katy_did
Master Poster
- Joined
- Feb 4, 2010
- Messages
- 2,219
Judge Claudia Matteini
"Your family lives in the Unitied States, so it would be extremely easy for you to leave the country," Matteini wrote. "The fact that you did not do so before you were arrested is totally irrelevant. We must remind you that your arrest was made very early, and was effected purposely before the arrival of your mother in order to avoid just such a possibility."
Thanks for this Draca, I knew I'd seen this somewhere but couldn't remember where!
Steve Moore's recent article and the discussion it's created has been really interesting. I'd always assumed that Amanda wasn't supposed to go the police station that day, that the police had had a conversation with her and discovered the text message, and that things went from there.
But there are a lot of things that don't add up about the 'spontaneous' interrogation scenario. Re-reading Amanda's testimony, the police didn't discover the SMS until she was already in the interrogation room, and this is also when Raffaele said she may have left the apartment. So neither of those can have been a reason to start interrogating her. It also sounds as if the interrogation may have begun a lot earlier than has been suggested, perhaps even at 22.30, not long after Amanda and Raffaele arrived at the Questura. Three police officers came to speak to Amanda. That's not just a casual conversation to ask a few quick questions, that's a planned interview.
Then there's the fact that, as Steve Moore points out, at least 12 officers were available for the interviews that night (possibly more, if some stayed in Raffaele's room). Were they really all there to interrogate Raffaele? Seems unlikely. And last, there's the very important fact that Amanda's mother was arriving the next morning. It seems like too much of a coincidence that Amanda just happened to be interrogated and arrested the night before, especially given Matteini actually states her arrest was "effected purposely before the arrival of your mother".
So I now think Amanda was supposed to go down to the station that night, as Giobbi says, and that for whatever reason she just wasn't aware of it. Presumably Raffaele must have taken the call from the police, since Amanda thought he was the one they wanted to interrogate; perhaps the message she needed to go to was lost somewhere down the line - maybe Raffaele misunderstood, or maybe he didn't explain properly to Amanda, or Amanda misunderstood him.
And if Amanda was meant to be interrogated that night, as now seems likely, I wonder what their reasons were at that stage for being so suspicious of the couple...? They had no real evidence against them, it was purely behavioural stuff, much of it really quite innocuous (kissing outside the house and buying underwear?). It's starting to look even more like a huge rush to judgment...