Amanda Knox guilty - all because of a cartwheel

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[quoye="Dan O"]2. There is no evidence that Raffaele used bleach. A photo of him with a jug of red liquid was a representation of blood (not bleach) and most likely contained fruit juice.[/quote]

Two bottles of bleach and a bleach receipt from a couple of days before were found in his apartment (the bleach was in the cupboard under the sink)...police believe that the bleach was used on order to bleach the knife and his trainers. Barbie Nadaeu also reports in her book traces of bleach were found on the knife.
 
I don't know whether it's what Dan O. is referring to, but the bottom of both photographs do look very similar. The plastic thing in the photo on the right looks kind of like the finger and the sink? looks kind of like the folded sweater.

Do I win the prize?
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Don't hold your breath, Shuttit. FOA types normally jump onto something which they think is significant, and shout it to the skies ( ... until they're proven wrong, again).

I think this is just Dan O. looking for a way out of his Supreme (Court) Stumble.

If "the folded sweater/towel" were significant, the likes of Dr. Mark C. Waterbury, Ph.D would have been applying their knowledge of plant growth to it long ago.
 
[qyote="Dan O"]As for the supreme court ruling, what difference does it make whether it was ruled inadmissible or illegal. The prosecution still managed to twist things to get it into the trial. Once you get the wrong idea into your head, how easy is it to see the obvious truth? Do you thing the jury can just put the statement out of their mind when assessing Amanda's guilt?

It makes a huge difference, since for weeks you have incessantly been calling the Italians criminals for one thing or another. Having this pointed out to you therefore demonstrates that your arguments, as usual, are complete and utter tosh.

The prosecution twisted nothing. Amanda Knox found herself on trial for murder and slander because of her own actions and she alone is to blame.

It seems what 'really' bothers you, is that the prosecution and the police did their jobs. That's your problem.
 
Now let me get this straight, on one hand, Dan O. says this:
The Italian supreme court already ruled that the interrogation violated Italian law. I take it that you have no qualms about Italian authorities violating the law when interrogating suspects.


... but now Dan O. says this:
As for the supreme court ruling, what difference does it make whether it was ruled inadmissible or illegal.
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Dan O., I think it makes a lot of difference, and I think that most readers of these pages think so too, whatever their point-of-view may be concerning the guilt of each of the three convicts in the murder of Meredith Kercher.

If you think it's necessary that I explain, either you're accusing the Italian authorities of illegalities in the questioning of Amanda Knox on 5 November 2007, basing this accusation on a supposed decision of the supreme court (which is what I understood is your position), or ..... no such illegalities took place nor was there a decision by the supreme court stating that Amanda's statements were useable in court because of said alleged illegalities.

You decide and tell us. I think most readers already understand perfectly that the supreme court decision was oriented towards the protection afforded Amanda by the Italian constitution, so that her own words couldn't be used against her.
 
Anyway, I'm glad we're now all agreed that Amanda's and Raffaele's questioning and statements weren't illegal :)
 
[quoye="Dan O"]2. There is no evidence that Raffaele used bleach. A photo of him with a jug of red liquid was a representation of blood (not bleach) and most likely contained fruit juice.

Two bottles of bleach and a bleach receipt from a couple of days before were found in his apartment (the bleach was in the cupboard under the sink)...police believe that the bleach was used on order to bleach the knife and his trainers. Barbie Nadaeu also reports in her book traces of bleach were found on the knife.[/QUOTE]

The bottles of bleach were purchased at the request of Raffaele's cleaning lady a couple months before the murder. Marina Chiriboga testified in court that there were one and a half containers of bleach left over after she last cleaned his flat a couple months earlier. (She quit due to advanced pregnancy). The same amount found when by the police after the murder. The receipts found were not from a couple days before, they were from a couple months before.

Marco Quintavalle, the store owner who testified to seeing Amanda outside of his store the morning after the murder claimed to have recognized her from news reports a few days later. But when the police questioned him on Nov. 15th, he didn't mention the fact. It was a year after the crime when he started telling his story about the blue-eyed girl.

Marina Chiriboga, Raffaele's former cleaning lady, was working in Marco's store that morning. She testified that she didn't see Amanda or Raffaele.

It also doesn't make a bit of sense that Amanda would be waiting for a store to open when there was plenty of bleach at Raffaele's apartment.

Barbie yet again shows she is as clueless as the plastic doll with the same name.
 
The bottles of bleach were purchased at the request of Raffaele's cleaning lady a couple months before the murder. Marina Chiriboga testified in court that there were one and a half containers of bleach left over after she last cleaned his flat a couple months earlier. (She quit due to advanced pregnancy). The same amount found when by the police after the murder. The receipts found were not from a couple days before, they were from a couple months before.
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Just a couple of observations on your reply to Ms. Nadeau's information concerning the bleach:

- according to you, no bleach was used in Raffaele's flat in the course of two months (neither by him, nor by his new cleaning lady, who doesn't seem very diligent by your account)

- Ms. Chiriboga didn't take much maternity leave if she quit Raffaele's place due to a baby not yet born, yet within two months is already a seasoned employee of the corner store. (I'm not suggesting anything there ... I have certainly seen shorter maternity leaves).
 
Fulcanelli writes:

The luminol prints are hardly junk evidence, they are clear hard evidence...

Saying so doesn't make it true.

It meed not be blood. Like I said, Raffaele was fond of using bleach and had bleach on the premises (unlike the cottage where there was no bleach and the girls never used products containing bleach to clean).


Raffaele's cleaning lady testified that he bought the bleach at her request and that the contents of the bleach bottles (one entirely unused, one partially used) was unchanged from the time she stopped working for him in September.

http://abcnews.go.com/International/story?id=7939101&page=3

Whilst there's a possibility it may be Raffaele or Amanda's blood...it's also quite possible it's actually Meredith's. It also should be pointed out this mixture was found in only one place in Raffaele's, where it was found in multiple places in the cottage. Therefore, that in Raffaele's displays and exception rather then a norm.

No. They also found the mixed DNA of Amanda and Raffaele on a pair of rubber kitchen gloves (Sample 89) and in a stain revealed with luminol on the floor of his bedroom (Sample 93). They also got luminol reactions on the outer handle of the bedroom door (Sample 92) and another location in his bedroom (Sample 94), but neither revealed any genetic profile. Another luminol trace on the bathroom floor (Sample 96) revealed Amanda's DNA only. Other luminol reactions from various places in Sollecito's apartment (Samples 97, 98, 99, 100, 102, 103, 104, and 105) revealed no profile. Sample 101, a luminol reaction in the kitchen, revealed the DNA of an unknown male.

Two bottles of bleach and a bleach receipt from a couple of days before were found in his apartment (the bleach was in the cupboard under the sink)...police believe that the bleach was used on order to bleach the knife and his trainers. Barbie Nadaeu also reports in her book traces of bleach were found on the knife.

I have given you a reliable citation regarding the status of the bleach in Sollecito's apartment. Nadeau is mistaken about the bleach receipt and traces of bleach being found on the knife, just as she is mistaken about Dr. Sollecito's wife shouting "F*** you" in the courtroom and many other points.
 
I don't really know what the argument is here, but for what it's worth, the "almost looks like fingers" looks to me more like a pair of twinkies. The folded/knitted sweater looks like a shoe horn, or possibly a large clam.
 
I don't really know what the argument is here, but for what it's worth, the "almost looks like fingers" looks to me more like a pair of twinkies. The folded/knitted sweater looks like a shoe horn, or possibly a large clam.
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Well, you've just added yourself to the rest of the readers here who are waiting with anticipation for Dan O. to reveal to us the esoteric observations he has made after he rotated slide 17 to the left, and slide 66 to the right.

I'm sure it's important.

((Somebody ring up Dr. Mark C. Waterbury, Ph.D, and keep him on standby ... this is going to be blockbuster stuff ... Amanda will be on the next plane home, once ABC or CBS contributes to the bucket again))
 
Kermit, you seem to be on the defensive about illegality because you assume it denotes a criminal implication. Are you aware police conduct illegal searches, illegally obtain evidence, etc., all the time and are still not criminals because of it?
 
Kermit, you seem to be on the defensive about illegality because you assume it denotes a criminal implication. Are you aware police conduct illegal searches, illegally obtain evidence, etc., all the time and are still not criminals because of it?
But even this level of illegal isn't what was found by the Supreme Court. Further, the argument is exactly that police have been found to have conducted a criminal interrogation and that this makes it more plausible that they would do other criminal stuff like plant evidence, destroy evidence, etc.... That argument breaks down if the Supreme Court didn't actually find that the police did anything improper.
 
But even this level of illegal isn't what was found by the Supreme Court. Further, the argument is exactly that police have been found to have conducted a criminal interrogation and that this makes it more plausible that they would do other criminal stuff like plant evidence, destroy evidence, etc.... That argument breaks down if the Supreme Court didn't actually find that the police did anything improper.

I'm willing to accept that, but it would be nice to see the actual text of the decision if anyone can link it here. Even Kermit himself seems a little confused:

"If you want, in addition to confirming that you understand that the supreme court ruling didn't have much to do with illegalities on the part of Italian authorities, and everything to do with Amanda's (Italian) constitutional protection against having her own words used against her in court."

That sounds a little legalish to me and not quite an affirmative statement of actual understanding. Perhaps you could point us all to the primary source. It would be appreciated.
 
I'm willing to accept that, but it would be nice to see the actual text of the decision if anyone can link it here. Even Kermit himself seems a little confused:
I'll see what I can come up with. Another decision that it would be nice to see would be the judgement against Mignini. So far I've come up with nothing.
 
I'll see what I can come up with. Another decision that it would be nice to see would be the judgement against Mignini. So far I've come up with nothing.

I'd like to see the one on Mignini too. When was Mignini sentenced? The motivation should be out I'm guessing. Maybe it's posted online somewhere but no one's looked?
 
I'd like to see the one on Mignini too. When was Mignini sentenced? The motivation should be out I'm guessing. Maybe it's posted online somewhere but no one's looked?
I asked about a month ago until people were sick of me on Perugia-Shock and nobody seemed to know. As far as I'm aware theres only vague and contradictory statements from journalists and the interview with Mignini to go on.
 
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I'm willing to accept that, but it would be nice to see the actual text of the decision if anyone can link it here. Even Kermit himself seems a little confused:

"If you want, in addition to confirming that you understand that the supreme court ruling didn't have much to do with illegalities on the part of Italian authorities, and everything to do with Amanda's (Italian) constitutional protection against having her own words used against her in court."

That sounds a little legalish to me and not quite an affirmative statement of actual understanding. Perhaps you could point us all to the primary source. It would be appreciated.
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Hi HumanityBlues. There's no confusion on my part. In this discussion, we have a point of view which is expressed by Curt Knox, as he explained to
Julie Chen on CBS's The Early Show:

"The only time that it's ever come out that she's changed her story was during a 14 hour interrogation all night in which she actually made two statements, one at 1:45 a.m. and another one at 5:45 a.m. and the Supreme Court of Italy has literally thrown them out because they were ... coerced."

This sort of suggested coercion and forced "confession" on the part of Italian investigators, and the supposed (according to Curt and pro-Amanda posters such as Dan O.) "throwing out" of Amanda's statements by the supreme court, has nothing to do with their true status as possible evidence in court.

Amanda's statements are what they are, and simply can't be used because they were made without a lawyer being present. Call it the Italian Miranda protection if you will.

However, that protection only goes so far. If your statements without a lawyer actually go so far as to represent a crime themselves, well, then your statements can be used against you in court (but only that part which is directly related to the new crime, in the case of Amanda, her false accusation against Patrick for which she has been found guilty, pending appeal).

You wanted some links ....

On one hand we have the Perugia Shock coverage of Amanda's legal action to have her Police Headquarters statements removed from the evidence. These were only partially successful, as the false accusation was included in the trial documentation:

Amanda's legal team's attempt to exclude all Police Headquarters statements

AMANDA (Kermit: Amanda's legal team) :

They used the statements I made at 1.45 am on November 6 when I didn't not have the presence of an attorney to defend me.

I was questioned again at 5.45 am and gave "spontaneous statements," but these are not admissible due to the status I had acquired in the mean time.

Both are violations of Article 63 cpp.

SUPREME COURT:

Statements released without the proper legal guarantees can't be used contra se (against the person) --not even against other suspects-- when there is already circumstantial evidence against the person who makes them.

But when the person is heard as a witness the total lock-up (can't be used at all, not against the one who makes them nor against other suspects) provided by Article 63 cpp does not apply.

In this case, the fact that he is just a witness and as such outside the facts protects him from possible abuse by the investigators (Cass.Sez.Un. 13/2/1997).

Arguing from these principles, the statements you made at 1.45 can only be used contra alios (against another person).

As a result of those statements, the interrogation was suspended and you became "indagata"(a suspect).

The "spontaneous statements" made at 5.45 am are not admissible against you or against other suspects because you had already become "indagata" and you did not have legal protection.

But, the memoir you wrote was a spontaneous defensive act and is admissible against you.

=================================

What's of interest is how these references were used in the trial itself. There was some considerable sparring going on between the Defence and Prosecution, as the court testimony reveals:

http://perugiamurderfile.org/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=165

- GCM=Giancarlo Massei=Judge=Presidente
- AK=Amanda Knox=accused undergoing examination
- CP=Carlo Pacelli=Lumumba lawyer=avvocato
- CDV=Carlo dalla Vedova=Knox defense lawyer=avvocato

CP: Yes, yes. In the interrogation of the 5th/6th, at 1:45, you said that you went to the house in via della Pergola together with Patrick.

AK: It's more complicated than that.

CP: Do you confirm it?

CDV: Another objection.

GCM: Excuse me, excuse me, please. Yes?

CDV: The genericity of the question relative to the interrogation of November 6th must be specified. I recall that this document was declared unusable by the Supreme Court. Decision of April 1, 2008. So whenever we refer to the time period of the 5th and 6th of November, when you refer to transcripts from November 6 in a plural form, it is absolutely necessary to give a time reference for the interrogation being referred to. Because there is one transcript which was declared inadmissible and the other admissible against others but not against Amanda.

CP? Excuse me, Presidente, but this objection is really "peregrina" [bizarre]. The interrogation of November 6 at 1:45 and the interrogation of November 6 at 5:45 have both been acquired [included in the dossier] in the body of evidence of the slander case, and thus they are perfectly admissible in the aim of any contestation from this attorney [CP speaking of himself in the 3rd person]. Otherwise, we would be in a situation that lies outside any logic of the legal code, so I will repeat and reformulate my question. On November 6, 2007, at 1:45, you said that you went to the house in via della Pergola with Patrick. Did you go?

AK: The declarations were taken against my will. And so, everything that I said, was said in confusion and under pressure, and, because they were suggested by the public minister (Mignini).

CP: Excuse me, but at 1:45, the pubblico ministero was not there, there was only the judicial police.
 
Kestrel said:
The bottles of bleach were purchased at the request of Raffaele's cleaning lady a couple months before the murder. Marina Chiriboga testified in court that there were one and a half containers of bleach left over after she last cleaned his flat a couple months earlier. (She quit due to advanced pregnancy). The same amount found when by the police after the murder. The receipts found were not from a couple days before, they were from a couple months before.

Actually, there was also a bleach receipt dated 5th Nov (source: Barbie Nadeau's book).
 
Kestrel said:
Marco Quintavalle, the store owner who testified to seeing Amanda outside of his store the morning after the murder claimed to have recognized her from news reports a few days later. But when the police questioned him on Nov. 15th, he didn't mention the fact. It was a year after the crime when he started telling his story about the blue-eyed girl.

This is because the police didn't ask him about Amanda, they asked him only about Raffaele.
 
Kestrel said:
Marina Chiriboga, Raffaele's former cleaning lady, was working in Marco's store that morning. She testified that she didn't see Amanda or Raffaele.

And she also testified that on that morning Quintavalle asked her morning if she'd seen that girl and what she'd bought. It is for this reason the judges have accepted his testimony.
 
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