LondonJohn
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 12, 2010
- Messages
- 21,162
I am sorry, but I do not understand your dilemma.
A 20-year old student of Washington University, educated in a highly exclusive Jesuit preparatory school, is not able to answer the simple question:
Whom did you send this message?
What about saying: ah,wait a minute, yes, I sent it to Patrick, he is the owner of the pub, where I work sometimes a week. He sent me a SMS that I didn't need to go to work on the evening of the 1st November - and this was my answer.
The police would have checked this and found it true.
End of story.
I don't think it was anything like this simple. I believe that AK did fairly quickly confirm that the text message was to Lumumba, and that it was indeed a confirmatory text following his (unsaved) text to her telling her not to come into work. However, the fact is, the police had almost certainly already decided that her pidgin-Italian phrase in the text which translated as "see you later" actually indicated a planned meeting between AK and Lumumba on the murder night. It was this which AK vehemently denied, and which the police took to be straight lies. And, in the police's minds, AK's denial of a meeting with Lumumba (which they were convinced the text message indicated) implied that the meeting did not have an innocent outcome. After all (in the police's minds), why else would AK lie to them and deny the meeting?
Incidentally, I think I'm right in saying that when the police had Lumumba in custody, they searched his cellphone and couldn't find any trace of the texts that he'd sent to AK. If I remember correctly, they immediately thought this to be a highly suspicious and deliberate act by Lumumba. But then someone realised that Lumumba's cellphone was actually set to not save any sent texts (as are many people's phones)..................