A conservative view on history as we make it

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

This Article Says It All

Adam Geller from the Detroit Free Press hits the nail on the head with this article.



Just as before, law enforcement proved overeager and bumbling. Just as before, a hyperactive media went into overdrive, eager to pronounce guilt. And just as before, a nation of voyeurs proved only too ready to play pundit.

It's been almost a decade since the murder of JonBenet Ramsey, but it's taken less than two weeks of fevered -- and apparently pointless -- speculation to show how little things have changed.

That seemed clear Monday when prosecutors in Boulder, Colo., abruptly dropped their case against John Karr, saying DNA tests failed to put the 41-year-old itinerant teacher at the crime scene, despite his insistence that he had strangled the 6-year-old beauty queen at her home on Dec. 26, 1996.

"Because no evidence has developed, other than his own repeated admissions ... the people would not be able to establish that Mr. Karr committed this crime despite his repeated insistence that he did," District Attorney Mary Lacy said in court papers.

The admission by prosecutors that they had the wrong man might have seemed shocking if this had been any other case. But in the context of the Ramsey case -- an investigation beset from its earliest stages by gross misjudgments by investigators -- it struck many observers as not only expected, but also grimly fitting.

"If there's a single mistake they haven't made, I'm not sure what it is, said Philip Jenkins, a professor of history at Pennsylvania State University who has written on child molestation and serial murder. "It fits, but it makes the existing record worse."

Media jumped the gun -- again

The decision to drop the charges against Karr was made all the more fitting because Karr's arrest earlier this month came as the nation appeared almost to have forgotten the case.

Any hope of that ended Aug. 16, when police in Thailand arrested Karr and brought him before reporters, where he professed his guilt, saying he'd been with JonBenet at the time of her death.

When pressed, he would not, or could not, describe exactly what had happened. But there was enough about his persona -- a creepy narrative that included Karr's flight from child pornography charges in California -- to whip the news media and the public into a frenzy.


*click on the link for the full article*

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

 
Google
 
Web The Charging Elephant