Here are some of the coverage of the "case closed" presser:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-492410/Meredith-Foxy-Knoxy-brought-strange-men-house.html
http://seattlest.com/2007/11/07/from_the_papers.php
http://slog.thestranger.com/2007/11/the_realm_of_the_sensless
(comment on the 16th as per Dan O.'s info mentions bleach no receipt)
No mention of bleach much less a receipt from the morning after tied to Amanda.
The only mention of bleach before the 9th is referring to the bottle Raf is holding in the MySpace pic.
Dave has determined Mignini wasn't even there. Moore's statement is false. Clemente's statement about the knife being ruled out by the prosecution expert is false.
The two interview vids should be watched for errors.
Maybe I am missing something in my reading, but I see no real coverage of the press conference held by the police after the Nov. 6, 2007 arrests in the citations provided above.
While it seems clear that Mignini was not at the press conference (and he certainly didn't appear in the commonly shown photo), did Mignini authorize the press conference? His legal role as prosecutor (Public Minister), according to Italian procedural law, is to direct the police engaged in an investigation during said investigation. Thus, any statements made by the police at a press conference made during an investigation could be assumed to be approved by the prosecutor, in his role as director of the police investigation. However, there apparently was no verifiable reference to bleach receipts at the press conference, but the police apparently were telling media false reports of such receipts at a later date. Since the police involved in the investigation are required by Italian procedural law to follow the direction of the prosecutor, the prosecutor either authorized such statements to the media or did not disavow them.
ETA: A transcript or video of the press conference would be most useful, especially with regard to evidence of violation of the presumption of innocence. Presumption of innocence with respect to a crime is a right of all persons not convicted of such crime, within the Council of Europe States according to ECHR case-law.
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