Machiavelli
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2010
- Messages
- 5,844
That is my conclusion as well.
It seems the problem is political in which direction? Your claim is they secretly believed her guilty of murder but were forced to find her innocent. My claim is, perhaps they were correcting what they saw as a genuine injustice, but were politically constrained by the workings of the higher court, especially those set into motion by Chieffi.
(...)
It is not a consistent scenario, in my opinion. Why not? Because it manifestly contradicts facts. It makes no sense to assume that B/M had to maneuver around findings constrained by the need to avoid a clash with Chieffi. Because what B/M actually do is to run like goats heads down into a clash against Chieffi, causing a conflict between res judicata.
The violation is so egregious, so manifest, that no avoidance maneuver could be assumed.
While on the other hands, there are parts of the B/M verdicts in which they could have taken a position favourable to Knox/Sollecito without risking any clash against Chieffi, like for example the parts where B/M say Nencini trial found further confirmations about the fact that Guede did not kill alone. B/M were not forced to agree with Nencini on this, and judges were not forced by the law to agree with previous findings by other courts, as B/M explains.
The fact that Guede's trial found that Guede did not kill alone, would not force B/M to agree with that findings and would not have forced Nencini - thisi is what B/M says. But they say instead that there were further confirmations in Knox/Sollecito trial, and that they agree with the findings of Nencini on that.
B/M do not avoid to point their finger against Knox/Sollecito when they could have avoided it without causing any legal clash, and they cause a clash on legal points on which they were not allowed to rule.