Bill Williams
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2011
- Messages
- 15,713
The question is: why? Given that there was nothing wrong with what he did (she might have been still alive and in need or urgent assistance) why not say so? I suspect the fear was that the defence would then jump all over this and suggest it as a route for contamination.
I was not completely clear which side of the victim he walked around to check her out. In the end it looked like it was the right (window) side. Could he have acquired any blood on the soles of his shoes and transferred it elsewhere?
Forget Battistelli's testimony... there is absolutely NO reason for him to have shied away from admitting that he went in to do the decent thing, see if Meredith was still alive. There must be some other reason for him to lie in court.
The 118 forensic staff also entered on the afternoon of Nov 2, and did not have protective coverings on... this from Massei's motivations:
Massei p. 91 said:On the afternoon of November 2, 2007 personnel of the Perugia Police headquarters
went to said house. The 118 and Coroner Dr. Lalli also came; a few hours later, the
Forensics staff from Rome arrived.
They then proceeded to perform an initial review of the house; Forensics proceeded
with findings in their area of expertise that took up the afternoon, evening and the
night of November 2, 2007 and subsequent days until Sunday, November 5, 2007.
Massei pp. 95-96 said:Monica Napoleoni, Deputy Commissioner of the State Police, arrived at the Via della
Pergola house around 13:30 pm, and colleagues of the postal police gave information
about the discovery of the body of a girl. Arriving almost at the same time as the
staff from 118, there was a female doctor and a nurse. In Romanelli's room, she saw
the break-in and glass "that had fallen on top of the stuff lying on the floor" (page
226). She approached Meredith’s room with the chief assistant Buratti, who
remained at the door as Napoleoni took one step inside the room "while the 118
doctor uncovered the corpse" (page 228, hearing [96] on February 27, 2009).
She was wearing shoe covers and sterile gloves. ‚I then saw this girl who was on the
floor with her face lying towards the right of the viewer, with a terrible wound. Was
semi-naked, had the t-shirt rolled up above the breast and lots of blood and spatters
of blood even on the breast‛ (page 229).
Everyone who entered had gloves and shoe covers on except the 118 personnel who certified the death. Soon afterwards, Dr. Chiacchiera and colleagues from the
Scientific Police arrived.
Maybe the 118 personnel certified the death from the hall.
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