Richard Masters
Illuminator
- Joined
- Dec 27, 2007
- Messages
- 3,031
She's hot. So she's innocent.
I'm new to the thread, so sorry if this is unoriginal.
I'm new to the thread, so sorry if this is unoriginal.
Too funny Mary H!!!
"shuttlt, after giving the matter some thought, I have decided to grace you and stilicho with the evidence I used to decide that the Perugian police and prosecutor were sexually attracted to Amanda.
First, I was able to establish attraction by closely observing the investigators' psychological and behavioral reactions during the investigation. I didn't need to rely on other kinds of investigation as this method has enabled me to get to conclusions in a very quick time."
Thanks for the laugh,
RWVBWL
Perhaps it's only me who finds such jokes distasteful.
No, I also find them crude and distasteful.
No, I also find them crude and distasteful.
What would you like changed about the Italian Justice System?
Do you have evidence that the media influenced this trial?
That's my opinion, and you're entitled to yours also.I'd argue that what little we've seen of the reasoning behind the verdict is well thought out and based on the evidence as presented by both sides.
Now I'm not saying that a lot of these problems don't exist here in the US, but the Italian system appears to me rather crude by comparison.
- There is no presumption of innocence under Italian criminal law
- The story was spoon-fed to the Italian media by the prosecution
- Information irrelevant to the basic facts of the case--like Knox's shopping spree on the day after the discovery of her flatmate Ms. Kercher's body, her sexual history, and her acrobatics at the police station--were thus widely reported in the media, and exploited at trial by the prosecution
- The jury was not sequestered during the trial, or prevented in any way from reading or hearing sensationalized information about the case in the media
- Under Italian criminal law, the defense has no say in the jury selection process so there is practically no protection against jury poisoning
- The confession was obtained under duress and absent of an attorney on behaqlf of Ms. Knox, yet it was still admitted as evidence in the trial
- In the prosecution's closing statement, they were allowed to make assertions unsupported by and contrary to the evidence
That's my opinion, and you're entitled to yours also.
Crude and distasteful? BobtheDonkey who is always looking to get a rise out of anyone who disagrees with him and laugh at their expense can't even take a joke. What a drama queen.
I really don't know where you're getting some of your information.
2) What story was spoon fed to the media by the prosecution?
3) The shopping trip was relevant to the basic facts of the case, hence why the owner of the shop actually gave testimony on the stand in the trial.
6) The 'confession' (accusation) was not obtained under duress, certainly not the legal definition for it. Amanda gave her statement as a 'witness' and even in in America witnesses are are not afforded attorneys.
3) The shopping trip was relevant to the basic facts of the case, hence why the owner of the shop actually gave testimony on the stand in the trial.
Stuff like that never happens for other cases i'm sureBarbie Latza Nadeau covered the case in Perugia. She wrote:
"From the moment they were arrested, Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito were a circulation bonanza for the Italian media and a front-page staple of the British tabloids. The Italian press funneled leaks from the lawyers and prosecutors to embellish the crime story and quickly dubbed Knox 'Angel Face,' fostering a cult of morbid fascination with this most unlikely killer."
http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2010-04-02/how-the-media-got-knox-wrong/
On the TLC documentary, she also said the prosecution (or maybe it was the police) "were practically handing out pictures of the crime scene" to reporters
If she had nothing to hide, she wouldn't have had reasons to be confused. It's not like the police were asking here to remember details from an obscure day for an event that happened years ago.Amanda very credibly said it was. In her written statement to the police, she asked the police to stop yelling at her because it only made her more confused. She wrote that before she knew she was going to stand trial for the murder, so she had no reason to embellish.
7. What were the assertions made by the prosecution in their closing arguments that weren't supported by evidence and that contradicted the evidence? Can you give us specifics please?
Stuff like that never happens for other cases i'm sure![]()
If she had nothing to hide, she wouldn't have had reasons to be confused. It's not like the police were asking here to remember details from an obscure day for an event that happened years ago.
It's par for the course... In the end it does nothing to make Amanda guilty or not guilty. That is decided by evidence presented to the courts.What's that got to do with it?
Not difficult at all. It's easy as apple pie.No, they were just asking her to remember something that hadn't happened. That's a little more challenging.
It's par for the course... In the end it does nothing to make Amanda guilty or not guilty. That is decided by evidence presented to the courts.
Not difficult at all. It's easy as apple pie.
If they're asking you to remember something that happened, while it didn't happen, just keep telling them it didn't happen. That's what most innocent people do. People who are somehow involved on the other hand....
I really don't know where you're getting some of your information.
1). There is presumption of innocence under Italian law.
2) What story was spoon fed to the media by the prosecution?
3) The shopping trip was relevant to the basic facts of the case, hence why the owner of the shop actually gave testimony on the stand in the trial.
4) In the Italian system there is no jury to sequester. Italian courts have only judges. And in terms of sequestering juries, even in America, juries are not sequestered, read this: http://www.slate.com/id/2091241/
5) Under Italian law the defence has no say in jury selection because they don't have a jury, only judges.
6) The 'confession' (accusation) was not obtained under duress, certainly not the legal definition for it. Amanda gave her statement as a 'witness' and even in in America witnesses are are not afforded attorneys.
7. What were the assertions made by the prosecution in their closing arguments that weren't supported by evidence and that contradicted the evidence? Can you give us specifics please?
Mary, what is your take on the distinction here between false confessions and false memories in this case?Do you know more than all the people who have researched and witnessed the rather common phenomena of false confessions?
Do you really need to have the impossibilty of 'proving a negative' explained to you? Or are you (yet again) simply demonstrating your disingenuousness?
Are we back to the question of why spoons from the draw weren't tested?