LondonJohn
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 12, 2010
- Messages
- 21,162
Correct. There is no "innocent" finding in Italian law. There is only "acquitted". Which they were.
Yes. And indeed, on top of the fact that criminal courts in Italy (just as in, for example, the US and UK) are neither empowered nor required to find acquitted persons "innocent"*....
.... a person on trial is never required to prove his/her innocence in any event. The reason for this should be obvious to any intellectually-enabled person: it's very often impossible for a person to prove his/her factual innocence of any particular crime, even when they truly have had factually nothing whatsoever to do with it**.
* Notwithstanding the fact - in both law and ethics - that an acquitted person must resume the PRESUMPTION of innocence.
** E.g. the (true) example I've employed frequently to illustrate this point: several years ago someone was stabbed to death at about 3am, around 1/2 a mile from where I live. There were no witnesses to the murder. At the time of the murder, I was asleep alone. I don't believe that at that time there was any CCTV coverage of the route between my flat and the scene of the murder. There was therefore literally NO WAY I could have proved my innocence of this murder.