I'll just answer your concerns about my own posts. I can't imagine why you selected those because they don't support your case in any way whatsoever--your case being that AK only "confessed" (actually accused Mr Lumumba) after being browbeaten or hit with hoses or some other kind of brutality you've concocted.
[Post 199]
Author : stilicho
Date : 6th December 2009 03:07 AM
After thirty hours with no sleep, food, and under constant harsh questioning, you'd probably blurt out whatever came to mind just to make it stop so you could eat and sleep and stop the suffering.
The length of the interrogation by Perugia police is certainly disputed. I have seen it, in the sympathetic Seattle press, variously set at six, fourteen, and more than 24 hours. Which was it? I've noticed that her defenders nearly always set it as long as possible. Why?
This was written before I knew that AK's original story changed after less than two hours of questioning as a witness and not as a suspect.
At the time, I was confused (without smoking marijuana) because the Seattle media was constantly changing their story about the length of her questioning. I didn't know that AK had been provided breakfast in the morning or that she had offered the police her written "gift".
Recall that many of us didn't know anything further than what the Marriott PR machine had concocted for our consumption. That includes the since-redacted claim that AK was guilty all because a cartwheel.
When I saw the constantly changing story about the length of her questioning, that sure set off the sceptic's alarm bells. Didn't it do the same for you? Or did you become interested in the case only after they had settled on a number?
[Post 293]
Author : stilicho
Date : 7th December 2009 12:21 AM
"The police interrogation wasn't even valid under Italian law and the accusation of character defamation lawsuit you claim was concluded has only been charged. No trial on this has occurred.
You're quite correct on the last part. I was under the impression she had already lost that case beforehand. You score!There you go. Your turn.
In this case you didn't just cherry-pick, Dan O. You forgot to correctly attribute only the bolded part to me. I was answering somebody's question about the defamation suit brought by Mr Lumumba against AK. I had thought the decision was already final due to some information I had misread. I was wrong and I admitted it rather than pretend I'd never said it.
The police "interrogation" (as the original poster framed it) was completely valid under Italian law. AK was there as a witness and of her own volition. The reason it was declared inadmissible was that her status had changed upon her declaration that she was in the cottage when Meredith was murdered.
I think it's very clear to anyone that AK did not realise that her attempt to implicate Mr Lumumba had also had the unintended consequence of implicating herself. Her vain attempt to undo the damage she knew she had done to her credibility only served to further implicate her because her voluntary "gift" was ruled admissible in court.
Rarely do murder suspects act with such aplomb regarding their own rights while in custody as AK did, Dan O. Most suspects listen to their lawyers and STFU. She didn't. As I've said many many times, her legal representation must absolutely cringe whenever she's given a chance to speak or write.
Here's one of my favourite exchanges between AK and the PM in JUN 2009:
PM: Listen, another question. The lamp that was found in Meredith's room, a black lamp with a red button, that was found in Meredith's room, at the foot of the bed, was it yours?
AK: I did have a lamp with a red button in my room, yes.
PM: So the lamp was yours.
AK: I suppose it was.
PM: Was it missing from your room?
AK: You know, I didn't look.
PM: Did Meredith have a lamp like that in her room?
AK: I don't know.
(Source:
http://boards.insessiontrials.com/showthread.php?t=356199 )
In court, as a defendant in a murder case, AK cannot even bring herself to answer a very simple yes-or-no question. That isn't the only example but it must have had a huge impact on jurors watching and listening to a presumably innocent person go to such great lengths to avoid saying that her lamp was in Meredith's room. (Don't start now thinking that AK was guilty all because of a lamp).
I suspect you've never been on a jury, Dan O. When defendants cannot even answer simple questions like that it makes it difficult to believe them when answering important questions such as whether they murdered their roommate.