June 3, 2010 2:42 PM

10th Anniversary Of JonBenet's Murder

This photo provided by the Los Angeles County Sheriffs Department shows murder suspect John Mark Karr Sunday, Aug. 20, 2006, in Los Angeles. Karr faces charges in JonBenet Ramsey's murder. (AP Photo/Los Angeles County Sheriffs Department)

This photo provided by the Los Angeles County Sheriffs Department shows murder suspect John Mark Karr Sunday, Aug. 20, 2006, in Los Angeles. Karr faces charges in JonBenet Ramsey's murder. (AP Photo/Los Angeles County Sheriffs Department) (AP Photo/L.A. County Sheriffs Dept.)

(AP)  A decade after the Christmastime slaying of JonBenet Ramsey, two aspects of the case endure: the public's fascination with the murder of the 6-year-old beauty contestant, and a sense for some that the notorious crime may never be solved.

Interest in the case was briefly rekindled this past year with the death of JonBenet's mother, Patsy Ramsey. The one-time Miss West Virginia died June 24 of ovarian cancer at the age of 49 in Atlanta, where the family had moved after her daughter's slaying.

Then, in August, the case appeared to blow wide open with the arrest in Thailand of John Mark Karr, a sometime teacher obsessed with the little girl's slaying.

Karr made bizarre, detailed confessions to the killing, but after he was brought back to the United States he was freed for lack of corroboration for his claims — or even any solid indication he'd been near Boulder at the time of the killing.

District Attorney Mary Lacy has said the investigation remains open and DA's investigator Tom Bennett said in a recent interview that the office is still receiving information about the case. Bennett noted that the office has hundreds of other, more active cases. The Boulder Daily Camera reported Saturday that Lacy had asked county commissioners for $40,000 to hire another investigator on the case.

JonBenet's father, John Ramsey, a software entrepreneur, has said in recent interviews he believes the case will be solved.

JonBenet was reported missing from the family's Boulder home by her wealthy parents on the morning after Christmas 1996. While police were taking an initial look at evidence, including an unusual ransom note written on a notepad in the home, John Ramsey found his daughter's body in the basement.

She'd been strangled and bludgeoned and had signs of sexual molestation.

The case became an overnight media sensation, driven in part by photos and videos of the little blond girl competing in beauty pageants in provocative costumes.

This wealthy, politically liberal town at the foot of the Rocky Mountains became a regular backdrop for newscasts as the case wore on well past the holidays.

As months and then years passed without arrests or seeming progress, infighting between the police and prosecutors became public and endlessly debated. The district attorney's office was accused of treating the Ramsey family with kid gloves. The prosecutor reportedly thought the police too anxious to investigate the family.

Although leadership of both departments has changed, the agencies apparently remain at odds over the case.

Boulder Police Chief Mark Beckner said his department and the DA's staff aren't communicating about the case. "I have no idea what they are doing. They don't share that with us," Beckner said, noting his department wasn't involved in arresting Karr.

Lou Smit, a former DA's investigator who became a close friend of John and Patsy Ramsey, says DNA eventually will solve the case and prove an intruder killed their daughter.

"I still think the case can be solved. We need to wait for the DNA databanks to fill up," said Smit.

Former lead police investigator Steve Thomas, who has maintained from the start that suspicion points to the family, disputes that DNA will solve anything.

On one point, however, Thomas may agree with Smit and the others: "Boulder's criminal justice system was simply unprepared for this case," he wrote in an e-mail exchange with The Associated Press

© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by brianp55 December 27, 2006 2:12 PM EST
John Mark Karr is a putz. One or both of her parents is obviously guilty as hell. It nauseates me to seen John Ramsey on tv trying to rehabilitate his image by obfuscation.
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by nothappyatall December 27, 2006 6:10 AM EST
Here we go like I said- the media DWELLS on these cases, this one, the Aruba one over and over and over again. If Jon Benet was black you would NEVER see this length of coverage, but the media loves cute white girls.

It's been ten years, more than likely they will never solve it, mom is dead, they moved out of the house/crime scene.
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by randalds December 26, 2006 11:55 PM EST
The step-brother did it. Either that or the mother did it to cover up the step-brother molesting her.
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by ecuadoriana December 26, 2006 8:16 PM EST
Whether this John Mark Karr guy is guilty or not, he has the creepy "Charles Manson stare" down pat. All he needs to do is to carve a swastika on his forehead & he could be a Manson Family member for sure.

People always say you should go with your "gut instincts" & my instincts tell me that somethin' ain't right in the head with that boy!
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by bhussbhuss December 26, 2006 8:08 PM EST
There's just always been something fishy about this whole murder case. Something doesn't ring true. I doubt the truth will ever surface.
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by jusdane December 26, 2006 7:38 PM EST
When there are hundreds of unsolved murder cases, I think it's incredibly unfortunate that this is still being reported on by the media.
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by azot3043 December 26, 2006 6:05 PM EST
A child is murder ... and your headlines are, "10th Anniversary" ... How something like this could be consider an anniversary is beyond me ...
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