Ken Dine
Muse
The police had Amanda's phone tapped since shortly after the murder, so all I'm saying is that the police must have known Edda would be in Perugia on Nov 6th, and that Edda would likely try to rush Amanda out of Italy.
If the police had hoped to force a confession from a lawyerless Amanda in the wee-hours of Nov 6th before mom arrived, then they had to do it that night, and they had many detectives on hand that night to do the job (12?), and even Mignini was still there. Something out of the ordinary was surely in the works that night.
.........
What happened that night isn't very hard to reconstruct, and it was clearly a brutal interrogation, which is why the police had to suppress the recordings.
Ken
I can agree with your analysis, but I was asking a specific question:
Are you saying that the cops said these actual words in this interview?
They actually said "From tapping Amanda’s phone the police knew that Amanda’s mother was arriving the next morning."
Did any of the cops say anything to this effect during this interview?
Yes or no?
I’m a tad confused about the “Interview” you’re referring to?
Do you mean Amanda’s interrogation in the wee-hours of Nov 6th, or something else?
If you mean Amanda’s interrogation, then why would the police mention to Amanda that they knew her mom was coming the next day as they tormented her into confessing?
That doesn’t make any sense?
What does make sense is that, after tapping Amanda's phone for several days, that by Nov 5th the police knew Amanda’s mom would be arriving the next day, and clearly the arrival of Amanda’s mom would complicate matters since Edda would likely drag Amanda to the airport by her braids unless the police could devise a way of stopping Amanda from leaving Italy.
Even if the police somehow stopped Amanda from leaving Italy when they had no evidence against Amanda, having Amanda’s mom thereafter at Amanda’s side would surely prevent the police from ever again interviewing Amanda without a lawyer present.

