I'm not sure what your point is here. The cartwheels were brought up in the trial as evidence Knox was behaving oddly. I hear you to say you agree the cartwheels were such evidence of odd behavior.
But my argument has more context than just the cartwheels. The cartwheels were not unusual for a dumb young adult who was oblivious to the fact the police viewed her behavior as odd. I do think the false assessment of supposed suspicious behavior occurs in the US all the time. Some folks here seem to think I only think Italian police make such errors.
I do think that in context the Italian police did mis-read Knox's behavior in the police station. I also think at the time Knox was probably clueless her behavior was setting off alarm bells. And I think it only takes a little bit of a culture clash for behavior to be misinterpreted.
So what are you saying?
Are you arguing that young adults are oblivious to context? That they have no behavioural repertoire and no understanding that there are different expectations of behaviour in different contexts? That is the only way I can make sense of your belief that this young woman had no idea her behaviour ws setting off alarm bells
Are you saying that young adults do have such an understanding, but that it is perfectly acceptable to turn cartwheels in police stations in America? That is the only way I can make sense of yet another reference to "cultural clash"
The fact is, skeptigirl, that no one here would disagree that there is potential for cultural misunderstandings: but for me at least this is not one of them
The different expectations for behaviour between Italy and the USA are not so great: Italy is not Mars. Young adults in Europe and in America are well able to understand that a murder investigation is a serious business. They know perfectly well that you don't turn cartwheels in police stations. And they know that a frivolous attitude in those circumstances will indeed "raise alarm bells".
It is perfectly possible to argue that she did not think the alarm bells would lead to suspicion of her complicity: but she was not oblivious to the fact that she was making an impact on the police. It is not evidence that she committed the crime and nobody is arguing that. But it is evidence of a peculiar attitude. That might be no more than anti authoritarian rebellion. It might be something much more serious. We don't know and you don't know. But the police here, and in the USA, and in Italy would be strange indeed if they did not notice it and consider it. After all, they see a lot of people in police stations. They kind of know the range of normal reaction better than you and I.
I don't think the broken window proved anything one way or the other
Not by itself it doesn't, no. But what you do not seem to understand is that this does not stand by itself. If you are looking for the one absolutely irrefutable piece of evidence and nothing less will do I think you have been watching too many movies.
but it is my understanding the killer left via the window in Kercher's room.
How do you know that?
We don't know if he broke in or was let in or just came through an open door.
If he did not break in then who broke the window? The prosecution says that Knox and her boyfriend did in order to fake a burglary. Do I take it you accept that? If you do then why did they do that?
I see no reason why a killer wouldn't lock the body in the bedroom and leave out the window if that was the only way to leave the bedroom door locked.
Might do that: might not. I have no idea why locking the door might seem important at the time. I have no idea why he would leave the bedroom and then return to lock the door and go out the window in full view of a busy street. If it happened that way he presumably had his reasons. You don't know and I don't know. I don't even know that the door was locked from the inside because I do not know what kind of lock it was: whether there was a key: whether it could only lock from the inside. Or anything much really. Neither do you. I presume it was a fact explored at the trial though.
In either case the same would apply to Knox as it would the the killer. Whichever questions the locked door and broken window bring up for you, how does one scenario fit Knox being involved and one scenario not?
Again you cannot take each piece of evidence in isolation. If the window was broken by the killer it is because he broke in: if it was broken by knox it is because she was trying to mislead the police. Since the window was too high to get in without a ladder, and no ladder was reportedly found, there is reason to doubt the killer broke in. And that means that someone else broke it: who, if not knox and/or her boyfriend? I suppose it might have been a second random burglar; or the evil Italian police. Could be anybody really. Anything could have happened: but some things are more likely than others.
As for entering the house, isn't it possible Knox was unaware the window was broken until she went in?
Of course it is possible. Who suggested otherwise? If the window was broken when Knox arrived I would imagine it very likely she did not notice unless the front door was on that side and I don't think it was
And, she wasn't alone. Her boyfriend was with her.
Unless I have misread she was alone and this is not disputed.
I think if I had two roommates and found my apartment door unlocked I would just assume someone was home. I'd probably go in before I found out they weren't.
Indeed and I said as much. But when I found they weren't I would certainly be uneasy. I think most people would. Would you not have a look around, presuming you had taken your brave pills? Or maybe call someone if you hadn't. You know, given that your door was open and there was no-one home and there was blood in the bathroom?
A lot of things are possible. All you are demonstrating is you do not know and that puts you in the same place as the rest of us. But you choose to deny a whole lot of circumstantial evidence which is quite clearly there and quite clearly important.