The article is written by someone explaining why the accused and their representation took certain steps after their arrests to protect themselves. The author is apparently a lawyer although I've never read anything else he's written.
What exactly "sucked" about the article?
@Bruce Fisher: The article did not concern the backgrounds of any of the three accused.
No, the article explains why the author THINKS the accused and their representatives took certain steps after their arrests. The fact that they actually took those steps is not established.
I will contain my objections to two main points. The first point considers how the author starts his piece, trying to claim credibility for the verdicts by virtue of the following facts:
"Most people in Italy believe the two trials ended correctly because they have been exhaustively reported-to throughout.
"Also they have been able to follow the machinations and the twists and turns of the three defendants and defenses in real time. And the court documents and transcripts are all issued in Italian, and some are officially posted on the Internet.
"The media coverage in Italian in Italy exceeds the media coverage in English in the UK and USA by a factor of five or ten. And there have been a number of very highly rated and balanced TV talk-shows on the case, in the course of which the defenses were not able to muzzle or slant the discussions - even if they ever considered doing such a thing."
The author is claiming that most people in Italy believe the verdicts were correct because the trials were exhaustively covered in the news. Never mind that this extensive news coverage could be slanted or even false. When he does mention bias, it is in reference only to how the defense might do such a thing. Also, he suggests that Italian news coverage is better than U.S. news coverage because there is more of it.
The illogic of these claims is stunning. Even the sleaziest American lawyer wouldn't imply, much less state outright, that people believe the verdict is correct because they have read about it a number of times in the newspapers.
This is just more evidence that Italians try their cases in the media as well as the courts.
Second, his entire argument rests on the claim that the three defendants were involved in a complex dance of accusing and counter-accusing each other of the crime in their prison diaries. At one point, he bases his claim on this evidence:
"Doesn’t all this sound like a reciprocal veiled accusation? Why would two people accused of murder, with exactly the same fate, write down their doubts about the innocence of their presumed accomplice?"
He quotes from the prison diaries extensively without once mentioning the extremely important fact that Amanda and Raffaele are reflecting on information that was given to them by the police. The author turns their spontaneous accounts of their bewilderment into calculated strategies guided by their lawyers to implicate each other in the crime. Yet, the words he quotes were written in the first week after the arrests -- long before the attorneys would have had time to plot strategies and instruct their clients in how to carry them out.
Basically, it's just more of the same nonsense of people looking with a microscope at what Amanda and Raffaele wrote about the lies the police told them, then using their own words against them, meanwhile ignoring all the rest of what they wrote that supports their innocence.
Not a very effective argument.
http://truejustice.org/ee/index.php