LondonJohn
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 12, 2010
- Messages
- 21,162
What? They got a tour of the evidence Amanda found.
I do find it interesting when commentators - especially pro-guilt ones - fail to comprehend just what a game changer to the situation it was when the Postal Police arrived at the cottage with the phones.
Up until that moment, Knox/Sollecito (and Romanelli) were concerned that there had been a break-in at the cottage, that there was some visible blood, that Kercher's room was uncharacteristically locked, and that Kercher was not answering either of her phones (her Italian phone was switched off, and her UK phone was just ringing then diverting to voicemail).
Those were the circumstances as they appeared to Knox, Sollecito and Romanelli. They were increasingly concerned for Kercher, as things were clearly out of the ordinary, but there was still no objective reason to believe that she had come to any harm. The situation was, however, strange enough and worrying enough to warrant calling the police - especially as a clear crime (the break-in) had been committed.
But everything changed the moment the Postal Police arrived. As far as the Postals themselves were concerned as they walked up the drive to the cottage, they were just returning a handset to an Italian woman. When they talked with Knox and Sollecito, however, it quickly became clear to all that this was a hugely worrying (and ominous) development. The Postals, plus Knox/Sollecito/Romanelli, now knew that the two mobile phones belonging to Kercher - who was missing, and whose bedroom door was locked - had somehow found their way into a random woman's garden on the outskirts of the city: somewhere where Kercher herself was very unlikely to even have been, far less to have abandoned/dropped her phones there.
It was the arrival of the Postal Police which escalated this situation enormously. There was simply no innocent explanation as to why Kercher's phones would have been found in that location, and when that was coupled with the pre-existing concerns over Kercher's whereabouts, it now pointed towards something bad having happened to Kercher.
I wish people would at least try to place themselves in the position of Knox or Sollecito (or Romanelli) on the morning/lunchtime of 2nd November 2007. People should remember to consider only the information and context that was available/present at each given time - and not to use (as is all too easy if one isn't thinking critically) the benefit of hindsight. Simply put: the minute before the Postal Police arrived with their new information, there was concern and worry about Kercher and her whereabouts, linked to the condition of the cottage and the inability to contact Kercher. The minute after the Postal Police arrived with their new information, it was now reasonable to objectively suspect that Kercher might have come to some harm, and it was now reasonable to break down her door to find out what was inside her locked bedroom.