Bill Williams
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2011
- Messages
- 15,713
What "appeal?" They never got an appeal--it was all "one trial", remember? There are no appeals in Italy. In the alternative, if there are appeals in Italy, then they have no prohibition against double jeopardy.
As for the "de novo" second and third instance trials . . . were they really de novo? People like Machiavelli seem to go on about how the higher level courts have no power to upset the fact findings of the lower courts, and the conclusions of higher level courts. That's not de novo.
IIUC in the Italian context, "double jeopardy" relates to that any judgement of the lower courts is provisional until finally signed off on by Cassazione. This legal saga shows this. There is only single-jeopardy (if that's a term!) in Italy with always at least two trials at the lower levels, one a 1st Grade trial and the other a 2nd Grade appeal of that trial, which is "de novo" in the sense that it can bring in new evidence, but also can interpret evidence gathered at former trials without new-review of it.