carbonjam72
Master Poster
- Joined
- Apr 24, 2014
- Messages
- 2,324
A guy called roteoctober posted this snippet from Nonsencini at IIP:
To which a particularly astute poster has replied:
A guy called roteoctober posted this snippet from Nonsencini at IIP:
Quote:
“In conclusion, if in point of law this Judge expresses adherence to the principle mentioned above, adhering to its precepts, in point of fact the existence of a definitive judgement attributing the murder of Meredith Kercher to a specific culprit, Hemann Rudy Guede, in complicity with other people, makes unquestionable the assumption that any fact finding having to be carried out with reference to the evidentiary compendium emerging from the documents of this proceeding will have to be performed having as an inescapable reference point the aforementioned judicially ascertained fact, and hence facing the datum, definitively established in the proceeding, that Rudi Hermann Guede participated, along with others, in the murder of Meredith Kercher”To which a particularly astute poster has replied:
Originally Posted by Clive Wismayer
Is this a ridiculous thought? Suppose Amanda and Raffaele were tried first and acquitted. Then Rudy was tried later. Given that the only people Rudy could reasonably be supposed to have committed the crime with were Amanda and Raffaele (according to Nencini) would that mean either:
A a finding of multiple killers would be impossible, or
B Rudy could not be convicted at all since the evidence pointed to multiple killers and the only people who could have been involved with him were acquitted?
Or something else?
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This is a really interesting point. A fast track trial isn't inherently a bad thing. However, if the result of a fast track trial can haunt trials that follow it with findings based on abbreviated hearings, then fast Track trials should only be allowed AFTER full trials have been conducted.
That way all participants get the benefit of the most thorough exploration of evidence that the prosecution puts forward. Otherwise, we get the current injustice, where an abbreviate trial with no examination of evidence becomes somehow binding even on non-participants to the trial - perhaps a problem no matter what the order of hearings.
Another thing the Italians could try - MEET EVERY DAY INSTEAD OF TWICE A WEEK. Don't take the summers off in the middle, and no goddamn siestas if they're doing that too. Or really, just export your trials to a northern EU country with a for profit legal option; export your trials, and import EU tax dodgers. Seems like a fair deal.

