JonBenét Ramsey Case Shocker: Former DNA Analyst’s Guilty Plea Unravels Years of Hidden Evidence as Father Demands Justice
Ever get that nagging feeling you’re missing the most obvious clue in a killer case? Yeah, me too—especially when it comes to the JonBenét Ramsey saga, where DNA evidence seems to have been, well, casually set aside. You’d think items soaked in mystery would get the royal treatment, right? But nope—some crucial samples never even made it under the microscope. Cost-cutting? Overlooked because unidentified male DNA was already in the mix? Makes you wonder if the investigators just threw in the towel too soon. John, JonBenét’s father, has been ringing alarm bells for years about Boulder PD’s mishandling of the investigation—and even went as far as offering to foot the bill for cutting-edge forensic genetic genealogy to breathe new life into the cold case. Fast forward to 2025, when Adam Frank, defending Michael Clark in a Boulder murder trial, threw down an even bigger accusation: that mistakes haunting JonBenét’s case had a ripple effect elsewhere. So, how deep does this botch really run? Ready to unravel the tangled threads?

“We always kind of wondered why. I mean, items that should have been sampled, but they weren’t, I don’t know whether it was a cost issue or they already found unidentified male DNA, so why go any further?”
Throughout the years, John has accused the Boulder Police Department of botching the investigation. Investigators have also been accused of not turning over DNA evidence to an advanced genealogy firm to hopefully find the person behind the bloody crime. John had even offered to fundraise to cover the cost of investigative genetic genealogy.
He explained, “We’ve advocated for a year almost that we use forensic genetic genealogy, FGG, which is kind of the latest tool that’s out there. You have to go to an outside lab, but it’s got to be one that knows how to do it.”
In 2025, Adam Frank, the defense attorney for Michael Clark, on trial for the 1994 murder of Marty Grisham in Boulder, alleged there were major mistakes made in JonBenét’s case and his client’s case, too.














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