Fulcanelli
Banned
- Joined
- Dec 11, 2009
- Messages
- 3,576
Hows that
Well, it's okay...for a start.
I'd disagree with the part regarding Filomena's room being already a mess though
Hows that
And apparently, I'll never know!
I'd put myself in the 'Amanda is guilty' camp for now... at least such a time that the Amanda defenders starts providing evidence for the things they claim. So far their CT-like musings have failed to convince me.
Well, it's okay...for a start.
I'd disagree with the part regarding Filomena's room being already a mess though![]()
And apparently, I'll never know!
Just some questions:
1. Why do you think Knox and Sollecito repeatedly told the police a pack of lies and gave multiple conflicting alibis?
No one here has been able to substantiate the claim that Amanda and Raffaele lied or had conflicting alibis until after they were influenced by the police.
2. Who do you think staged the break-in in Filomena’s room?
Rudy either caused or staged the break-in.
3. Who do you think tracked Meredith’s blood into the bathroom that Knox and Meredith shared?
Rudy or Amanda.
4. Why did Amanda Knox voluntarily admit that she was involved in Meredith's murder on 6 November 2007?
Nothing said while being interrogated alone by a group of police officers in a place you are not allowed to leave can be considered voluntary in the usual sense of the word.
5. Why did Amanda Knox accuse Diya Lumumba of murdering Meredith despite knowing full well that he was completely innocent and why didn't she recant her false and malicious allegation when he was in prison?
We've gone over this a million times. She didn't know he was innocent. She accused him because the police suggested it. She did recant her allegation within hours of making it.
6. Why won't Sollecito corroborate Amanda Knox's alibi that she was at his apartment on the night of the murder?
He did, in his prison diary.
My "strawman" is as generalized an argument as yours regarding contamination. You have yet to prove that contamination happened in this case, merely that it can happen. As such, it is no strawman to call out your arguments for the generalizations they are.Belz...,
I became interested in the case when I saw an open letter from nine DNA forensic scientists who pointed to serious weaknesses in the DNA evidence. After I learned some of them had helped to convict people, I knew it was not knee-jerk criticism of any prosecution or any DNA evidence (BobTheDonkey's strawman to the contrary notwithstanding). The more I looked into the DNA evidence, the better I understood the arguments of he open letter. Then I looked into the luminol footprints, and I saw the same kind of confirmation bias in this aspect of the forensics. Given the highly speculative nature of the prosecution's narrative, this case lives or dies with the forensics.
halides1
Interesting that you would post this without regard to your own position concerning the evidence tampering/conspiracy claims you tout, all in order to promote your faith in Amanda's innocence.Yesterday it was the Straw Man, today it is begging the question (well, actually, everyday it's begging the question):
Also Known as: Circular Reasoning, Reasoning in a Circle, Petitio Principii.
Description of Begging the Question
Begging the Question is a fallacy in which the premises include the claim that the conclusion is true or (directly or indirectly) assume that the conclusion is true. This sort of "reasoning" typically has the following form.
1. Premises in which the truth of the conclusion is claimed or the truth of the conclusion is assumed (either directly or indirectly).
2. Claim C (the conclusion) is true.
This sort of "reasoning" is fallacious because simply assuming that the conclusion is true (directly or indirectly) in the premises does not constitute evidence for that conclusion. Obviously, simply assuming a claim is true does not serve as evidence for that claim. This is especially clear in particularly blatant cases: "X is true. The evidence for this claim is that X is true."
Some cases of question begging are fairly blatant, while others can be extremely subtle
http://www.nizkor.org/features/fallacies/begging-the-question.html
Interesting that you would post this without regard to your own position concerning the evidence tampering/conspiracy claims you tout, all in order to promote your faith in Amanda's innocence.
Then you should first establish that her job was in danger to begin with.Maybe she wanted to keep her job.
It is certainly questioned in the courts... I don't think you are making a very convincing case here.From what I have gathered, not a lot of public questioning of the prosecution's case is done in general. It is an authoritarian system in which the magistrates hold the most power.
I don't see how these two (Amanda and eves-dropping on Organized crime) are connected. Care to explain?I found an interesting article from earlier this week that may explain some of the hesitation on the part of the United States to intervene in Amanda's case:
Will wonders never cease?I would imagine the U.S. and Italy have similar other shared interests, as well.
Sure, they could done it that way... where's the evidence though?They didn't even have to test the bra calsp -- they could just SAY they tested it, and show the results of another DNA test instead. Or, they could just wipe some of Raffaele's DNA on it from his clothing or a napkin.
I think I'll stick to my currently held beliefs till you start providing some evidence for your assertions.They already had the evidence from Amanda -- the knife. They probably thought everybody would believe that was enough. Like I said, they weren't terribly brilliant about all this.
Right... those judges are so damn gullible.All of the other judges don't have to know what's going on behind the scenes. They only have to believe what Mignini and Comodi tell them.
Then you should first establish that her job was in danger to begin with.
It is certainly questioned in the courts... I don't think you are making a very convincing case here.
I don't see how these two (Amanda and eves-dropping on Organized crime) are connected. Care to explain?
"Sure, they could done it that way... where's the evidence though?
I think I'll stick to my currently held beliefs till you start providing some evidence for your assertions.
Right... those judges are so damn gullible.
No, you make them as accusations. Let's call a spade a spade. And you have your bar set to a different level for those you are accusing to those you are defending. It would seem that aside from Meredith, her family and truth...the greatest victim of this case has been fair play.
Mary, do you still beat your husband?
Mary H said:The evidence is questioned in court, but the lawyers are not free to make all the objections we have made in the blogs. If they did, they could be sued.
I'm in the same camp as well, but if it wasn't for that darn locked door I'ld be around 50 / 50. There is just too much evidence pointing to Rudy not locking it, and that leaves only Amanda to lock it.
I've been trying to locate something on par with a police training manual but so far no luck.
...
It's tough without either a police manual or resorting to news stories and anecdotes to demonstrate that DNA swabbing is not ordinarily applicable to those not detained, already under arrest, or convicted. If anyone has a pdf from a police manual--regardless of jurisdiction--it would be helpful here.
And why should I, or anyone else, seriously consider this?That's why I said "maybe."
Usually in court you are expected to have evidence that supports your 'objections', especially the type of objections you are espousing.he evidence is questioned in court, but the lawyers are not free to make all the objections we have made in the blogs. If they did, they could be sued.
They do it in plenty of other cases where their citizens are involved, even those cases where the issue of guilt has been settled without a doubt. So why would the United States intervene in those cases and not in this one?The Italian system of criminal investigation seems to be working in general in the best interests of the United States Department of Justice. If it ain't broke (in 99% of cases), they are not going to fix it.
You of all people should realize how dangerous it is to work with hunches.No evidence, just a hunch, based on my observations of this trial over the past year.
Well, thank you.Fine with me.
That judges are gullible? Most judges I've had the pleasure of meeting were pretty smart people. And usually not easily deceived. That's not to say it doesn't happen, it does. But it's rare.Do you think it's any different in any other country?
Just posting this for someone I know:
Mary H said:Same ol', same ol'. Take out everything that is false, irrelevant, has been effectively refuted or is subject to reasonable doubt, and what you are left with is that Amanda couldn't remember the order or the lengths of the phone calls she made the morning of the 2nd. Ergo, she killed Meredith.
Mary H said:The difference is my accusations don't put anybody on trial or in jail. No matter what Amanda's supporters SAY, nobody gets hurt. The prosecution, police, judges and scientists are invulnerable to our remarks.