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Have you looked at other cases where (most likely) innocent defendants are convicted? In these cases, it is well documented that the evidence will be shaded, cops will lie to support other cops, etc. . . .Do you call these actions a conspiracy?
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Some even have false confessions, even when the confession doesn't match the evidence. All the judicary (and jury, in the US) sees are the three words, "I did it," and nothing matters after that.
The cop thing, I believe, is called the "Thin Blue Line", and there was even a movie by that name about a true to life wrongful conviction, and the movie actually helped straighten out that wrongful conviction. I haven't seen it, so maybe I should and shut-up about it until then.
In the US anyway, it seems to me that judges don't really like stepping all over other judge's decisions (especially murder cases) and that is sometimes part of the problem behind innocent convictions, and none of that really needs a conspiracy to be true, and I don't see any reason why Italy would be any different.
And once again, this is all just my opinion,
d
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ETA: I can understand why judges (in the US) would not really like to do a lot of stepping (the higher courts do it more than the lower ones), How confusing would that be if all judges overturned all other judges daily. Even, if it was just precedents alone... in my opinion any way (Last time, see my new sig, "Unless otherwise indicated, the above is only my opinion").
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