Friday, December 28, 2018

The Man Who Owns JonBenet's Tricycle Thinks It's They Key To Everything.

A Colorado collector, fascinated with the crime, found JonBenet’s abandoned pink tricycle.
He then set off on a bizarre voyage of discovery and now is offering new theories.
Andrew Novick was living in Boulder, Colorado, when the six-year-old girl was found murdered in her family’s basement in 1996.
Novick began walking by the large house, abandoned by John, Patsy and their nine-year-old son Burke within weeks of JonBenet’s death.
Their speedy departure to Atlanta raised a lot of questions.
The family never returned, appointing movers to pack up their possessions.
Her tricycle was left abandoned outside the house.
Novick took ownership of the  trike, along with a packet of popcorn and an oversized candy cane which had decorated the front lawn.
He took the tricycle to psychics to see what they had to say.

Novick has made a documentary about the Ramsey ‘memorabilia’ he now owns.

There have been theories pointing the finger at everyone from the parents, with Patsy’s writing appearing to match the ransom note, to the odd “Santa Claus” Bill McReynolds, to a man named Michael Helgoth who later took his own life, and owned a pair of Hi-Tec boots that seemed to match a footprint left in the basement.

In December 2016, a series of documentaries tried to provide answers to the cold case that still has everyone stumped. 
The Case of: JonBenet Ramsey by CBS pointed the finger at her brother Burke, with forensics experts suggesting he hit her over the head before his parents covered it up by tying a garotte around the girl’s neck.

Burke strongly denied the accusation he harmed his sister, saying he suspected a pedophile who stalked child beauty pageants and denouncing the “false and unprofessional television attack” riddled with “lies, misrepresentations, distortions and omissions”.
He sued the network in a $750 million lawsuit, which could go to trial late next year or in 2020.

There have long been claims of errors by law enforcement in properly searching the home, and a failure to fully investigate by the District Attorney.

A housekeeper recollected him smearing feces over her walls, possessions and bed.

“There’s a kind of a spitefulness going on there, a very ugly spitefulness.” 

Did Burke get Jealous over JonBenet's new bike that replaced the tricyle? 

“Our culture is obsessed with unsolved crimes,” 
said Novick
 “I don’t think it will go away. I think it will go on for as long as it remains unsolved.”

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