Cite?
What safeguards would have prevented Amanda and Raffaele from supplying the Perugia police with a litany of conflicting, contradictory, and changing statements from 02 NOV 2007 until their arrests? I don't personally know of any. What safeguards would have prevented Amanda from writing her alibi email and the "gift"?
In this listing (corruption), Italy fares pretty poorly:
http://www.transparency.org/policy_research/surveys_indices/cpi/2009/cpi_2009_table. US = 19th, UK = 17th, Canada = 8th...Italy = 63rd.
In this one they're listed as "Free":
http://www.freedomhouse.org/uploads/fiw10/FIW_2010_Tables_and_Graphs.pdf
Political Rights: US, UK, Canada and Italy all highest rated.
Civil Liberties: Italy is one rank lower than the other three.
Here's a look at Italy:
http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/country,,,,ITA,,4c1a1ea8c,0.html
The judicial system is undermined by long trial delays and the influence of organized crime. A bill backed by Berlusconi's government that would place a six-year cap on the length of trials in Italy's three-tier justice system was pending before parliament at year's end. The bill, which does not apply to mafia crimes, has been criticized by the opposition as it would apply retroactively and annul Berlusconi's current trials for tax fraud and corruption. Despite legal prohibitions against torture, there have been reports of excessive use of force by police, particularly against illegal immigrants. In August, the European Court of Human Rights ruled that an Italian police officer who shot dead a protester during the 2001 Group of 8 summit in Genoa was acting in self-defense. Some prisons system suffer from overcrowding.
Amanda did report excessive force by police but it's rather probable she lied about it. She isn't an illegal immigrant; she's a murderer.
Just as a comparison, I thought I'd dig up Peru, where Joran Van Der Sloot is claiming exactly the same things Amanda did (coerced confession, mistreatment, problems with translations, etc):
http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/country,,,,PER,4562d94e2,4c0ceada28,0.html
The judiciary is widely distrusted and prone to corruption scandals. The Constitutional Court, once seen as independent, has been accused of favoring the government in recent years; civic groups criticized its December 2009 decision to close a corruption case against a former army general based on a procedural violation. A 2008 Judicial Career Law improved the entry, promotion, and evaluation system for judges, and the judiciary's internal disciplinary body has been highly active in recent years. Access to justice, particularly for poor Peruvians, remains problematic.
An estimated 70 percent of inmates are in pretrial detention, and as of November 2009 the inmate population had reached nearly 200 percent of the system's intended capacity. Since 2006, an adversarial justice system has been gradually introduced with the hope that it will speed up and ensure greater fairness in judicial proceedings.
I wonder where the advocates for poor Joran are as the safeguards against a wrongful conviction in Peru appear to be considerably more lacking than in Italy.
So Gilder wrote something you found useful. Is Krane's company being engaged by either defence team for the appeals?