With all due respect: I must disagree with your assessment of the Italian Justice system.
I agree that those that participate in the Italian criminal justice system are "riddled with corruption, conflicts of interest, political factions and patronage", but so are the prosecutors and police that participate in the criminal justice systems of many countries, but I find many of the rules and procedures that are written into the Italian criminal justice system to be commendable "fail safes" against unjust convictions that I would like to see adopted to other criminal justice systems, including that of the United States.
What I like most of all is the need for a "Motivation" that requires a clear statement of the reasons, by law, that the accused is guilty, and the automatic and serious appeals by the accused in the case that the "Motivation" is absolute nonsense, which certainly was the case for AK and RS.
It is certainly true that Italy allowed many incompetent and biased judges and prosecutors to participate in the trials of AK and RS, at every level, but the "Motivations" and scrutiny of the "Motivations" by the accused allowed the Italian criminal justice system to stumble, restart, stumble again, and then eventually arrive at the correct result.
It also seems clear that this case, because the system employed the most incompetent, corrupt, biased, and even psychotic court officers, led down a twisted path that revealed many of the weaknesses that still exist in the Italian criminal justice system, and need to be addressed and corrected.
Most of these weaknesses can be traced directly to the decisions of the ISC to fail to recognize the pitfalls of creating judicial truths, such as the multiple participants judicial truth, that led directly to overstepping its legal mandate to review the procedures of the appeal judge and create even MORE judicial truths relating to evidence evaluation, as overturning Hellmann and virtually directing Nencini to declare a guilty verdict with a "Motivation" that ignored both the evidence and the principles decreed by Italian law.
To my way of thinking, the final acquittal on March 27 represented the Italian criminal justice system saying "the mess that these idiots have created here is as apparent as the 'emperors new clothes' and we have to put a stop to it before it gets worse, if that is even possible".
I do not know if any rules or procedures protecting any system designed by human beings can save a the system from the procession of corruption and stupidity we have seen over the past seven years.
Yes, biased and corrupt idiots participated in the bumbling spectacle that Italy has presented, but the Motivations and the strict appeals eventually delivered justice to AK and RS, at least as far as the worst accusations were concerned.
And I think that the inevitable spanking that Italy will receive from the ECHR will, in good time, close out the whole sorry mess.
Just my opinion