Caso Arquivado: Quem Matou JonBenét Ramsey?
Título original: Cold Case: Who Killed JonBenét Ramsey
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Quase 30 anos após seu assassinato, uma série em três partes da Netflix revisita a morte de JonBenét Ramsey, a rainha da beleza infantil morta em sua casa no Colorado, apresentando entrevist... Ler tudoQuase 30 anos após seu assassinato, uma série em três partes da Netflix revisita a morte de JonBenét Ramsey, a rainha da beleza infantil morta em sua casa no Colorado, apresentando entrevistas com figuras-chave, incluindo seu pai.Quase 30 anos após seu assassinato, uma série em três partes da Netflix revisita a morte de JonBenét Ramsey, a rainha da beleza infantil morta em sua casa no Colorado, apresentando entrevistas com figuras-chave, incluindo seu pai.
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I knew the case of the mysterious death of JonBenét Ramsey from podcasts. At first view, the case is like hundreds of others - the child goes missing, no one knows anything, no one has saw anything, so the parents are suspects. The difference, however, is that here the police literally did everything not to solve the investigation. They make a lot of mistakes, and while collecting evidence, they forget why they called.
Could we find out who killed the girl if only the police did what they should? I don't know, but it would be nice if the police were not extremely incompetent in such delicate cases.
The documentary doesn't talk about anything that hasn't already been said. However, it's a very good summary of the investigation, the collected evidence and the theorys about the girl's death (perhaps focusing too much on one of the theories, but still).
It's sad to watch documentaries like these, because they remind us that sometimes the perfect crime is the result of a lack of knowledge and investigative skills, not a calculating villain with super intelligence.
It's worth watching, but it's even better to google the case and listen to a podcast about it (for example, "Deception Detective", who recorded 7.5 hours of material on the subject), because Netflix, as usual, omits a lot of police negligence, and oversimplifies some threads.
Could we find out who killed the girl if only the police did what they should? I don't know, but it would be nice if the police were not extremely incompetent in such delicate cases.
The documentary doesn't talk about anything that hasn't already been said. However, it's a very good summary of the investigation, the collected evidence and the theorys about the girl's death (perhaps focusing too much on one of the theories, but still).
It's sad to watch documentaries like these, because they remind us that sometimes the perfect crime is the result of a lack of knowledge and investigative skills, not a calculating villain with super intelligence.
It's worth watching, but it's even better to google the case and listen to a podcast about it (for example, "Deception Detective", who recorded 7.5 hours of material on the subject), because Netflix, as usual, omits a lot of police negligence, and oversimplifies some threads.
This is an Interesting and Sad, But a Little Unsatisfying documentary about one of the most famous unsolved murder cases in modern times. This three part series does a good job laying out the case from the night of the murder until now. The case outlines all the permutations and crazy years of focusing on the parents as the prime Suspects. The documentary does a lot but, what it does not do, is definitively point the finger at an alternative suspect. I think the main point of the series is to create pressure on the intransigent Boulder Police to allow outside agencies to use modern forensics to identify the real killer. This is still so sad and I hope the killer is caught while her Dad is still alive.
If you watched the 2016 release, "The Case Of JonBenet Ramsey", on Prime Video, you will be disappointed by this 3 episode series!. This series is so slanted towards the pro-Ramsey side, that a very large amount of evidence is completely ignored/omitted. This was largely about John Ramsey and his continual denial that no one in his family could possibly know anything or anyone involved in the death of his daughter. If you have not done so already, please watch " The Case Of....", which is on Prime Video, and watch a team of expert forensic investigators, as they deal with the evidence regarding this horrific crime. The case they make, in regards to who actually could have committed this murder is extremely compelling!.
I usually avoid documentaries about unsolved crimes. They're always the same dead-end corridors: one suspect, then another, discarded as quickly as they enter the scene. But 'Cold Case: Who Killed JonBenét Ramsey' caught me by surprise - perhaps because it starts poorly but ends up being interesting. JonBenét was just six years old when she was found dead in the basement of her own home. From minute one, the investigation pointed the finger at the parents, John and Patsy, and the case became less about a search for justice and more of a media spectacle.
At first, I had the impression that the documentary opens as if it had bought the police's version hook, line, and sinker: the certainty that the Ramseys were guilty, sold as truth in every gesture, every silence, every lawyer hired. The mere presence of defense became proof; grief was interpreted as acting. Even when it's mentioned that the DNA found didn't match the family, the narrative insists on circling the same ring, as if only one possibility existed. There was a moment when I feared I was watching a film that had chosen its culprits before even looking at the evidence.
But gradually, the tone changes, and what emerges is far more interesting: a portrait of the toxic relationship between the police and the media. There was pressure for a "quick culprit," the mantra that all abuse crimes happen within the home, and the selective leaks that turned every hypothesis into a spectacle. The perversion reached the point where a TV show staged a trial, complete with a psychologist making wildly inappropriate and speculative insinuations about a six-year-old child to justify an abuse accusation against the parents. It is this kind of collusion, displayed without shame, that not only stalled the investigation but almost destroyed a family. Without lawyers, John and Patsy could have traded their home's basement for a jail cell.
By the time the tide of public opinion finally turns, it's already too late. The son, still a child, was accused on national television of being the perpetrator; Patsy, battling cancer, became the target of books describing her as a murderer. All this while they were trying to grieve their daughter - a grief constantly hijacked by the need to defend themselves. The documentary then slips into the part that interests me the least: the parade of discarded suspects. But at least it introduces us to figures worth remembering, like Lou Smit, the investigator who defended the theory of an intruder. Amid so many versions and vanities, he seems like the only one willing to look at the evidence instead of the cameras.
In the end, the mystery remains unsolved, as the title promises. But perhaps that's precisely the point: Who Killed JonBenét doesn't work because of the answer it doesn't provide, but because of the question it raises - to what extent are the police and media capable of manufacturing a truth? The doc isn't perfect, but it shines when it shows that, in certain cases, justice fails not for lack of evidence, but due to an excess of narratives. The crime may have remained without a culprit, but the Ramseys' reputation was condemned in the court of public opinion. And in that invisible tribunal, there is no appeal.
At first, I had the impression that the documentary opens as if it had bought the police's version hook, line, and sinker: the certainty that the Ramseys were guilty, sold as truth in every gesture, every silence, every lawyer hired. The mere presence of defense became proof; grief was interpreted as acting. Even when it's mentioned that the DNA found didn't match the family, the narrative insists on circling the same ring, as if only one possibility existed. There was a moment when I feared I was watching a film that had chosen its culprits before even looking at the evidence.
But gradually, the tone changes, and what emerges is far more interesting: a portrait of the toxic relationship between the police and the media. There was pressure for a "quick culprit," the mantra that all abuse crimes happen within the home, and the selective leaks that turned every hypothesis into a spectacle. The perversion reached the point where a TV show staged a trial, complete with a psychologist making wildly inappropriate and speculative insinuations about a six-year-old child to justify an abuse accusation against the parents. It is this kind of collusion, displayed without shame, that not only stalled the investigation but almost destroyed a family. Without lawyers, John and Patsy could have traded their home's basement for a jail cell.
By the time the tide of public opinion finally turns, it's already too late. The son, still a child, was accused on national television of being the perpetrator; Patsy, battling cancer, became the target of books describing her as a murderer. All this while they were trying to grieve their daughter - a grief constantly hijacked by the need to defend themselves. The documentary then slips into the part that interests me the least: the parade of discarded suspects. But at least it introduces us to figures worth remembering, like Lou Smit, the investigator who defended the theory of an intruder. Amid so many versions and vanities, he seems like the only one willing to look at the evidence instead of the cameras.
In the end, the mystery remains unsolved, as the title promises. But perhaps that's precisely the point: Who Killed JonBenét doesn't work because of the answer it doesn't provide, but because of the question it raises - to what extent are the police and media capable of manufacturing a truth? The doc isn't perfect, but it shines when it shows that, in certain cases, justice fails not for lack of evidence, but due to an excess of narratives. The crime may have remained without a culprit, but the Ramseys' reputation was condemned in the court of public opinion. And in that invisible tribunal, there is no appeal.
I remember when this case was unavoidable in the news and a national obsession, people passionately "believed" the parents were guilty based on weak circumstantial evidence, opinions about child beauty pageants, and police supposition.
Ignore the other reviewers who say it's a documentary series made by/for the Ramseys. The actual facts of the case are that the police jumped to conclusions, ignored and kept secret the DNA evidence that exonerated the family, but the police just "believed" the parents were guilty. Everything flowed from there. It was sickening media and police malpractice. The hell this family was put through reveals a lot more about the public's relationship to sensational "news" that was really just entertainment and clickbait.
Ignore the other reviewers who say it's a documentary series made by/for the Ramseys. The actual facts of the case are that the police jumped to conclusions, ignored and kept secret the DNA evidence that exonerated the family, but the police just "believed" the parents were guilty. Everything flowed from there. It was sickening media and police malpractice. The hell this family was put through reveals a lot more about the public's relationship to sensational "news" that was really just entertainment and clickbait.
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