Nearly three decades after six-year-old beauty queen JonBenét Ramsey was brutally murdered in her Boulder, Colorado home, a new true-crime documentary claims to solve the mystery—naming both the killer and motive. But how credible is it? And why is the public suddenly questioning everything again?

Watch the 'Cold Case: Who Killed JonBenét Ramsey' Trailer

A Fresh Documentary, A Bold Claim

Titled Who Did It? Identifies the Murderer And Motive for JonBenét Ramsey Case, the film premiered on YouTube recently and makes a startling assertion: the Ramsey parents are innocent, and the killer was an unidentified intruder motivated by obsession and rage.

According to the documentary’s producers, investigations—including advanced DNA testing and unused audio diaries—point to a stranger, not the family. Early buzz suggests they’ve uncovered forensic proof that wasn’t available in the 1990s.

JonBenét Ramsey Docs to Watch After Netflix's 'Who Killed JonBenét Ramsey'

What’s New This Time?

Previously Unheard Evidence

Audio tapes from Detective Lou Smit, once involved in the case, have resurfaced. Smit strongly argued the family didn’t commit the crime. These tapes reportedly include confessions that only he would know.

DNA Test Calls

Cutting-edge DNA techniques are being applied to the old crime scene material. One theory suggests that analysis of minute, previously overlooked evidence may finally identify a third party.

Interview with Former DA Alex Hunter

Hunter’s newfound interview, included in the doc, hinting he had suspicions not made public in the original proceedings.

The documentary dismantles the sensational media storm that originally cast suspicion on the Ramseys. It revisits early investigative errors, such as mishandling DNA and failing to secure the crime scene outside of typical protocol.

Social media is buzzing:
“When a stranger’s DNA was found, why didn’t they act on it?”
“Is this the point where police and media got it so wrong?”
“Could justice finally be on the horizon?”

Skepticism and Hope

The house where JonBenet Ramsey was found dead is listed for sale at nearly  $7M

While families and true-crime sleuths are hungry for closure, some experts caution viewers:

Old evidence is tricky—contamination, degradation, chain-of-custody issues.

However, the documentary’s director, Oscar-nominated Joe Berlinger, has publicly argued that there’s zero chance the parents were involved—and hopes this will push Boulder authorities to reopen the case using modern science.

A Turning Point or Another Dead End?

The narrative of Who Did It? is compelling, but official confirmation is still pending. DNA results could take months. Whether this documentary will prompt a formal investigation or legal reopening remains uncertain.

Still, after nearly thirty years of silence, viewers are holding their collective breath:
Could the truth finally emerge? And will justice for JonBenét’s memory be within reach?