lonepinealex
Muse
In all this discussion about the potential extradition battle for Knox - with more than one anonymous State Dept source now apparently saying that if the convictions were confirmed and Knox's extradition were sought, the US would refuse to extradite - have the pro-guilt commentators yet managed to figure out that this wouldn't be a case of the US protecting a "murderer"?
If the reports (and the sources) are accurate, then the reason why the US would refuse to extradite Knox would be this: the US Government doesn't think Knox should be convicted of murder, and that any such conviction in an Italian court would be a miscarriage of justice. Knox is a private citizen of no other importance (strategic, military or otherwise) to the US Government, so there can be no other reasonable explanation for a refusal to extradite.
Perhaps the pro-guilt commentators might care to dwell on this factor for a while. Why might the US Government consider this to be a miscarriage of justice, and to conclude this so strongly as to refuse extradition? Could it possibly be that, under reasoned non-partisan analysis, there are clear indications of a miscarriage of justice? Surely not! (Obviously the more stupid and blinkered pro-guilt commentators are likely to retreat under the banner of "Bad old America protecting its own regardless", but maybe this might just give one or two of them pause for thought.....)
Indeed, I made this point a couple of pages back but it got lost in the fracas.
They can hardly put the US State Dept's response down to the actions of the PR Supertanker.
Surely some of them will start to wonder?