Christianahannah writes:
Do you know if the purse (wallet) in the wardrobe was in use or an extra one which was empty? Do you know if the police ever determined where Meredith's money and credit cards were taken from?
It's the same purse. It was on the bed when the crime scene was discovered. But during the investigation, police removed the mattress from the bed and took the mattress out to the living room. Then they pulled the clothes out of the wardrobe and laid them on the bedframe. The purse, along with the pillow from the floor, ended up in the empty wardrobe. On December 18, they stuffed the clothing on the bed into a suitcase, pulled the purse out of the wardrobe and put it back on the bedframe, laid an evidence tag next to it, and took pictures of it.
Hi Charlie and other JREF members,
Charlie mentioned that Miss Kercher's mattress was pulled out into the living room. Months later, someone broke into the apartment and stole that mattress.
Do you know anything about the theft of Miss Kercher's mattress after her murder?
I had read on Frank Sfarzo's latest posting at Perugia Shock that Luciano Aviello was insinuating that someone else killed Miss Kercher. Doing a google search of Mr. Aviello, I noticed on PMF that he was taking credit for a break-in that occured at Miss Kercher's apartment.
See this:
Saturday 09 May 2009
Prisoner writes: 'I know real murderer's name'
“I know the real name of Meredith’s killer, a fellow-brother Albanian friend of mine told me, and it’s not Raffaele Sollecito.” Luciano Aviello is Raffaele Sollecito’s ex-cellmate and, now, maybe encumbering his admirer, is writing another letter to Court of Assize president Giancarlo Massei.
A few weeks ago he had sent a letter in which he claims to have asked two of his friends to break into the murder house to prove that anybody could have done so. Yesterday, the page count of his letter jumped to five, and the tone was angrier. He’s had it with journalists, because they’ve referred to his less than clear past and because they wrote about his previous never-proven-true “revelations” on various important and dramatic criminal cases (like the disappearance of little Angela Celentano).
He’s had it with the police too, in whom he confided his secret about Raffaele’s innocence and who didn’t even give him the time of day. He maintains that, actually, he has a letter written by an Albanian friend, which contains the real name of the murderer, and he wants to speak only to the court president, Giancarlo Massei, to reveal it to him.
Although even the lawyer on the civil side of the case, Francesco Maresca, acting for the Kerchers, remains skeptical: “That letter ought to be re-read carefully: it’s not flour from his grainsack*”.
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As her mattress was stolen, I wonder why someone would steal it? There would be a big chance of getting caught while doing it, so why? Just because Miss Kercher had slept on it and was the victim of a brutal murder? Or might it have something to do with what Mr. Aviello states?
Hmmm...
RWVBWL