Originally posted by ColdCaseJury
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E.g., if she was bending down to light the fire (which if she was I'm guessing she was successful in going, given the burns), I think it's a very safe assumption she did not know there was a dangerous person in the home at the time. There were spent (?) matches found underneath her body to support that she had just lit it.
I used Rod's blueprint to try and recreate the crime scene and where the blood splatter was found based on what you just told me, please advise on the accuracy:
Knowing of the burns, I think it is safe to assume that something about the way she fell or was moved meant that her skirt ended up in the fire briefly.
I think the burglary is very likely staged, and so we can't rule out staging of the body to make it look as though something different has happened either... I would say that the spray on the wall must certainly be the direction she was attacked from (and then the lower body rotated into a different position) - except she was hit anywhere between 4 and 11 times, so that splatter could have been from any of the blows... Not sure if splatter like that still occurs after the heart stops beating...
I don't think Wallace necessarily did it, it's his own unusual behavior which implicates him. I think most of the prosecution case revolved around exposing false statements and pointing out odd (as an example, alibi-mongering) type behavior. Knowing all of his actions and his changing stories, coupled with the likely staging of the scene, it seems very hard to believe he had no hand in it whatsoever... In a different situation where he'd been lured by note to Menlove West and his wife struck down in the hall or kitchen, and didn't falter from his story, I think I'd be inclined to believe his innocence... With her in the parlor and all the other things the same, I'd still feel he may have been innocent, but I think it almost completely rules out the idea of a burglary as a primary motive unless the burglar intended to kill her first.
That is unlikely, as it's suggested a bar or poker were used to hit her. Would a burglar preparing to kill someone come so unprepared as to have to rely on using items found in the victim's home to carry out the attack?
Most burglars only kill when panicked, and considering Julia was seemingly minding her own business in the parlor, I strongly suspect it was an assassination, with a staged robbery to divert police attention.
As far as the staging of the robbery goes, it is perhaps the worst in the history of the world... A replaced cash box, a door needlessly ripped off (lol), no other super easy to reach valuables stolen. It's a borderline pathetic attempt... I'd suggest people look more into people who might have a motive to murder her. She wasn't exactly a nice woman, she surely had her share of enemies.
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