Diocletus
Illuminator
- Joined
- May 19, 2011
- Messages
- 3,969
I agree the European Court will not strive to work out what happened in the interrogation. It's hardly necessary anyway. The calunnia conviction must be annulled as being fatally and fundamentally tainted by irregularity and once that goes, the significant role played by that conviction on the murder conviction must, at the very least, call the latter into serious question too.
This is another good point. They will be troubled by the Art. 3 issue (degrading treatment) but will take care of it by simply saying that there was a violation of Art. 6.1 (assistance of counsel/right to silence). Much simpler and cleaner, and the Italians won't whine as much afterwards.
Last edited: