Colorado law enforcement “harvesting” information and “targeting” tipsters
by Timothy Charles Holmseth on September 1, 2016, 10:22 P.M. CST
CBS Denver reported today that law enforcement in Colorado is asking for the public’s help to solve the murder of JonBenet Ramsey.
“We have not and will not give up. We remain focused on this investigation and finding justice for JonBenet,” said BPD Chief Greg Testa.
But…
Danielle Kekoa, an FBI informant, says tipsters with solid information are being targeted by ‘shadow government’ squads.
“The cops know the truth, and they’re bs-ing about this case like they do every other year or so. They’re corrupt. It’s Boulder. It’s Colorado,” Kekoa said.
“Don’t waste your time calling in tips to the Boulder PD, they’re only harvesting information. They have no intention of following up on any good tips, and if you have a good tip, then they will target you,” Kekoa said.
Police records and video show Danielle Kekoa, and her husband Curtis Kekoa’s, have been targeted for non-stop harassment by Colorado law enforcement, CPS, and other agencies including the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.
The harassment began after the Kekoa’s defected from Denver Bible Church and reported information to the police about the murder of JonBenet Ramsey and other children.
Denver FBI special agent Kimberly Milka advised the Kekoa’s to alert the FBI of any future acts of rights violations and plans to attend court hearings.
The Kekoa’s defected from Denver Bible Church, which they describe as a “satanic cult” several years ago, and began sounding the alarm to the police in Colorado about the JonBenet Ramsey, Jessica Ridgeway, and Dylan Redwine murders.
Danielle Kekoa was questioned by Denver FBI in November 2015 about criminal activities in the Colorado underworld. She said the latest televised statements by the Boulder police chief is the usual con.
“It’s all BS. The Boulder Police Department has known about the serial killer who left his DNA on JonBenet since 2012,” Kekoa said.
Kekoa is referring to Robert (Bob) Enyart, the radio shock jock and pro-life activist that heads up Denver Bible Church; the organization under investigation by federal authorities for suspected involvement in attacks on Planned Parenthood.
Denver FBI interviewed Danielle Kekoa about Enyart in November of 2015 in efforts to stop a pending attack on Planned Parenthood, which occurred nonetheless, in Colorado Springs, three days after the interview.
In 2016 the Kekoa’s produced a documentary entitled “Expect it” which features information about Planned Parenthood and other cases shared with the FBI by Danielle Kekoa.
It is no surprise the FBI is interested in Enyart. Enyart, a convicted child abuser, authored and published a Manifesto declaring the formation of his own government that is sovereign from the laws of the United States.
Curtis and Danielle Kekoa were members of Enyart’s ‘Denver Bible Church’, which they fled with their six children after realizing something was horribly wrong with Enyart and his cult-like followers that Kekoa described to the FBI as a group of pedophiles.
Danielle Kekoa’s claims of retaliation are substantiated by this publication (Write Into Action – Timothy Charles Holmseth) that was threatened earlier this week by a caller using a voice changer.
The anonymous caller demanded Timothy Holmseth remove a photo of JonBenet Ramsey from his website, which shows stun-gun burns on the six year-old child.
Cathy O’Brien, an author and survivor of Project Monarch, a CIA program that utilizes trauma based mind-control, says an instructional video called “How to create a mind control slave using a stun-gun” was found in the Ramsey home and seized on the grounds of National Security. O’Brien says she was the female used in the video.
In an interview with Write Into Action, O’Brien asked the million dollar question ‘what could the random murder of a six year-old, snatched from her bed in her own home, possibly have to do with National Security?’
Questions are mounting about the whereabouts of Enyart on December 25-26, 1996, and any affiliation he has with the CIA and Project Monarch.
The BPD’s appeal to the public for tips, is met with great irony, as one of the most detailed tips to ever come in to law enforcement about JonBenet Ramsey was from Enyart.
Enyart, turning homicide temporary investigator for the child’s murder, authored a detailed timeline and 3,300 word analysis of what occurred in the Ramsey home the night the child was murdered. The analysis entitled The Clue that Breaks the Case was published on Enyart’s website at www.shadowgov.com
Enyart appears obsessed with murder and has organized protests using his followers.

Shown here are members of Robert Enyart’s group carrying signs and protesting about the JonBenet Ramsey murder case. The photo is featured in a You Tube video published by Enyart. One sign reads “I advise you to be rested” which is a phrase from the ransom note found in the Ramsey home. Another man is holding a sign that says, “The ransom note is a confession”.
According to a Washington D.C. insider, the murder of JonBenet Ramsey is going to be solved by a Donald Trump Justice Department.
The Clue that Breaks the Case (shown below) was authored and published by Bob Enyart at http://www.shadowgov.com.
Many believe it was written by an eye-witness.
Some evidence in the JonBenet Ramsey murder points toward her parents, and other evidence seems to clear them. If the whole truth could be discerned, it would explain every piece of evidence, because real events produced every bit of the crime scene. Sometimes, a single key opens many doors, and one piece pulls the puzzle together. JonBenet’s murderer inadvertently put the key piece of evidence into the ransom note.
On Christmas night 1996, at 755 15th Street (retagged now as 749 15th St.), in the Boulder Colorado mansion of her parents, John and Patricia Ramsey, JonBenet was murdered. Death resulted from both a severe blow to the head that fractured her skull across the length of her head, and by strangulation with a cord tightened with a broken stick around her neck. The six-year-old girl had also been vaginally assaulted prior to her death. Consider the following observations:
- Patsy Ramsey called 911 at 5:52 a.m. on Dec. 26 telling police that her daughter was missing and that she had found a ransom note.
- At 5:55 a.m. neighbors Fleet and Priscilla White are called to the Ramsey home, along with other friends.
- Detectives found a partial draft of the ransom note in the home, and the legal pad on which the final ransom had been written on three of seven pages torn from the center of the pad. And although it may seem too obvious even to point out, realize that unlike in the JonBenet Ramsey murder:
- a kidnapper doesn’t write the ransom note in the house
- a kidnapper doesn’t molest the victim in the house
- a kidnapper doesn’t kill the victim in the house
- a kidnapper doesn’t leave the victim behind in the house, and
- a kidnapper doesn’t forget to call to arrange to get the ransom money.
- Ransom note excerpts: “Mr. Ramsey, Listen carefully! We are a group of individuals that represent (sic) a small foreign faction. We respect your business (sic) but not the country that it serves. At this time we have your daughter in our possession (sic). She is safe and unharmed and if you want her to see 1997, you… will withdraw $118,000… I will call you between 8 and 10 am tomorrow to instruct you on delivery. The delivery will be exhausting so I advise you to be rested. If we monitor you getting the money early, we might call you early to arrange an earlier delivery of the money and hence an earlier pickup of your daughter Any deviation of my instructions will result in the immediate execution of your daughter. … You can try to deceive us, but be warned we are familiar with Law enforcement countermeasures… Don’t try to grow a brain John. … Don’t underestimate us John. Use that good, southern common sense of yours. It’s up to you now John! Victory! S.B.T.C.”
- The note’s time element indicates it was composed around midnight. “At this time we have your daughter… I will call you [by] 10 am tomorrow…”
- Consider the phrase, “I advise you to be rested.” A kidnapper would not normally give such advice to his victims. And no one urges sleeping people to get rest.
- The ransom note refers to JonBenet 14 times but never by name. The note states for example, “if you want her to see 1997” avoiding the personal, “If you ever want to see JonBenet again…”
- The letter, abnormally long for a ransom note, demands a relatively small ransom, exactly equal to Mr. Ramsey’s annual bonus as president and CEO from Access Graphics, the billion-dollar company that he helped launch.
- In 1968-1969 the Navy stationed Ramsey at Subic Bay Training Center.
- Detectives found Ramsey handwriting samples in the home that were similar to the style on the “ransom” note.
- A broken window had an obviously disturbed sill, below which police found a scuff mark and below that a piece of broken glass on the basement floor. However, police find no footprints outside the window. Later reports vary, but early local news accounts reported that it had snowed that night just hours before the murder. The Weather Underground records for Boulder a low temperature of 10 degrees Farenheight on Dec. 26 and 18 degrees on the day of the murder with precipitation (snow) of under 1/10th of an inch. Regarding the claim of an intruder, the city’s police chief later wrote, “Most investigators do not believe there was a legitimate point of entry. It is unknown how an intruder may have gotten in. {Colorado Springs investigator) Lou Smit always believed it was the basement window, but we did not agree with him, as the dust and spider web were undisturbed.”
- There were no signs of forced entry. The alarm system had not been activated. Four people were known to be in the house that night, JonBenet, her nine-year-old brother Burke, and their parents.
- The Boulder police have no evidence pointing to Burke and have never considered him a suspect.
- Detective Linda Arndt, the only police officer on the scene in the hours prior to the discovery of the body at 1:05 p.m., remembers Mr. Ramsey’s demeanor when he initially greeted her as not distraught nor even upset, but cordial.
- Arndt says that the Ramseys did not spend those morning hours in each other’s company, but that Patsy stayed in the sunroom with friends and John stayed mostly in his den, and read his mail in the kitchen.
- When asked that morning who might be responsible for the crime, John gave police the name of an employee; and Patsy gave the name of one of her housekeepers.
- Arndt says that 10 a.m., the ransom note deadline, passed unnoticed. She says that the Ramseys did not remark whatsoever regarding the fact that the kidnapper had not called.
- Arndt says that she asked the Ramseys and their friends to examine the ransom note for clues, and that almost everyone offered ideas to her except Mr. Ramsey.
- Linda Arndt says that she was confused about why the Ramseys would not speak to her. They later refused a formal interview, and refused to take polygraph tests.
- Arndt suggested Mr. Ramsey search the home. When he and Fleet White came upon the corpse in the basement, Ramsey ripped the duct tape from her mouth and picked up the 47 inch long, 45 pound body.
- The circuitous route to wine cellar where the body was found would be very difficult to navigate by a stranger, especially at night, especially if the child had been struggling, and especially when the staircase light switch is not in an expected location on a wall, but above and behind someone entering the stairs.
- Arndt saw Mr. Ramsey carrying the body from the basement, JonBenet’s unsupported arms extended above her head, and realized that rigor mortis had set in, and that she had been dead for some time.
- Such rigor mortis sets in after about six to twelve hours. There was also the scent of decomposition.
- At 1:30 p.m. a detective overheard John Ramsey talking by phone to his pilot and arranging a trip to Atlanta that evening for himself, his wife and son. Det. Sgt. Larry Mason told him, “You can’t leave.”
- The coroner, Dr. John Meyer, found evidence of sexual assault from the previous night: a small abrasion and small amounts of blood in both her underwear and vagina. Three medical experts consulting for the police say that the injuries were also consistent with prior sexual abuse. A black light helped reveal that her body had been wiped clean but that a residue of blood was left on her thighs.
- In an unguarded moment during an online chat in 2015 in a forum which he thought was relatively private, Boulder Police Chief Mark Beckner placed more focus on the parents than he normally would. He wrote, “We know from the evidence she was hit in the head very hard with an unknown object, possibly a flashlight or similar type item. The blow knocked her into deep unconsciousness, which could have led someone to believe she was dead. The strangulation came 45 minutes to two hours after the head strike, based on the swelling on the brain. While the head wound would have eventually killed her, the strangulation actually did kill her. The rest of the scene we believe was staged, including the vaginal trauma, to make it look like a kidnapping/assault gone bad.”
- John Ramsey says that he had carried a sleeping JonBenet from the car straight to her bed that night. The coroner found something in her stomach “which may represent fragment of pineapple.” The party she attended that night had served no pineapple, but police found a bowl of pineapple on the Ramsey’s dinning room table.
- The murderer draped one of JonBenet’s blankets around her body. That blanket held a pubic hair not linked to any family member. Unidentifiable DNA material was on her underwear and beneath her fingernails. An unidentifiable palm print of unknown age was on the wine cellar door. The panties on her body were too large for JonBenet and contained a stain with male DNA which could not be linked to any house member but which was later linked, in 2008, to DNA on the waistband of the long johns that she was also wearing.
- Upon viewing the body, Patsy exclaimed that she had never before seen the underwear on her daughter’s corpse. Detectives later found out that Patsy had recently purchased that pair of underwear at Bloomingdale’s in New York for her 12-year-old niece, but that JonBenet begged to have it kept for her, so Patsy kept it for her. Prior to the murder, even friends of the family knew of this underwear story. If Patsy did recognize the distinctive underwear, and was lying, then she was trying to point the police to the exculpatory evidence, which she knew had been planted.
- Officer Barry Harkopp interviewed next door neighbors and reported that Scott Gibbons saw strange lights and movements coming from the kitchen area around midnight; and neighbor Melody Stanton awoke her husband around midnight after hearing a scream, and he stated he heard “the sound of metal clashing against cement.” The Ramseys say they heard none of this.
- Police found a Ramsey family flashlight on the kitchen counter, which was not normally kept on that counter, but nearby.
- On Dec. 27, 1996 Patsy Ramsey, being exhausted and lying down, reached up and touched the face of a friend, Pam Griffin, the woman who had made JonBenet’s pageant costumes. Griffin thought Patsy was delirious when she asked, “Couldn’t you fix this for me?” as though a sewing machine could bring back her daughter. She then remembers Patsy saying, “We didn’t mean for this to happen” and Griffin got the definite feeling that in her weakened condition, Patsy had revealed that she knew who the killer was.
- Regarding the ransom note, on March 5, 1997, police and handwriting experts clear John Ramsey and Burke as writers. The investigators believe Patsy probably wrote the note and on April 14, 1997, they request from her a fifth handwriting sample.
- The Ramseys have often resisted cooperating with the ongoing investigation, as for example, on Feb. 19, 1997 when they refused to allow police to interview John’s oldest son, John Andrew. A known feud developed early on between the detectives and District Attorney Alex Hunter’s office. Accusations of conflict of interest suggested the reason for Hunter’s frequent conflict with detectives and sheltering of the Ramseys. On Jan. 16, 1998, the Ramseys refuse a police request for a second interview, but on June 25, 1998, allowed Hunter’s office to question them.
- Linda Wilcox, a housekeeper, described the Ramseys, upon finding a flood in their home, Patsy panicking, and John as controlled but “furious,” so filled with “rage” that his eyes “almost changed color.”
- The duct tape roll and any remainder of the cord used were never found in the Ramsey mansion. A footprint one foot from the body made in concrete dust from a High-Tec brand boot could not be linked to any shoe in the house. The 4.5 inch stick used in the ligature strangulation came from one of Mrs. Ramsey’s paintbrushes found among her art supplies in the basement.
- Four fibers on the duct tape have been linked to the red and black jacket that Patsy wore the night before. When Patsy greeted officers at 6 a.m. she was wearing the same jacket she had just worn to the Christmas party. Patsy maintains that she dressed that morning prior to finding out that JonBenet was missing. Yet it took the police months to get the clothing the Ramseys were wearing the night before, just as it took months to get their credit card bills and phone records.
- Prosecutors often fail to convict parents who murder a child, because most people cannot even imagine committing such a crime. Sadly, however, Susan Smith drowned her two young boys, just as thousands of parents have murdered their own children, and countless fathers have molested their daughters.Such brutality does happen, and society’s mindset disregarding such behavior results in more victims.
- As a six-year-old beauty queen, JonBenet was dressed provocatively by her mother and coached to saunter like a seductress.
- If the Ramseys murdered their daughter, possible motives include: parents blaming their daughter for their own sexual abuse of her; jealousy of mother toward daughter; sexual incident getting further out of hand than planned; outburst of wrath after sexual assault unintentionally breaks child’s skull. The actual murder and kidnap scheme came about to cover up the initial crimes.
Much of the “ransom” note is inconceivable from the perspective of an intruder. For example, no kidnapper pays a compliment of “respect” to the business of the victim’s family, as the JonBenet ransom note does to the Ramsey business. But the clue that breaks the case is the phrase, “I advise you to be rested.” No theory of an intruder can explain that phrase, nor much of the above evidence against the Ramseys. However, that key phrase explains the evidence, both the damning and the apparently exculpatory. And it shouts that the parents murdered their daughter and then worked to throw the police off the trail. Thus the ransom note is practically a confession.
On that Christmas night, after Patsy put her son to bed, something prompted Pastsy to fly into an outburst of rage against JonBenet. Perhaps John had begun to sexually abuse his daughter. Regardless, one form of destructive behavior led to another and at midnight, in a burst of anger and emotion, Patsy grabbed a nearby flashlight and struck her daughter in the head, cracking her skull. The forceful “blow knocked her into deep unconsciousness” which at first could have led the parents “to believe she was dead.” Perhaps assuming that their daughter was dead or irreversibly dying and that they could not save her, they set their minds to work on how they could save themselves. Regardless of this horror, neither was willing to give up their millionaire lifestyle. So John and Patsy began to conceal their crimes by staging the scene to look like a kidnapping gone bad. First, they strangle her, which both gets rid of her, and makes what would have been an accidental death appear to be deliberate. Then they planned to dispose of any damning evidence, but realized that, without evidence pointing to someone else, they would be the only suspects. So, if they were to survive, the resourceful Ramseys would have to rework the crime scene to point to an intruder.
They decided to write a ransom note, which John began dictating to Patsy. As they wrote the note, they made mental notes about what evidence they must dispose of, and what evidence they could gather and plant to divert attention. Their note had to take into account that: it might take them hours to rework the crime scene; the neighbors may have already noticed the commotion and might watch the house or even call 911; John needed to leave the house to dispose of the roll of duct tape, the spool of cord, etc.; neighbors may notice them stirring in the house or might see John driving away or returning way past midnight.
Even though they risked being seen, they were not ready to dump their best alibi. They needed to tell the police that they were asleep all night, and heard nothing. Their desperation to avert justice demanded that they try that alibi. Thus, they planned to “wake up” at 6 a.m. and call police. However, a neighbor or even a police patrol might have seen John Ramsey up at 3 a.m. Their wording in the note guarded against that risk. If that worst-case scenario occurred, Patsy could then admit: “Yes, we found the note last night. We were afraid to call the police because of the death threat. John rushed out in desperation to find JonBenet, and I searched the house. Then when John returned without her, we reread the note, and realized that we had better go to bed to get the rest we needed for the next day. When we woke up, we realized that we needed help, so we decided to called 911. But we thought it better not to mention that we had been up desperately looking for her last night.”
With that pretext, they went to work. John found a pair of unused shoes, and made a footprint next to the body. He then took those shoes, the oversized underpants, and other damning evidence with him as he left the house around 1:30 a.m. He went out of find a public restroom, at a nightclub, a gas station, a diner, or even at a striptease joint or, preferably, an adult bookstore with video stalls. Somewhere along his journey he dropped the damning evidence in the trash. At the restroom, he used the panties that Patsy had recently purchased to pick up a pubic hair, and then rubbed a stain onto the underpants. Meanwhile Patsy decided to rewrite the ransom note, and she authored the final, personal, contradictory lines, “Don’t try to grow a brain John. … Use that good, southern common sense of yours. It’s up to you now John!” Patsy then saw the broken ends of the paintbrush that John had overlooked and she hid them among her art supplies. Later, Mr. Ramsey returned to the house, planted the lone pubic hair on the blanket, put the stained underwear on the body, and broke the basement window and disturbed the sill (which he later pointed out to Fleet White).
The unidentifiable DNA material on the underwear and under her fingernails was likewise collected by John, but could also have been collected in a day of normal child’s play. In his unguarded moment online, police chief Beckner, who had headed up the Ramsey investigation, described the possible sources of that DNA to include “Intentional placement“. (If that DNA material had come from an intruder, that would suggest that JonBenet fought and struggled, getting the attention of her neighbors, but not her parents.) To help explain to the police how they could have slept through the attack, Patsy Ramsey had taped their daughter’s mouth shut.
Some may think this plan too involved for the Ramseys to pull off. However, John had built a successful defense contracting business, and Patsy had long ago managed to become Miss West Virginia. Further, they had help. Book author and FBI criminal profiler John Douglas wrote Mind Hunter, which reads in part like the JonBenet case in the use of duct tape, ligatures, and similar phrases in its ransom note. Investigators found that hardback in the Ramsey’s bedroom.
After rechecking the crime scene, the Ramseys went to bed to rehearse their story. Neither slept that night, neglecting their own advice.
READ MORE – – – http://www.writeintoaction.com/JonBenet%20Ramsey%20FBI%20emerges%20from%20chaos.html
VISIT WWW.WRITEINTOACTION.COM