BobTheDonkey
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jun 30, 2009
- Messages
- 4,501
Is it? That is what I would have assumed but it is what I am now trying to clarify. Do you have any information about how this works, BobTheDonkey?
I have no real evidence other than what we've seen/heard about how clean the apartment was (besides, perhaps, Kercher's room). In this case, the lack of evidence is intriguing.
The knife in Sollecito's apt, for instance, shows signs of being cleaned in an extreme/unusual manner (from one of your first posts). While not a clincher, given that the knife had barely any of Meredith's blood and Knox's DNA with no really valid alibi for how Meredith came into contact with it, it certainly appears that someone cleaned the knife vigorously with bleach attempting to remove traces of Meredith's blood.
The distinct lack of fingerprints in Knox's room. The distinct lack of Sollecito's DNA in an entire house that he had visited multiple times.
The lack of DNA on Meredith's body, the only DNA evidence found was of Guede's DNA inside, where it couldn't be scrubbed off.
We know that the bloody footprints in the hallway as well as the blood splatters in the bathroom were cleaned and only revealed with luminol (excepting the bathmat that Knox and Sollecito perhaps hadn't quite managed to clean before the Postal Police arrived).
There's also the finding of Meredith's clothes in the washer/drier, actively running at the time the Police arrived.
Each one on it's own isn't all that compelling, but when put together...we find evidence of a (failed) cleanup.