Actually, I agree with you about how frightful the press can be: low standards, repetitions and 'copy and pastes' from 'press releases', outright plagiarism, even making stories up. Only a small handful actually go out and find stories. However, that is to miss the point.
What the press does give us is the knee jerk emotional temperature of the community we live in. So, whilst the lurid coverage of 'Foxy Knoxy' was ghastly, nonetheless it raises the interesting sociological issue: what came first, the public's demand for salacious stories, or the press feeding them to society?
A female rapist/murderer is so rare, of course there is going to be prurient press interest. However, that's not to say the interest is erroneous or false.
The Marasca supreme court definitively upheld that Amanda was certainly at the murder scene, and Raff, almost certainly. This is based on the solid evidence of the lower merits fact-finding courts, who evaluate the evidence in extraordinarily fine detail.
It is established as a fact, the burglary was staged after the murder and the perpetrator/s undressed and moved Mez' body after her death and desecrated her dignity and modesty. We know Rudy fled almost immediately afterwards and spent the rest of the night at a public disco. Only one person had access to the cottage that weekend, together with all the time in the world to stage the two scenes. In addition, Amanda and Raff were careful to make sure Rudy's crap remained unflushed, despite cleaning up (Rudy testified the hallway was covered in blood and he couldn't understand how Amanda could have slept there).
These people took the time to cover Mez with her own duvet, that her father had helped her to buy in London.
Amanda has shown zero remorse and shed no tears for her 'friend'. So for her to write that sentences for rapists should be as light as six months shows just what a cold-hearted psychopath she is.
Amanda by her own account, in her own writing, and under no pressure or demand for it, recounted how she took 'Patrick' (= meaning Rudy, as upheld by the Marasca supreme court) to the cottage for sex with Mez.
Vixen yet again lies and uses ridiculous arguments. There is no evidence that anyone returned later to alter the scene in Meredith’s room. This is shown in the link below :-
http://www.amandaknoxcase.com/meredith-kerchers-body/
If Amanda and Raffaele had killed Meredith, why on earth would they need to return to the room and move the body? How does exactly does this help them? If they did return to the room and altered the crime scene, is there not a risk they would be seen by witnesses and they would leave forensic traces in the room? Would Amanda and Raffaele both readily agree to this course of action considering the risks?
Contrary to what Vixen said, Amanda did show grief and emotion over the death of as can been seen from the testimony below from amandaknoxcase.com :-
Amanda’s reaction to hearing about Meredith’s murder
Testimony of Luca Altieri (Filomena’s friend)
Page 224:
Mignini: Listen, when… do you remember if you saw Amanda cry in the Police Station?
Altieri: Amanda had already cried outside the house, also going to the Police Station in the car, yes, at a certain point…
Mignini: When did she cry?
Altieri: Now, after I… she asked me this… I don’t remember well if she asked how, with what she had been killed, basically, how they had cut her throat, and when I gave her the answer to this question she burst out crying.
Page 229:
Dalla Vedova: One last clarification and I’ve finished. On the question of whether Amanda cried outside.
Altieri: Yes
Dalla Vedova: She was crying because she was in shock, do you think?
Altieri: Do I think?
Dalla Vedova: Your statement to the police [verbale] ends thus: she started crying.
Altieri: Yes
Dalla Vedova: As soon as you gave her this news, when you gave her the news that…
Altieri: Yes, I mean it certainly seemed to be a reaction to the thought of what I had said, then if it was or it wasn’t this other thing, I wouldn’t be able to say.
Dalla Vedova: No, I wasn’t asking for your opinion. You said to Amanda: I heard that there is a girl which it seems… killed because she has a cut on her throat and she started to cry as a result of this.
Altieri: Yes
Dalla Vedova: In that moment was Sollecito nearby?
Altieri: He was in the car, in the back seat.
Dalla Vedova: And he was trying to console her
Altieri: We were going to the Police Station
Dalla Vedova: He was trying to console Knox because she was crying?
Altieri: I don’t know, in that moment there I couldn’t tell you, when I said earlier that he was trying to console her I was referring to a scene outside the house, in the period when we were still there.
Dalla Vedova: However earlier you said that Amanda cried the first time when you were outside the house, then also in the car
Altieri: Yes, it’s there that… it’s there that I visually saw him console her, outside the house when she was crying
Dalla Vedova: And to you it seemed right that she behaved this way or did it seem strange to you?
Altieri: No, it seemed normal.
Testimony of Filomena Romanelli (Housemate)
Page 53 (At the police station):
Judge Massei: This breakdown how did she show it?
Romanelli: When one begins to cry and then stops themselves, how can I explain it? One chokes up, cries a little, but it’s not a liberating outpouring of emotion, it’s not crying openly.
Romanelli: My eyes were watery with dark circles around them… Yes (I cried), Marco yes, Paolo yes, Luca I don’t think so, Raffaele no, and Amanda fundamentally I would say no, I saw her just one moment breakdown where she almost cried but then she managed to maintain composure.