on her," Paugh said of Lacy. "She's not going to just go out there willy-nilly and pick up some nut case."
CBS News legal analyst Andrew Cohen, who has followed the Ramsey case extensively, agrees.
"If they don't have anything, they become laughingstocks of all time in the law enforcement profession, and I'm simply unwilling to believe that," Cohen says of the Boulder DA's office.
Paugh said she's spoken with JonBenet's father, John Ramsey, but did not know where he currently is. She said he's upbeat about the arrest, but not yet ready to speak publicly.
"It's a very touchy thing right now," Paugh said. "All this is bringing up some very hurtful and terrible memories, even though it's a good thing; he just needs some alone time."
Meanwhile, police in the town just north of Atlanta where Patsy Ramsey spent the final months of her life, declined to comment Friday on whether they had set up a ruse to trap e-mails or letters that Karr tried to send Ramsey.
The family's attorney, Lin Wood, in Atlanta said Patsy Ramsey never received the correspondence because police or someone else set up an address. "He thought that he was corresponding with Patsy, but he wasn't," Wood told The Associated Press.
A spokesman for the Roswell Police Department, which helped to identify and locate Karr, declined to say Friday whether his agency conducted the correspondence ruse.
"We're not commenting on any part of the investigation," Sgt. James McGee said.
Authorities asked Ramsey in late May — a month before she died of cancer — whether she would be willing to meet with Karr, Wood said.
Ramsey said she would meet with Karr if it would advance the investigation into her daughter's slaying, but the meeting never took place because authorities did not get back to her before she died in June, Wood said.
For most of Friday, speculation swirled around e-mails Karr sent regarding Ramsey's death. The day before Christmas Eve 2005, Karr sent an e-mail to University of Colorado professor Michael Tracey. It was one of a disturbing series of e-mails between Tracey and a person investigators believe to be Karr.
A source close to the investigation told CBS News the reason investigators moved in on Karr was because of details in these emails about the Ramsey house that had not been made public, reports CBS News correspondent Kelly Cobiella.
Correspondence obtained by the Rocky Mountain News included one message in which the professor was asked to visit JonBenet's home in Boulder to read aloud an ode called "JonBenet, My Love."
Tracey once worked for CBS News as a consultant on the Ramsey case.
"JonBenet, my love, my life. I love you and shall forever love you. I pray that you can hear my voice calling out to you from my darkness, this darkness that now separates us," read one of the e-mails, which the newspaper said Friday it obtained from a source close to the investigation.
In other e-mails, Karr said he was under federal investigation for "child murder and child molestation" in four states.
"I don't know that he's guilty," said Tracey. "Obviously, I went to the district attorney for a reason, but let him have his day in court and let JonBenet have her day in court and let's see how it plays out."
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- August 21, 2006
I believe that Karr is a bought and paid for 'fall guy', purchased by John Ramsey.
John Ramsey committed the crime, Patsy helped cover it up, and Karr was brought into the mix months or years after the crime.
Karr was paid to %u2018admit to the crime%u2019 but could continue 'in the wild' until he needed to play his "get out of [foreign] jail card", to get back to the US. John Ramsey is a billionaire, he could fund such an extravagant %u2018fall guy%u2019 plan.
Karr would never be convicted, because the evidence at the scene will not match him. BUT, having him in the mix will (in the court of public opinion) deflect the %u201CJohn and or Patsy Ramsey did it%u201D belief. - Reply to this comment
- This is entirely too convenient-He confesses a few months after Patsy died. Who has been supporting him these ten years? I believe Patsy and Karr knew all along who killed JonBenet and a deal was struck that it could be uncovered after her death. I believe it is possible that he was abusing her son, JonBenet came in and was killed, or Patsy came in and wanted to protect her son. Three people know who did it and two are dead.
- Reply to this comment
- Patsy Ramey's sister is one special human just by the fact that she says. "Wait and see" concerning the arrest of John Mark Karr in Thailand. The Press totally accused John and Patsy when their family lost JonBenet. The parents were vilified and dragged through the mud up til Patsy died recently.
The Colorado Police were of no assistance to the Ramsey's. They promoted their accusations and wrote books highlighting the reasons John and Patsy killed Jon Benet. If policeman or detective stood up for the Ramsey's they were dismissed and themselves slandered.
Any Press outlet should not have the right to print or say the Ramsey's names. - Reply to this comment
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