The year 2016 marks the 20th anniversary of the death of 6-year old JonBenet Ramsey, a child in Boulder, Colorado who was brutally sexually assaulted and murdered in her home. Despite an abundance of evidence left behind by her killer, the case remains unsolved. It is often called the “Coldest Case” in Boulder. In the first comprehensive, independent forensic analysis of the Ramsey Case ever performed, author Johnny Kerns, a partner with the United States Department of Justice, takes the reader on a journey to discover who killed 6-year old JonBenet Ramsey in her home on December 26th, 1996. Examining evidence, sources and methods that have eluded the Boulder Police Department, Federal Bureau of Investigation and other state and federal law enforcement agencies reviewing the case, Kerns provides the definitive answers as to who killed JonBenet, why she was killed and how the killer methodically committed a home-invasion with the intent to kidnap the child and ultimately abandoned his plan in favor of murder.
This was a really big disappointment. Although the author made me aware of several facts that I had not known previously, his theories were not backed up by any real evidence. I felt like his only real objective was to take focus away from the Ramseys. Sometimes the writing was contradictory, the person responsible has no special training, but is a trained outdoors man. The person responsible may be Hispanic or a mix of caucasian and Hispanic...too many conclusions are jumped to by the author. Plus, instead of attacking other theories, etc...I wish he would have just focused on presenting his opinion instead of trying to discredit other theories. Plus, I found the writing to be amateurish and a bit sloppy at times. I am recommending this as a do not even bother read to my friends.