Bruce, youv'e proven nothing. Gather your strength for the translation of the Motivation report. Perhaps then you'll see the light of day. Oh, and as for the world view? Last time I checked, no protests, Perugia still full of students. World still moving along. No hue and cry. More written about her hair, actually.
For the last time..........
there is nothing magical or new to be revealed in the Massei report.
The report deals with how the judicial panel arrived at its verdict and sentence. Nothing more or less than that. No new evidence will be revealed in the report - it never could be, since jury panels are required by law to assess the case based purely on the evidence presented in court.
So all that the Massei report will show is which parts of the prosecution's case they found to be compelling evidence of guilt (and, conversely, which parts they rejected). Since everybody already knows that the judicial panel found both defendants guilty on all charges, we can already know that they were persuaded by the bulk of the prosecution's case. No surprises to be had there, then - since we already know the prosecution's case in detail.
And anything that the report says by way of "crime narrative" is only of marginal relevance. I'd argue that the judicial panel actually has no business in law making up its own narrative of events - it should either accept the prosecution's narrative in whole or in part, or it should reject it without substituting its own.
The assumed mythical status of this report ("Ahhh - wait until you read the translated Massei report:
then you'll understand") is getting completely out of hand - for reasons that are not hard to fathom......
To make a trite comparison: remember after the OJ Simpson trial, when various members of the jury were interviewed? I remember one of them saying things like "We thought that when the glove didn't fit OJ, the prosecution lost the case right there." We already knew that the glove didn't fit OJ (and we already knew that the prosecution had botched up badly in showing how this was of limited value, owing to shrinkage of the glove and OJ's donning of latex undergloves for the demo). So all that the juror's explanation told us was that the jury preferred to believe the defence over the prosecution in this instance.
But that doesn't automatically make it the correct interpretation.
Obviously, the Mattei report is more erudite and considered (hopefully) than some of the jurors in the OJ trial. But the principle is exactly the same. The report tell us
how the judicial panel arrived at a conviction, but won't be introducing any new evidence. It merely shows us their
interpretation of the evidence. And we already know that
their interpretation indicated guilt beyond reasonable doubt, since they voted to convict. BUT this doesn't mean that no other interpretations are still possible. The "words of Mattei" are not stone tablets handed down by the Gods.