What if the greatest mystery in the JonBenét Ramsey case is not who killed her, but why no one was ever prosecuted?
In JonBenet Ramsey: Prostitution of Justice, Doc Miller challenges nearly three decades of accepted narratives surrounding one of the most infamous child murders in American history. Rejecting the popular image of an unsolved mystery, Miller argues that the real story lies in the collision of wealth, political power, media influence, and a criminal justice system unwilling to test its evidence in court.
From the chaotic morning of December 26, 1996, to the secret grand jury proceedings that ultimately voted to indict John and Patsy Ramsey, Miller traces a path he believes leads not to mystery, but to a profound justice system failure. He examines the controversial ransom note, disputed forensic evidence, the emergence of Lou Smit's Intruder Theory, and the role played by Boulder District Attorney Alex Hunter, whose refusal to sign the grand jury indictment remains one of the most debated decisions in modern criminal law.
Part criminal justice book, part investigative journalism angle, and part justice system corruption exposé, this work explores how public relations campaigns, celebrity attorneys, and relentless media narratives reshaped a homicide investigation into a cultural phenomenon. Readers interested in legal corruption exposure, forensic controversy, media manipulation, and a famous unsolved murder book will find a deeply researched and unapologetically controversial examination of the JonBenét Ramsey case.
Whether you agree with its conclusions or not, Prostitution of Justice asks a question that still haunts America: Did the system fail to solve a murder, or did it refuse to prosecute one?