Bill Williams
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2011
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Going to the source as to what Raffaele might have meant when he implied that their behaviour was "suspicious"......Could you clarify your question?
ETA - here's one snip:
Raffaele Sollecito, the man Italian prosecutors say helped Amanda Knox murder her roommate in 2007, admitted this week that he does have some lingering questions about Knox's behavior around the time of the crime.
In an interview that aired on Italian television Monday, Sollecito said that he doesn’t understand why his ex-girlfriend stayed in her flat in Perugia, Italy, to take a shower after she realized the residence had been broken into and noticed blood drops on the bathroom floor.
"Certainly I asked her questions," Sollecito said in the interview, which aired in part on the "Today" show Monday. "Why did you take a shower? Why did she spend so much time there? . . . I don't have answers."
Read Latest Breaking News from Newsmax.com http://www.newsmax.com/TheWire/aman...sollecito/2014/02/25/id/554566/#ixzz3f4TkjMr9
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Raffaele said he was perhaps the only one in the Questura that could discern that Amanda's "behaviour" would attract attention of Italians. (As to the Brits, he perhaps did not have that kind of radar.)
I first blurted this out when Erin Burnett was interviewing CNN legal analyst and former homicide prosecutor, Paul Callan, just after the Nencini provisional re-conviction.
Burnett seemed sure that the key to this case was "Amanda's behaviour." IIRC even Callan gave a slight scoff to her suggestion.... Callan himself as soft-guilter.
The point being, what was the behaviour pointing to, if it is seen to be "suspicious"? I'm loathe to read through Massei again, but even is guilt verdict did not rely upon behaviour.
Of all the non sequitors of making a guilt case this is the non sequitorious.
