The woman was framed.
The woman was framed.
Yes, you called shenanigans at least twice and I corrected you on it at least twice. Here we go again.
When I began my argument about the door, I started out by saying it is not impossible to stop in one's tracks on the way out a door, let go of the handle and reach around to the inside and flip the switch on the inside doorknob without moving one's feet. I said I do that all the time. I made this claim because people had been saying that it was impossible for Rudy to have locked the bedroom door while his shoeprint was facing toward the front door.
As we delved more deeply into the discussion, it turned out that one objection was that Rudy's shoeprint was on the hinge end of the door, which led people to claim he would not have been able to reach the handle of the door and turn a key in the lock because of the distance he was standing from the handle. I tested this and found it very doable, then suggested other people try it, too. Some did, some REFUSED TO EVEN TRY IT. You know who you are.
To make a long story short, the conclusion of my point was that while I often stop in my tracks to reach inside to lock my front door, I am indeed closer to the handle of the door when I do it. That doesn't mean it's not impossible to stand at the hinge end of the door and lock, it; but that is not something I do all the time, and I never claimed it was. (Rudy, on the other hand, could have done it very easily.)
In the end, the whole discussion turned out to be moot, because Rudy probably did leave a print right in front of Meredith's bedroom door when he paused to lock it, but that footprint was cleaned up by police. The whole argument had started because SOMEONE claimed there was no evidence of Rudy having stood in front of the bedroom door; there was only evidence of the one shoeprint at the hinge end of the door.
As we have seen before, that claim was very likely not the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth.
One of us is badly confused: I thought the story was that Rudy locked the door while facing mostly towards it in a perfectly ordinary manner.
My understanding was that while the prosecution initially claimed to have positively identified the print as Raffaele's, the defence proved that it was unlikely to be Raffaele's since Raffaele's second toe didn't touch the ground, his foot being a bit of an odd shape.
The same "footprint expert" that claimed that the mat print was Raffaele's also claimed to have positively identified some luminol footprints as Raffaele's, which was questionable even in principle since luminol does not give high resolution and Raffaele's and Rudy's feet differed in size by only 3mm.
Those two pieces of evidence in particular look very much like the prosecution overselling highly ambiguous "evidence" as proof positive of their theory.
Hi LondonJohn,OK. Let's contrast your opinion (expressed in lovely terms of sarcasm, by the way) with the other two possible alternative scenarios:
Let's first of all suppose that Guede committed the crime alone (since that's a pre-requisite to discussing the why-would-Guede-have-locked-the-door issue). Guede would not have known when or if any of the other girls would be returning to the house, and neither would he likely have known whether Meredith had any other plans that were broken (horribly) by her murder.
So, Guede's now standing in the murder room, evaluating his options. Scenario 1: he could choose to flee, leaving Meredith's door wide open. Since many people seem to argue that the time (and manner) of discovery of the body would have been of no consequence to Guede, this scenario bears discussion.
If he'd chosen this option, imagine if one of the other housemates had returned 15 minutes* (say) after he'd left - especially if the housemate was AK, whose room was right next door to Meredith's. Any of the returning housemates might reasonably have had a quick spin round the house to see who was in, and they would inevitably have made the grisly discovery through the open door. So let's suppose for a minute that the murder was committed at 11pm**, that Guede left the flat (leaving Meredith's door wide open) at 11.05pm, and that one of the girls returned at 11.20pm. This would have narrowed the time of death right down, and would also have given Guede no opportunity to create diversion through his post-murder clubbing activities. Police sirens would have been screaming through the Perugia air by midnight at the latest. All of this would be bad news for Guede.
So, let's now look at Scenario 2. In this scenario, Guede elects to close Meredith's door, but not to lock it. And again, let's suppose that a flatmate returns home some 15 minutes after Guede leaves the scene. Guede would most likely not have known whether Meredith had missed an appointment to meet up in a bar etc, and he would also not have known whether the girls were in the habit of opening the closed bedroom doors of their housemates (either to chat, or to borrow items such as hairdryers, makeup, books etc). So a returning housemate might very reasonably have opened Meredith's door (with or without knocking) - either to check whether she was in, or to borrow something from her room. And, of course, her body would then have been discovered in the same way as in "Scenario 1".
So, again, I'd argue that IF Guede were the sole assailant, it wouldn't take much depth of reasoning for him to conclude - as he was standing there with blood on his hands (literally) - that his best option was to lock Meredith's door. And yes, the fact that he left a large amount of forensic evidence of his presence DOES show a lack of appreciation of such evidence on his part. But the issue of locking the door goes far beyond even a rudimentary knowledge of DNA evidence, as I hope I've illustrated above.
* It bears repeating at this point that Guede would have had no idea whether a housemate might have returned 5 minutes after the crime, or 10 hours after the crime. He would have had no idea when anyone might return, so had to assume a worst-case scenario of a relatively early return.
** 11pm is a purely arbitrary time - I'm not suggesting that the murder WAS committed at that time, it's just used here to illustrate relative timings.
I’ve now read at least 3 different scenario’s to how Rudy could have locked the door all by himself. Bruce Fisher – Mary H and Katy did. And each one has said to try it their way, it works.
Well, you know, they are all possible, so is walking out the door, do a hand stand, remove your shoes, and with your right foot, pull the door closed. Now for the tricky part..........
OK, I’m not going any further, I hope you see what I’m getting at, heck, I think it was even on this site, I saw a monkey, doing a handstand on a goat, while walking on a tightrope.
Yes it is possible, but a murder was just committed, they guy who did it, if he locked that door, would not do it any different than anyone else on this planet.
Walk out a door, and then lock it just normally and see how easy it is, that’s the way Rudy would have done it too, now pay attention to your shoe steps, but that’s not what Rudy’s shoeprints indicate.
So he locked Meredith’s door, close Filomena’s door, but left the front door open. Sorry, but no way, I just don't see that happening.
Rudy did lock Meredith's door, and it was not to delay discovery. It was to prevent her from getting out of the room and calling for help. He took her cell phones for the same reason. That's why he threw them away instead of keeping them for his own use.
Meredith may have taken up to two hours to die from bleeding to death slowy. When Rudy left her, she was still alive. He would not have tried to help stanch the flow of her blood with towels if he thought she was dead.
When he left the cottage, he was in a panic-induced state of deep denial, wishfully thinking that everything would turn out okay if he behaved normally. It served his psychic purposes to believe Meredith would recover quickly from the attack, try and fail to get out of her room and wait until someone came in the morning to help her.
To Kevin: I don't know if they were able to tell when Rudi's hand was cut, or how. He had fled to Germany so it was about 10 days before he was examined. As to the dna of the knife found in Raffaele's flat. Why did he say he had pricked Meredith?
Why did Raffaele say Amanda must have taken it, and done something to Meredith?
I'd disagree with you on this. While I'd agree - and it's supported by pathology - that Meredith would most likely not have been dead by the time the assailant(s) (WHOEVER he/she/they were), I think it would have been clear to anybody in the room that Meredith was extremely unlikely to recover after receiving those wounds - and most certainly not without dramatic medical intervention. She would almost certainly have quickly lapsed into unconsciousness (mercifully minimising her suffering), and would obviously have been bleeding profusely. So it was more a question of "if", rather than "when" she was going to die.
I also think it extremely unlikely that Guede would have wished Meredith to recover (even if in a fantasy scenario), if he were the sole assailant. Any recovery by Meredith would have resulted in Guede inevitably being jailed for a very long time for sexual assault and attempted murder. I'd think that Meredith's death would be a "preferred" option for Guede at that point.
HOWEVER, this adds an extra dimension into why Guede would have elected to lock the door, under my belief that it was done primarily to deter discovery for as long as possible. If Meredith was still alive when Guede left the room (as is likely), then Guede's locking of the door would serve an extra, important, purpose: if a flatmate had returned shortly after Guede left (which he had to assume was a possibility), then any discovery of Meredith - still alive - might have led to urgent medical intervention that might conceivably have saved her life. Guede would then be in big trouble - for obvious reasons.
In addition, had Meredith not survived, but had nonetheless been revived to the extent that she could whisper or write, she could have named Guede as her killer. Either way, Guede had to minimise the chances of Meredith being found, and locking the door was the easiest way to do that (short of moving her from the house, which clearly wasn't a possibility).
Hi Bob001,[FONT=Verdana, sans-serif]I haven't read the whole history here, but in case no one has mentioned it CBS's "48 Hours" devoted a full hour to the Amanda Knox case after a lengthy independent investigation. The woman was framed. The Italian prosecutor has a long history of bizarre behavior, including finding Satanic murder cults behind every tree, and was himself under indictment for misconduct when he tried Knox. At other times he tried to intimidate other Americans, including a well-known American author. Knox was interrogated for many hours without a lawyer, during which she says she was hit and threatened, and no recording or transcript of the interrogation exists; in other words, nobody knows what she said, only what the cops claim she said. Apart from all other issues, at the time of her interrogation she didn't speak Italian very well and some of her interrogators weren't fluent in English, so even if the cops weren't deliberately lying no one really knows who said what and what they meant. The Italian legal system is dramatically different from America's in many ways, to a defendant's detriment. CBS reporters proved that it was impossible for a "witness" to hear what she claimed she heard. Experts stated that the "murder weapon" couldn't have made the wounds that the prosecutor claimed. A prime suspect in the murder, a man with a record of violent crimes, fled Italy immediately after the murder and was captured on a train in Germany. He subsequently was convicted and sentenced to 30 years in prison. And that's just the beginning. Amanda Knox pretty clearly was a flaky, flighty coed at the time of the crime, and her attitude rubbed a lot of the locals the wrong way, but there is no substantial evidence that she had anything to do with any murder, let alone killing her roommate in their own home during some bizarre sex game, and plenty that she is innocent. [/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, sans-serif]First link (of six) to the "48 Hours" report (I can't post full link, but it would look like this:[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, sans-serif]w w w.youtube.com/watch?v=atWyYFIPYtM[/FONT]
[FONT=Verdana, sans-serif]Numerous other reports from responsible media sources are also easy to find.
[/FONT]
The forensics are consistent with one or two knives. Ockham's Razor says that until evidence of a second knife arrives then one knife is a more conservative hypothesis.
Hang on, this is getting farcical. Rudy left a bloody footprint on the bathmat in the bathroom, so the claim that he left no evidence of his presence in the bathroom is nonsense. He had to have been in the bathroom after stabbing Meredith.
So far nothing unusual for a dumb and disorganised housebreaker with a history of breaking into buildings by throwing a rock through the window. (I don't know what this talking point about glass on the ground is supposed to be about, the distribution of glass would be the same whether Rudy chucked the rock to break in or someone else chucked the rock to fake it).
There's anecdotal evidence of Rudy harassing women before,
and of Rudy carrying knives while breaking into buildings before.
I don't think it makes much sense for a perfectly normal person to just up and decide to rape and murder someone, but then again that's your straw man.
I think the evidence says Rudy did it, and it follows from that conclusion that he was sick in the head long beforehand and he had almost certainly thought about using his knife on a woman while breaking into her house before.
I haven't seen this claim anywhere before: Evidence? Citation?
As above.
However I could easily imagine Raffaele saying that if someone asked "How could Meredith's DNA possibly have gotten on to that knife blade?". Amanda taking the knife to her place and somehow bringing it in contact with Meredith is the only obvious way that could have happened without Raffaele's knowledge, if indeed it happened at all, which I think on balance it almost certainly didn't.
How could that have happened if Amanda was indeed with Raffaele all night as they had asserted?
And, again, if you'd read this thread, you would have seen the discussion regarding Raffaele's story.
Basically, it's one thing to suggest plausible alternative scenarios, it's quite another entirely to fabricate a completely implausible story (lie) as to how the DNA could have found it's way to the knife.
"Maybe Amanda snuck out and gave the knife to the killer" = plausible (if we ignore that it destroys their alibis)
"I pricked Meredith's finger while cooking" = not plausible - in other words, a flat out lie.
I'd disagree with you on this. While I'd agree - and it's supported by pathology - that Meredith would most likely not have been dead by the time the assailant(s) (WHOEVER he/she/they were), I think it would have been clear to anybody in the room that Meredith was extremely unlikely to recover after receiving those wounds - and most certainly not without dramatic medical intervention. She would almost certainly have quickly lapsed into unconsciousness (mercifully minimising her suffering), and would obviously have been bleeding profusely. So it was more a question of "if", rather than "when" she was going to die.
I also think it extremely unlikely that Guede would have wished Meredith to recover (even if in a fantasy scenario), if he were the sole assailant. Any recovery by Meredith would have resulted in Guede inevitably being jailed for a very long time for sexual assault and attempted murder. I'd think that Meredith's death would be a "preferred" option for Guede at that point.
HOWEVER, this adds an extra dimension into why Guede would have elected to lock the door, under my belief that it was done primarily to deter discovery for as long as possible. If Meredith was still alive when Guede left the room (as is likely), then Guede's locking of the door would serve an extra, important, purpose: if a flatmate had returned shortly after Guede left (which he had to assume was a possibility), then any discovery of Meredith - still alive - might have led to urgent medical intervention that might conceivably have saved her life. Guede would then be in big trouble - for obvious reasons.
In addition, had Meredith not survived, but had nonetheless been revived to the extent that she could whisper or write, she could have named Guede as her killer. Either way, Guede had to minimise the chances of Meredith being found, and locking the door was the easiest way to do that (short of moving her from the house, which clearly wasn't a possibility).
If it was just Rudi there, as you claim, he could have done the coup de grace in less time than it took to cut the bra. Which, btw, could have just been unsnapped. It would take someone inexperienced with girlfriends (Raffaele) and into rape and porn (Raffaele) to cut the bra.
You quoted me asking for a citation, but I have to point out that you did not provide one. What is your source?
Hi Sherlock Holmes,I’ve now read at least 3 different scenario’s to how Rudy could have locked the door all by himself. Bruce Fisher – Mary H and Katy did. And each one has said to try it their way, it works.
Well, you know, they are all possible, so is walking out the door, do a hand stand, remove your shoes, and with your right foot, pull the door closed. Now for the tricky part..........
OK, I’m not going any further, I hope you see what I’m getting at, heck, I think it was even on this site, I saw a monkey, doing a handstand on a goat, while walking on a tightrope.
Yes it is possible, but a murder was just committed, they guy who did it, if he locked that door, would not do it any different than anyone else on this planet.
Walk out a door, and then lock it just normally and see how easy it is, that’s the way Rudy would have done it too, now pay attention to your shoe steps, but that’s not what Rudy’s shoeprints indicate.
So he locked Meredith’s door, close Filomena’s door, but left the front door open. Sorry, but no way, I just don't see that happening.
What I find absolutely telling regarding the mental gymnastics to believe the "Lone Killer" theory is this:
The "Lone Wolf" theory involves some kind of turn-on similar to this: He broke in, was feeling sick, Meredith comes home, so he attacks her sexually (killing her before or after, whichever).
These same people who argue that this is what happened will turn around and claim that they don't believe the Prosecution theory that Amanda and Raffaele getting busy was a turn-on to Rudy because it's just "stupid" and "doesn't make any sense".
Duplicitous much?
One of us is badly confused: I thought the story was that Rudy locked the door while facing mostly towards it in a perfectly ordinary manner.
My understanding was that while the prosecution initially claimed to have positively identified the print as Raffaele's, the defence proved that it was unlikely to be Raffaele's since Raffaele's second toe didn't touch the ground, his foot being a bit of an odd shape.
The same "footprint expert" that claimed that the mat print was Raffaele's also claimed to have positively identified some luminol footprints as Raffaele's, which was questionable even in principle since luminol does not give high resolution and Raffaele's and Rudy's feet differed in size by only 3mm.
Those two pieces of evidence in particular look very much like the prosecution overselling highly ambiguous "evidence" as proof positive of their theory.
I have a couple of questions if I may. If nothing else they should break up the monotony of the back-and-forth.
1) Barring a compelling reason, should we not accept the word of expert forensic scientists?
These are people who are paid for their expertise to provide evidence that convicts criminals every single day, and when there is not a camera crew around they are not much second guessed (pressed by defense lawyers yes, doubted by laymen not so much).
2) Just how much of the 'she's innocent' comes down to a pretty American girl being tried by uppity foreign types from a second rate nation with a weirdo legal system?
Sorry if those lead the points a little, I didn't want to spam multiple posts just for a few thoughts of my own.