Continuation Part 17: Amanda Knox/Raffaele Sollecito

Status
Not open for further replies.
No, I mean things for which evidence is zero, such like the alleged existence of "suppressed DNA profiles", and which some criminals falsely present as "proven facts".

Machiavelli - in the last few days posters here have posted communication from two people to the court, citing the suppression of the raw data files.

You yourself commented at length on Stefanoni's own letter to a court, where she defends not handing them over, and where she sets the conditions on which she'll let people take a peek - if done in her own lab, with her still controlling the interpretation.

You yourself defended NOT handing them over, implying that if in the hands of the defence there' no telling what they'd do with them.

More importantly, there is no one else in Italy who shares your views. Can you point to anyone in Italy who shares your views. Don't bother with Maresca, he believes the whole matter, writ large, is closed as of 27 March with acquittals.
 
Last edited:
What I find amusing is Machiavelli saying there was some kind of wrongful interference by the US State Department. Personally, that's what I hope the State Department would do if one of its citizens faced such a wrongful prosecution.

The US Government does not interfere in foreign judicial processes, in spite of Machiavelli wrongfully believing that they do. There are two logical reasons why the US Government does not do this. First, the US Government would not want foreign governments to interfere in US court cases. Secondly, the US Government was not present in the cottage when the victim was murdered; it has no first-hand knowledge of this event and cannot know what occurred or who was involved.

When a US citizen is involved in a legal matter abroad, the US Embassy's Consular Section (American Citizen Services unit) will provide a standing list of local attorneys who have provided their names to be on such a list. No embassy official vets the lawyers on the list or can vouch for their abilities. (Think what liability claims would arise against US Consular officials and the State Department if it were to select or "recommend" what lawyer to hire and the lawyer lost/botched the case.)
 
Complete rubbish! You're presupposing the "real" murderers were never going to be found.

Nonsense. The real murderer was found. They already had Guede's DNA, his prints, his shoe prints and his own admission to being there with an utterly preposterous story to explain it all. The only reason they HAD to find SOMETHING they could argue linked Amanda and Raffaele to the murder was because they had them locked up for six weeks already and had declared "Case Closed" five weeks earlier. Rather than admit the error they simply made up evidence to support it.
 
"TruthCalls" would appear to be a misnomer if you consider Mach pointing out the facts makes Mach "a disgusting character"?

The post that I am referencing is not about pointing out facts, it's an emotional outburst by a troubled soul who clearly admits his fanatical hatred for numerous people he doesn't even know based solely on their opinion of one case. His comments are disgusting, and that's being polite.
 
I would like to again raise something we discussed here a year ago. It would be good if there is an organization that underwrites an on-call legal service to provide preliminary legal guidance to people involved with the police or judiciary in foreign countries. If Amanda had called the number and said my housemate was just murdered and the police want to talk with me, the Rome office of such a service could have told her "do not say anything until your lawyer arrives". That might have saved Italy, the Kerchers, Knox, Sollecito, Lumumba, Slappy Ficarra, Napoleoni. Giobi, Mignini, Machiavelli, Vixen, et al a lot of trauma.

One version of this legal aid service would be a benefit provided by a credit card provider. Use our Visa card to purchase your plane tickets and hotels when you travel abroad and you have access to a 24/7 phone number to call for prelinary legal guidance whenever you are in contact with police or the judicial process. Universities should require their students going abroad to have such coverage. Parents should insist on it, too. So should employers whose employees are traveling abroad. Italians should want this when traveling. Americans, too.
 
Last edited:
What? They've just reported a burglary and Amanda hasn't spotted her dirty great lamp was gone? In court, she was squirming and wriggling about admitting the lamp on the floor of Mez' room was hers. Conveniently wiped clean of all fingerprints.

OK Vixen, maybe you can be the first guilter in eight years to explain this comment.

WHEN did they wipe their prints from the lamp and for WHAT REASON?

Do you think they planned on forgetting the lamp in the room and so they wiped their prints before they locked it in the room? Or perhaps you think they thought leaving the lamp in the room without prints might work in their favor somehow? Or maybe you think they snuck into the cottage AFTER the room had been entered and, realizing the left the lamp behind, managed to wipe it clean when no one was looking - even though there are a dozen witnesses that know they never were near the room.

Never mind there is NO evidence the lamp was dusted for prints or tested for DNA. It is so typical of the pro-guilt side to latch onto anything and twist it to imply guilt, often without even thinking through how it actually plays out in the bigger picture.
 
OK Vixen, maybe you can be the first guilter in eight years to explain this comment.

WHEN did they wipe their prints from the lamp and for WHAT REASON?

Do you think they planned on forgetting the lamp in the room and so they wiped their prints before they locked it in the room? Or perhaps you think they thought leaving the lamp in the room without prints might work in their favor somehow? Or maybe you think they snuck into the cottage AFTER the room had been entered and, realizing the left the lamp behind, managed to wipe it clean when no one was looking - even though there are a dozen witnesses that know they never were near the room.

Never mind there is NO evidence the lamp was dusted for prints or tested for DNA. It is so typical of the pro-guilt side to latch onto anything and twist it to imply guilt, often without even thinking through how it actually plays out in the bigger picture.

They did it through the keyhole.
 
Now I found your post.

I rest my case; Finzi was badly briefed. He justifies his choice on the fact that he had been told the wounds were deep. BUT no dimensions, no description of a type of knife.

Your "case" was that he only picked the first one he saw. Now, if you believe he was only briefed approximately, this might well be. But it seems a rather inconsequential observation.

In fact all the wounds were compatible with a smaller knife than the one he collected. Some wounds were ONLY compatible with a smaller knife.

IMHO, they were not. I believe noting there was a very deep and long wound is an important element that would suggest any rational investigator to pay a particular interest to large knives.
You say that the large wound was compatible with a small knife, but I have to disagree. Theoreticall, once could say any knife with a blade longer than 8.5 cm could be compatible. But it's theoretical. A large wound of that kind indicates probably a large knife, and the imprint on the bedsheet looks like that of a knife with at least a 12cm long blade.
All these elements are circumstantial, but they are an indication.
I say that such a large wounds tends to be incompatible with a small knife, because the lengh of a knive determines not also depth of wound abut also the strenght of the leverage. It's quite difficult to produce such a long cut with clean margins like that with a thin blade only 8.5cm long. I'm not saying I have any proof that this is physically impossible, but intuitively I would look for a larger knife, it looks like a tool more likely to cause that wound.

Anyway, still I don't see the point about Finzi. In fact, Finzi collected both a large knife and a smaller knife from the apartment, on the basis that they looked interesting. And that's a rational procedure.

Can you say the smaller wounds were not compatible with a steak knife?

No, I cannot tell that a steak knife is incompatible with a stabbing. I can only tell that it would be irrational to collect steak knives, especially from an apartment where you just found two "good" knives certainly compatible with a stabbing, and worth to be analysed immediately.
If you read Finzi's testimony, however, you would note Finzi says the apartment was seized entirely: all objects inside were seized, thus including steak knives. The police reserved to pick up any other object from the apartment if they deemed that could be useful to investigations.

What about the knives in Knox's kitchen and under her bed? By dismissing other knives as being too small he made an error.

But there is no "dismissal", there was no definitive decision, it was only temporary. The other knives were actually "dismissed" later only because DNA of Meredith was found on Sollecito's kitchen knife.
It should also be noted that knives inside the cottage were considered less interesting than those in Sollecito's apartment in the first place, because a possible Meredith's DNA finding on them would have been of less probative value.

There must have been a smaller knife. He did not look for one because he jumped to a conclusion not supported by the evidence. This is characteristic of the police approach, jump to a conclusion, act on it, ignore what the evidence says.

I don't think Finzi "jumped" to any conclusion. It's simply normal for investigators to make choices. Investigators have no other choice but making choices, they have to use intuition and comprehensive perception, and their approach has an economy. It is just false that Finzi chose "without" evidence. He chose on summary information, and he chose rationally.

Because of his 'instinct' that the knife on top, the first knife he saw, was a possible murder weapon, the prosecution were forced in to the two knife theory, because this large knife could NOT have inflicted all the wounds.

After you know what his actual criteria were, you stop emphasizing a false idea that he picked a knife because it was "on top" or because it was "the first he saw". This is defence spin, trying to invent non-existing causal link.

He did not chose the knife because it was the first one he saw. It's false. He doesn't say so. He says he picked it because it appeared interesting, ans also picked another one because of the same reason.

So where did he get the gloves from? In the crime scene videos we see that the police use boxes of gloves, not individually packed pairs. So who pulled out gloves before him? Where had they been? Where had the box of gloves been? We have a source of contamination here.

Sources of contamination need to be proven with some substantial argument.

I accept if you say so that there is no concept of chain of evidence in Italy. However if considering the interpretation of LCN touch or trace DNA the integrity of the sample and the collection process is crucial.

If you want to dismiss a piece of circumstantial evidence you need a strong, substantial argument, capable of actually crushing the evidence completely. To point out that the circumstantial evidence is not "perfect" in cartesian terms is no argument. Meredith's DNA found on a blade in Sollecito's apartment is a very peculiar and improbable finding, not something you can dismiss on a concept of scientific quality.

So this was a standard process? I assume then that most of the evidence was treated in the same way? Unpackaged at the police station, documented, and repackaged? Was this done in the same room? On the same desk? What were the cleaning processes between examination of each item? Was the box sitting in the office where the evidence underwent repertazione? Had Gubbiotti been to the crime scene? Had anyone else passing through that office? if you say this is routine procedure I accept that. Yet it is another opportunity for the knife or the box it was put in to be contaminated with MK DNA.

It's not me who says that. It's Gubbiotti who says so in his testimony. He explains he unpacked the knife to do a procedure called "repartazione".
He was not asked all the questions you ask.

I accept there was a great deal of poor practice, that the handling of the knife was not worse than the handling of most of the evidence.

Reference please.
In contrast please see Goray, M. and R. A. H. van Oorschot (2014). "The complexities of DNA transfer during a social setting." Legal Medicine 17(2): 82-91. Where they document DNA transmission in a social situation not involving body 'fluids'. Interestingly one participant 'imported' DNA from an unknown individual which he subsequently spread first on to a glass (secondary transfer)then from that glass on to a table (tertiary transfer). If this had been a crime scene the finding of this unknown persons DNA would be argued as evidence they were there. However in a controlled experiment it has been demonstrated that an individual does not need to have been present for their DNA to be found on an object in a room. No body fluids here.

The premise is that I don't have Oorschot's article before my eyes, but as for what I recall by memory, such "situation" produced by the experiments only tends to support what I said, no way it contradicts it. The experiment is based on massive DNA sources (like glasses), not microscopic sources. My understanding is such massive sources were even deposited through liquid mean (saliva) and transferred through wet surface (human skin). But above all it's the massive original amount produced through saliva what makes this seems having nothing to do with what we are talking about. The knowledge about a stain of biological fluid (wet at the origin, then dried) containing massive amounts of DNA that is likely to be touched, equates to assume there is a large-size (non microscopic) DNA stain to start with, and that the carrier is likely to touch the stain. Also, you should assume that the same carrier will be likly to touch the item.
And even under those ideal pre-set conditions, tertiary transfer is still a relatively rare event.
But in a real scenario, such assumptions/conditions should be proven first. (ths is basically what Novelli and the Cassazione say)
No conditions like that are proven for the bra clasp or the knife.

So why were not all the scratches tested? Perfectly reasonable to swab the blade. Not sure why anyone worries about whether there was a small scratch where Stef says she saw one.

In fact I'm not worried. But ther was one at least. And I just guess she swabbed seizable portions of the blade.

It does not improve the issue. She submitted to court a document that was false. The hand written entry is supposed to have been contemporaneous. It is hard to see how she could have made that mistake if the document had been written at the time.

I don't know when it was written, but I would naturally think the report was written subsequently. And despite we call it "Stefanoni's report", I believe it was not redacted by Stefanoni, certainly not by Stefanoni alone.
Several pages of the report seem to be the re-pasting of pre-written texts, repeating themselves with only some data changing.

Especially since subsequently documents were found that documented the use of the QUBIT. So the hand written note must have been made later. The fact that there is one 'error' justifies going through and checking all other facts she gave against the original data.

There's nothing wrong chacking data. I just note the defence never intended to seriously check the data. Their approach was always opportunistic and intended to search pretext, never intended to thoroughly exploit their options to check data.

Once this one 'error' was identified all the rest should have been reviewed. This review should have been led by the director of the laboratory, possibly with an external expert to independently review the data and ensure the report was otherwise true.

This is not something you can say. You can't tell who is to be appointed to "review". Quality of any investigating action or evidence collection can sure be investigated as well, but not along with the principles you seem to believe. A review anyway should be motivated on a principle that does not dispute a principle of trust for Stefanoni as a witness, because to dispute a witness sincerity one would need a proof.
All this would have to be done by a judge, and anyway the judge would need to assess himselfto what extend the imprecision of an expert could actually influence evidence. Because the evidentiary relevance is a key concept: even showing that Stefanoni's documentation activity or scientific investigation had a mediocre quality, would likely be itself irrelevant as for the evidence.

We do not know what was said, I think what I quoted could be regarded as his comments on the record his report is 28 November 2007 reporting on the testing done over several days from 12 November.

Potenza raised the issue that Steffanoni did not follow standard protocols. We do not know what he said at the time but he certainly documented objections shortly after. I think this means that the argument that defence had to accept the findings of the incidente probatorio, because they did not object is not valid. They objected to the methodology. This was contested evidence not mutually accepted evidence.

If one raises issues about quality of documentation against Stefanoni, the same should raise equally alarming censure about the Potenza's quality of documentation.
The point about the "incidente probatorio" tells me that maybe you didn't understand exactly what I was saying when I was talking about objections. Doesn't matter. I wouldn't say the defence has to accept the findigns of the incidente probatorio, this makes little sense in legal words. The incidente probatorio is evidence, it's shaped like that. Potenza's observations are part of the incidente probatorio, they are part of the "finding". What is in Potenza's words is part of the documentation. However, also what is not in Potenza's word is part of the incidente probatorio. The lacks in his documentations are part of how the piece of evidence is shaped.

I'm not saying that the defence cannot attempt to re-open or to discuss and change the findings of the incidente probaorio, but if they intend to do so through searching documentation, they should do that seriously.
Poster davefoc made an interesting example about his experience as a juror in a drnk driving case. That could be an interesting comparison because it is possible to show how it's the rules that influence the evidence and how the evidence work, not an absolute concept of "scientific" quality. That could be a topic for another post in the future.
 
Last edited:
Machiavelli - in the last few days posters here have posted communication from two people to the court, citing the suppression of the raw data files.

You yourself commented at length on Stefanoni's own letter to a court, where she defends not handing them over, and where she sets the conditions on which she'll let people take a peek - if done in her own lab, with her still controlling the interpretation.

She doesn't say that.

In the first place, she doesn't "set the conditions". She advises the judge, that conditions should be controlled, if he wants objective results.

And nowhere she ever says that would mean she would reserve for herself to control an "interpretation". This is you inventing things.

Above all, Stefanoni says "yes", they can see the raw data if the judge wants.

You yourself defended NOT handing them over, implying that if in the hands of the defence there' no telling what they'd do with them.

She said "yes".
Let's repeat the concept: she said "yes".

I think given that particular situation, especially given the limited possibility to discuss in a preliminary hearng, there would be reasons for caution. I would probably ask to be there when the parties analize the data, if I were Stefanoni. However, I can't tel for sure.
Let's not forget that Pascali is currrently under trial for writing a false experts report on the Elisa Claps case, and Stefanoni was the one who caught him. That was the person she was having before herself in that moment.

More importantly, there is no one else in Italy who shares your views. Can you point to anyone in Italy who shares your views. Don't bother with Maresca, he believes the whole matter, writ large, is closed as of 27 March with acquittals.

These kind of hyporboles. "no one else" .. ? Where do you get those absurdities from. I had already pointed at cases where much "worse" has happened, like experts destroying items systematically or leading the other experts into traps by exploiting lack of disclosure: and those actions (like on the Parolisi case or the Peruzzi case) were not illegitimate, at least not for Italian law (even though there will be likely a submission at the ECHR for the Parolisi evidence handling).
Besides procedure questions, there are also high profile cases where the evidence handling had a scientific quality overall far worse than that of the Kercher case (on the Erba murders, for example, or in the Garlasco case), and yet all ended with convictions. Actually almost nothing of this is legally codified.
 
She doesn't say that.

In the first place, she doesn't "set the conditions". She advises the judge, that conditions should be controlled, if he wants objective results.

And nowhere she ever says that would mean she would reserve for herself to control an "interpretation". This is you inventing things.

Above all, Stefanoni says "yes", they can see the raw data if the judge wants.



She said "yes".
Let's repeat the concept: she said "yes".

I think given that particular situation, especially given the limited possibility to discuss in a preliminary hearng, there would be reasons for caution. I would probably ask to be there when the parties analize the data, if I were Stefanoni. However, I can't tel for sure.
Let's not forget that Pascali is currrently under trial for writing a false experts report on the Elisa Claps case, and Stefanoni was the one who caught him. That was the person she was having before herself in that moment.



These kind of hyporboles. "no one else" .. ? Where do you get those absurdities from. I had already pointed at cases where much "worse" has happened, like experts destroying items systematically or leading the other experts into traps by exploiting lack of disclosure: and those actions (like on the Parolisi case or the Peruzzi case) were not illegitimate, at least not for Italian law (even though there will be likely a submission at the ECHR for the Parolisi evidence handling).
Besides procedure questions, there are also high profile cases where the evidence handling had a scientific quality overall far worse than that of the Kercher case (on the Erba murders, for example, or in the Garlasco case), and yet all ended with convictions. Actually almost nothing of this is legally codified.

What utter bilge.

As late as Sollecito's 2015 appeal to ISC, the raw data files had not been turned over.

You make it sound like experimental atomic physics. If she said "yes" why weren't they handed over?

Why do you need to invent non-judicial concerns like, they need to be handed over "with caution"?

What utter bilge. Can you name one Italian who shares your views on this? I thought not.
 
Good morning in Italy,
Machiavelli,

I just surfed some 25 waves or so
as evening set upon us here on this last day of July, 2015,
a Friday here in Los Angeles.

Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito are still free.
Rudy Guede is, I hope, still in your prison.

When I was out in the line-up,
I wondered for a moment, as I waited to ride my next wave
why your Dr. Patrizia Stefanoni did not ever write that the amount of [SIZE="-7"]Raffaele[/SIZE]'s DNA
found on Meredith Kercher's bra clasp was 1.4 nanograms.

Odd how Dr. Stefanoni
does not make mention of this
nor make mention of the amount of DNA
from the other males who left their mark on Meredith's bra clasp,
right?

Maybe you did attend court that day,
but stepped outside for a ciggy break
and so did not hear Dr. Stefanoni tell this to PM Comode.
Judge Massei was presiding at the time.

Frank Sfarzo was there too that day,
he heard this and reported about it.

Somehow though,
I doubt this tidbit of info from Dr. Patrizia Stefanoni made it into The Massei Report,
right?

Why wouldn't Dr. Stefanoni have written this amount down somewhere in her tests?

Don't know what I'm talkin' about?

Have a look here,
good ol' Frank Sfarzo is reporting:
The problem in discussion was indeed that according to Tagliabracci the DNA on the bra clasp was not enough to have a reliable test. And Stefanoni suggested Comodi to say that instead it was the perfect quantity, being 1.4 nanograms. An ideal quantity. But that revealed a problem: why nobody else knew that measure?

<snip>

1.4, the quantity of DNA on the bra.
That number wasn't written on any document, Stefanoni just said it in court.

<snip>

While Mrs Comodi was busy with her, by now, usual escape for smoking, the defenses, with the power that little number gave them, explained the judge that the wonderlab didn't provide all information about the tests, and this affects the rights of the defendant. A principle that a man of law can't ignore.

Link:
http://web.archive.org/web/20101015182343/http://perugia-shock.blogspot.com/2009_07_01_archive.html


So Machiavelli,
In a few hours it'll be daylight in your neck of the world.
I hope that you have a great Saturday, doin' whatever you like or need to do.

And I hope that you too might ponder,
as I did this evening,
why Dr. Patrizia Stefanoni never made mention, previously, anywhere:
"it was the perfect quantity, being 1.4 nanograms. An ideal quantity."

Why is Dr. Patrizia Stefanoni hiding information from The Court and The Defense?
What else did she hide?
 
Last edited:
Now I found your post.



Your "case" was that he only picked the first one he saw. Now, if you believe he was only briefed approximately, this might well be. But it seems a rather inconsequential observation.
I was responding to your claim that he had been briefed to look for a large knife. You were wrong on this. He was not briefed to look for a knife of any particular size. He could not know (could he?) that DNA would be found on the first knife he saw, a knife that could not have inflicted most of the wounds. (If as you say all the wounds could have been inflicted by the large knife why is the presence of a second unidentified knife a consistent and necessary part of the prosecution narrative?)

IMHO, they were not. I believe noting there was a very deep and long wound is an important element that would suggest any rational investigator to pay a particular interest to large knives.
You say that the large wound was compatible with a small knife, but I have to disagree. Theoreticall, once could say any knife with a blade longer than 8.5 cm could be compatible. But it's theoretical. A large wound of that kind indicates probably a large knife, and the imprint on the bedsheet looks like that of a knife with at least a 12cm long blade.
All these elements are circumstantial, but they are an indication.
I say that such a large wounds tends to be incompatible with a small knife, because the lengh of a knive determines not also depth of wound abut also the strenght of the leverage. It's quite difficult to produce such a long cut with clean margins like that with a thin blade only 8.5cm long. I'm not saying I have any proof that this is physically impossible, but intuitively I would look for a larger knife, it looks like a tool more likely to cause that wound.
Your intuition is a poor basis for rational decision making. Surgeons make long cuts in flesh, do they use short or long knives? Have you seen a scalpel? I am not sure how you imagine leverage is relevant in stabbing. The fatal wound was jagged in edge not clean margins. All the pathologists testified the wounds on the left were not compatible with the large knife collected by Finzi.

Anyway, still I don't see the point about Finzi. In fact, Finzi collected both a large knife and a smaller knife from the apartment, on the basis that they looked interesting. And that's a rational procedure.
To be strict Finzi did not collect a smaller knife someone else did.



No, I cannot tell that a steak knife is incompatible with a stabbing. I can only tell that it would be irrational to collect steak knives, especially from an apartment where you just found two "good" knives certainly compatible with a stabbing, and worth to be analysed immediately.
If you read Finzi's testimony, however, you would note Finzi says the apartment was seized entirely: all objects inside were seized, thus including steak knives. The police reserved to pick up any other object from the apartment if they deemed that could be useful to investigations.
This is where we differ. You are happy that investigation is based on instinct. If you do not have a clear description of the knife, then the logical thing is to collect all possible knives. A subsequent decision could be made on the extent of investigation. I accept that this seems to be the practice of Perugian police. They leave the evidence lying around and subsequently go back and collect more weeks later.



But there is no "dismissal", there was no definitive decision, it was only temporary. The other knives were actually "dismissed" later only because DNA of Meredith was found on Sollecito's kitchen knife.
It should also be noted that knives inside the cottage were considered less interesting than those in Sollecito's apartment in the first place, because a possible Meredith's DNA finding on them would have been of less probative value.
But suppose one of the untested knives had tested positive for blood, had a strong DNA positive for Kercher, and had Guede's finger prints on it. Or Kokomani's DNA? This is suspect centric investigation. The police only look for evidence to convict someone, not to solve the crime. they choose a suspect then pursue them. Many wrongful convictions have this characteristic.


I don't think Finzi "jumped" to any conclusion. It's simply normal for investigators to make choices. Investigators have no other choice but making choices, they have to use intuition and comprehensive perception, and their approach has an economy. It is just false that Finzi chose "without" evidence. He chose on summary information, and he chose rationally.



After you know what his actual criteria were, you stop emphasizing a false idea that he picked a knife because it was "on top" or because it was "the first he saw". This is defence spin, trying to invent non-existing causal link.

He did not chose the knife because it was the first one he saw. It's false. He doesn't say so. He says he picked it because it appeared interesting, ans also picked another one because of the same reason.
see comments above


Sources of contamination need to be proven with some substantial argument.



If you want to dismiss a piece of circumstantial evidence you need a strong, substantial argument, capable of actually crushing the evidence completely. To point out that the circumstantial evidence is not "perfect" in cartesian terms is no argument. Meredith's DNA found on a blade in Sollecito's apartment is a very peculiar and improbable finding, not something you can dismiss on a concept of scientific quality.
But also the police need to show what they claim is true. There is no evidence that trace DNA implies contact with the source individual with any certainty.

It's not me who says that. It's Gubbiotti who says so in his testimony. He explains he unpacked the knife to do a procedure called "repartazione".
He was not asked all the questions you ask.
I accept that.

The premise is that I don't have Oorschot's article before my eyes, but as for what I recall by memory, such "situation" produced by the experiments only tends to support what I said, no way it contradicts it. The experiment is based on massive DNA sources (like glasses), not microscopic sources. My understanding is such massive sources were even deposited through liquid mean (saliva) and transferred through wet surface (human skin). But above all it's the massive original amount produced through saliva what makes this seems having nothing to do with what we are talking about. The knowledge about a stain of biological fluid (wet at the origin, then dried) containing massive amounts of DNA that is likely to be touched, equates to assume there is a large-size (non microscopic) DNA stain to start with, and that the carrier is likely to touch the stain. Also, you should assume that the same carrier will be likly to touch the item.
And even under those ideal pre-set conditions, tertiary transfer is still a relatively rare event.
But in a real scenario, such assumptions/conditions should be proven first. (ths is basically what Novelli and the Cassazione say)
No conditions like that are proven for the bra clasp or the knife.

Probably best not to comment if you are unfamiliar with the paper.
No saliva involved. Saliva tested for and was absent. The interesting thing is that a third of tests showed the presence of unknown DNA imported on the hands of the experimental subjects and transferred to objects in the test scenario. They were not looking for LCN DNA. Let me repeat this. It is not rare. One third of samples contained DNA from an individual who had never touched the object. In some cases the DNA was clearly at least tertiary transfer. Unknown individual on to hands of experimental subject. From hands of experimental subject to object. From that object to another object. Quaternary transfer was demonstrated. DNA from person1 to handle of jug. To hand of person 2. From hand of person 2 to glass. From glass to table. DNA of person one found on area of table never directly touched. It should be emphasised this experiment was done by police forensic scientists. Why would police forensic scientists want tp do research that shows trace DNA is unreliable? Because it is unhelpful to police investigations if the interpretation of the forensic evidence is inaccurate. Trace DNA cannot prove direct contact between the source individual and an object. The issues are even greater once LCN trace DNA is considered.

I don't know when it was written, but I would naturally think the report was written subsequently. And despite we call it "Stefanoni's report", I believe it was not redacted by Stefanoni, certainly not by Stefanoni alone.
Several pages of the report seem to be the re-pasting of pre-written texts, repeating themselves with only some data changing.
I take this back (re contemporaneous entries). I had thought that the report included copies of original laboratory documents. This may be a product of poor quality copy.

Nonetheless. It is worrying that the most critical piece of evidence in this case was reported incorrectly to the court, both in written documents and verbally. Ultimately the director of the laboratory is responsible for the quality. If a significant error had been made the processes should have been reviewed, the report checked for other errors. Consideration should have been given as to whether this type of error may have affected other cases and the lab should be pro-active in informing prosecution and defence in other cases affected by similar errors. A process should be put in place to prevent similar errors in future.

There's nothing wrong chacking data. I just note the defence never intended to seriously check the data. Their approach was always opportunistic and intended to search pretext, never intended to thoroughly exploit their options to check data.
I do not know what the defence's intentions were. What we do know is they never had the opportunity to thoroughly check data as it was never provided.



This is not something you can say. You can't tell who is to be appointed to "review". Quality of any investigating action or evidence collection can sure be investigated as well, but not along with the principles you seem to believe. A review anyway should be motivated on a principle that does not dispute a principle of trust for Stefanoni as a witness, because to dispute a witness sincerity one would need a proof.
All this would have to be done by a judge, and anyway the judge would need to assess himselfto what extend the imprecision of an expert could actually influence evidence. Because the evidentiary relevance is a key concept: even showing that Stefanoni's documentation activity or scientific investigation had a mediocre quality, would likely be itself irrelevant as for the evidence.
No see above. A judge might want to have an investigation. It is the responsibility of the director of the lab to ensure SOP are followed and that there is quality assurance in place. You would imply that no matter how many errors were made so long as the forensic scientist was sincere one could not investigate their competence. Surely once the witness has told the court an untruth then it is legitimate to question the truth of any other statement.

If one raises issues about quality of documentation against Stefanoni, the same should raise equally alarming censure about the Potenza's quality of documentation.
The point about the "incidente probatorio" tells me that maybe you didn't understand exactly what I was saying when I was talking about objections. Doesn't matter. I wouldn't say the defence has to accept the findigns of the incidente probatorio, this makes little sense in legal words. The incidente probatorio is evidence, it's shaped like that. Potenza's observations are part of the incidente probatorio, they are part of the "finding". What is in Potenza's words is part of the documentation. However, also what is not in Potenza's word is part of the incidente probatorio. The lacks in his documentations are part of how the piece of evidence is shaped.

I'm not saying that the defence cannot attempt to re-open or to discuss and change the findings of the incidente probaorio, but if they intend to do so through searching documentation, they should do that seriously.
Poster davefoc made an interesting example about his experience as a juror in a drnk driving case. That could be an interesting comparison because it is possible to show how it's the rules that influence the evidence and how the evidence work, not an absolute concept of "scientific" quality. That could be a topic for another post in the future.

I accept I do not really understand the incidente probatorio, but we can agree that the defence are entitled to question the methodology and results of the analysis.
 
"The burden of proof is on those who assert that something exists" - Machiavelli

You mean like blood in the TMB negative cottage samples? Or, the availability of all the control samples? Or proof of what Amanda and Raffaele actually said in interrogation and under what circumstances including proof that Mignini asked no questions and merely took dictation?

No, I mean things for which evidence is zero, such like the alleged existence of "suppressed DNA profiles", and which some criminals falsely present as "proven facts".

There is categorical proof that Stefanoni suppressed DNA profiles.

But, according to you, the burden of proof of something is met when the evidence for it is not zero. I have to tell you that this is not a concept endorsed by the Italian code of criminal procedure.

So, proof of blood is a confirmatory test.
Proof of what happened in an interrogation is a recording.
 
Last edited:
"The burden of proof is on those who assert that something exists" - Machiavelli

Is there any proof that Raff's DNA was on the bra clasp?

Is there any proof that Meredith's DNA was on a knife that wasn't even the murder weapon?

Is there any proof that Amanda and Raff were at the cottage at the time of the murder?

Is there any proof of a clean up?

Is there any proof the break in was staged?

Is there any proof there was blood in the luminol highlighted foot/shoe prints?

It seems a lot of things have been asserted without any proof, yet the defence must prove that the DNA that was claimed to be on the knife and bra clasp(that have never been verified and cannot be retested) got there by contamination.
 
"The burden of proof is on those who assert that something exists" - Machiavelli

There is categorical proof that Stefanoni suppressed DNA profiles.

There is zero. That's the point. An absolute zero.
It's an invention and a vicious lie.

But, according to you, the burden of proof of something is met when the evidence for it is not zero. I have to tell you that this is not a concept endorsed by the Italian code of criminal procedure.

I anticipate won't be successful if you try to lecture me about Italian Jurisprudence. About logic neither.
You misrepresent or misunderstand it systematically, anyway. And this seem to me a constant problem of the Knox supporters. They seem in general to refuse the concept of circumstantial evidence, and fail to understand it. They don't understand how a series of elements each one itself not certain as for its cause and not conclusive, can lead to certainty beyond reasonable doubt. They draw any kind of misrepresentation about this logics process, and about the content of each piece of evidence.
You are someone who used to believe evidence should be found of the presence of "a suspect inside the room" before start considering evidence of guilt.

The proof of blood is a confirmatory test.
Proof of what happened in an interrogation is a recording.

This is just 100% wrong.
A trial is not a skeptics forum.
Pieces of circumstantial evidence don't have arbitrary proof thresholds. Their value depends on the logical alternatives.
Moreover, a "piece of evidence" is not an object, but a reasoning. Evidence is not something physical, it's something logical, it's a piece of reasoning. Not a finding itself, but an inference that links a finding to other findings. It's developed from factual findings, but does not equate to any specific finding.
 
Last edited:
There is zero. That's the point. An absolute zero.
It's an invention and a vicious lie.



I anticipate won't be successful if you try to lecture me about Italian Jurisprudence. About logic neither. You misrepresent or misunderstand it systematically, anyway. And this seem to me a constant problem of the Knox supporters. They seem in general to refuse the concept of circumstantial evidence, and fail to understand it. They don't understand how a series of elements each one itself not certain as for its cause and not conclusive, can lead to certainty beyond reasonable doubt. They draw any kind of misrepresentation about this logics process, and about the content of each piece of evidence.
You are someone who used to believe evidence should be found of the presence of "a suspect inside the room" before start considering evidence of guilt.

proof of blood is a confirmatory test.
Proof of what happened in an interrogation is a recording.
[/QUOTE]

Of course we can lecture you. Our view has prevailed. We were right and you were wrong.

You don't understand your own country's legal system, or its laws. Circumstantial evidence must be serious, precise and consistent. Each piece must be evaluated on this basis before it can be included as part of an assessment in the round. In this case, each and every piece of evidence adduced by the prosecution fails the test.

Even the so called eye and ear witnesses stand hopelessly discredited.

There is proof of nothing but obfuscation and sharp practices on the part of the prosecution and Stefanoni.

There is proof of suppression of evidence, proof of contamination and proof of incompetence.
 
There is zero. That's the point. An absolute zero.
It's an invention and a vicious lie.



I anticipate won't be successful if you try to lecture me about Italian Jurisprudence. About logic neither.
You misrepresent or misunderstand it systematically, anyway. And this seem to me a constant problem of the Knox supporters. They seem in general to refuse the concept of circumstantial evidence, and fail to understand it. They don't understand how a series of elements each one itself not certain as for its cause and not conclusive, can lead to certainty beyond reasonable doubt. They draw any kind of misrepresentation about this logics process, and about the content of each piece of evidence.
You are someone who used to believe evidence should be found of the presence of "a suspect inside the room" before start considering evidence of guilt.



This is just 100% wrong.
A trial is not a skeptics forum.
Pieces of circumstantial evidence don't have arbitrary proof thresholds. Their value depends on the logical alternatives.
Moreover, a "piece of evidence" is not an object, but a reasoning. Evidence is not something physical, it's something logical, it's a piece of reasoning. Not a finding itself, but an inference that links a finding to other findings. It's developed from factual findings, but does not equate to any specific finding.

I see you've added another paragraph. It is the factual basis from which an argument is developed. Yet, there is no factual basis from which to develop any argument supportive of guilt.

If you cannot see that the existence of blood is absolutely determinable by experiment and that no inference of its existence is ever appropriate in a court of law, then you are lost forever. Stefanoni, if she wished to do so, could have proceeded to a confirmatory test, but she was satisfied that that a TMB negative result was sufficient for investigative purposes to obviate the need for a confirmatory test. She took the TMB result as proof that there was no blood. Nobody from the prosecution can rightly tell a court that any possible inference that blood was in the sample can remain.

It's like saying "I knew very well that the box was empty so I didn't open it" and then saying later, "Well, it might have had something in it after all".

No! You open the damn box or you don't make the claim!
 
Evidence Free Cases

There is zero. That's the point. An absolute zero.
It's an invention and a vicious lie.



I anticipate won't be successful if you try to lecture me about Italian Jurisprudence. About logic neither.
You misrepresent or misunderstand it systematically, anyway. And this seem to me a constant problem of the Knox supporters. They seem in general to refuse the concept of circumstantial evidence, and fail to understand it. They don't understand how a series of elements each one itself not certain as for its cause and not conclusive, can lead to certainty beyond reasonable doubt. They draw any kind of misrepresentation about this logics process, and about the content of each piece of evidence.
You are someone who used to believe evidence should be found of the presence of "a suspect inside the room" before start considering evidence of guilt.



This is just 100% wrong.
A trial is not a skeptics forum.
Pieces of circumstantial evidence don't have arbitrary proof thresholds. Their value depends on the logical alternatives.
Moreover, a "piece of evidence" is not an object, but a reasoning. Evidence is not something physical, it's something logical, it's a piece of reasoning. Not a finding itself, but an inference that links a finding to other findings. It's developed from factual findings, but does not equate to any specific finding.

KAUFFER: Of course we can lecture you. Our view has prevailed. We were right and you were wrong.

You don't understand your own country's legal system, or its laws. Circumstantial evidence must be serious, precise and consistent. Each piece must be evaluated on this basis before it can be included as part of an assessment in the round. In this case, each and every piece of evidence adduced by the prosecution fails the test.

Even the so called eye and ear witnesses stand hopelessly discredited.

There is proof of nothing but obfuscation and sharp practices on the part of the prosecution and Stefanoni.

There is proof of suppression of evidence, proof of contamination and proof of incompetence.

Mach, there is no reliable evidence that proves Amanda and Raf ever left Raf's apartment that night.

There's no evidence they were present at the scene and time of the crime.

There is only evidence of Rudy Guede being present at the scene and time of the crime. And by Guede's own account, recorded by police in a skype call, Rudy first said Amanda wasn't there, and only began to change his story after months in prison and access to his lawyer.

It defies belief that you continue to argue this case, indeed, that you have ever argued this case.

If you are not getting paid for your advocacy, I can't imagine what motivates you.

There was a recent confirmation of a case with IIRC, had similar circumstances of coerced statements from a young woman, Sabrina Misseri and her mother Cosima.

http://bari.repubblica.it/cronaca/2015/ ... ref=HREA-1

I read these cases and I think about innocent people condemned to spending decades in prison for crimes they didn't commit, based on evidence free prosecutions.

Their lives are ruined by reckless prosecutors and incompetent judges.

We have these in the US too, as do all countries I suppose. But how can anyone look at these cases and not cringe?

ECHR should provide continuous oversight of trials, and have an ability to step in and suspend such evidence free cases. The idea that people have to wait decades for a court to undo its mistakes is a disgraceful failure of any society.

Prosecutors and police who rely on coercive techniques, and continue to generate these miscarriages of justice need to be removed from office, or provided with additional oversight and safeguards against continuing abuses and errors.

The continuing hounding of exonerated defendants through additional litigation is a further indication of the rot in the system.
 
...

And this seem to me a constant problem of the Knox supporters. They seem in general to refuse the concept of circumstantial evidence, and fail to understand it. They don't understand how a series of elements each one itself not certain as for its cause and not conclusive, can lead to certainty beyond reasonable doubt. They draw any kind of misrepresentation about this logics process, and about the content of each piece of evidence.

And there (highlighted) you have it: the means by which a dysfunctional legal process can make up "certainty" out of inconclusive evidence.

...

Moreover, a "piece of evidence" is not an object, but a reasoning. Evidence is not something physical, it's something logical, it's a piece of reasoning. Not a finding itself, but an inference that links a finding to other findings. It's developed from factual findings, but does not equate to any specific finding.

This is trickier. It sounds part-way reasonable, but when it is dishonestly applied it justifies all of the arbitrariness in the Perugia judicial process. One unsound "finding" is used to bolster another, until "findings" are made that don't have any connection with concrete facts. For example, people go on talking about the "staged break-in", the "call made after the police arrived", the "multiple killers" and endless other discredited factoids.

This is the basis for so many of bogus reasons given by Mach and others for sustaining their ugly views.
 
There is zero. That's the point. An absolute zero.
It's an invention and a vicious lie. .

Your opinion on the issue of the 100+ suppressed profiles would be more interesting if you had ever tried to address the issue in the merits. However, since you appear to be completely impotent on this issue, your conclusory objection is mere rubbish.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Back
Top Bottom