DNA test for teacher who says he killed JonBenet
Catherine Elsworth and Andrew Drummond Bangkok
August 20, 2006
THE suspect in the killing of child beauty queen JonBenet Ramsey is 
expected to be extradited to America today despite growing speculation 
over his confession to Thai authorities and the likelihood that only DNA
 testing will prove whether he committed the crime.
John Mark Karr, 41, a teacher and child-care assistant, allegedly 
told Thai officials that he drugged, raped and accidentally killed 
six-year-old JonBenet in the basement of her family home in Boulder, 
Colorado, 10 years ago.
Once extradited to Colorado, Karr is likely to face charges of murder, kidnapping and child sexual assault.
But speculation has grown that rather than being the killer, the 
husband of two teenage brides who was once arrested for possession of 
child pornography could merely be obsessed with the case.
Karr was seized in an apartment in Bangkok on Wednesday after a US 
judge issued a warrant for his arrest. Hours later, before a roomful of 
journalists, he said: ‘I was with JonBenet when she died. Her death was 
an accident.’
But some experts have said that without corroborating evidence, such 
as DNA, the confession appeared unlikely to secure a conviction.
DNA that came from a Caucasian white male was found beneath the 
girl’s fingernails and on her clothing. Authorities have never said 
whether the DNA matched anyone on an FBI database.
A DNA mouth swab was taken from Karr in Bangkok. The results are 
unknown. He will be given another test when he is handed over to 
prosecutors.
‘DNA is the big ticket, the 600-pound gorilla in this case,’ former 
Denver prosecutor Craig Silverman told the Rocky Mountain News.
‘If his DNA doesn’t match, that’s a huge problem for the prosecution.
 If it’s a match, then it’s game, set and match for the state.’
Karr’s ex-wife, Lara Knutson, whom he married when she was 16, said 
Karr was with her and their three children in Alabama during the 
Christmas holiday period in 1996 when JonBenet was killed.
The post-mortem examination showed no evidence of drugs in the girl’s
 system and there was no conclusion about whether she was raped.
Examples of Karr’s handwriting are also being examined to see if he 
wrote the ransom note demanding $118,000 left in the Ramsey home.
The email correspondence that led to Karr’s arrest reveals an 
obsession with the Ramsey case. In a series of messages Karr sent to 
Michael Tracey, a British academic in Colorado who produced three 
documentaries about the Ramsey murder, the suspect says he was ‘in love’
 with JonBenet.
In one message, sent on December 23 last year, Karr asked Professor 
Tracey to visit JonBenet’s old house in Boulder and recite a poem.
It read: ‘JonBenet, my love, my life. I love you and shall forever 
love you. I pray that you can hear my voice calling out to you from my 
darkness – this darkness that now separates us.’
Professor Tracey contacted authorities in May.
		
					
					
					
					     
            