I thought the front door was supposed to be so exposed that merely stopping and locking it with a key already in hand (an otherwise normal occurrence) would be too suspicious. It seems like anything that is inconvenient to an innocence theory is too suspicious.
Quadraginta, this whole subtopic of yours is an extended foray into the Texas Sharpshooter Fallacy. We don't know why Rudy (or whoever) did one thing rather than another, and it's ridiculous to conclude that every minute detail of the case you consider "odd" with the benefit of confirmation bias is in fact evidence that the prosecution three-way conspiracy theory is factual.
All that is necessary for the defence case is that it be
possible for Rudy to have thought it a better idea at the time to leave by the front door rather than the window. That could be because he had an injured hand, because he thought he heard a passer-by, because he was lazy, because he was tired, it could be anything and exactly what it was doesn't matter (and isn't our job to prove).
For people who have been so nonchalant about suggesting Olympic class gymnastics to get Guede up through the window without leaving any traces of his passage, you all are sure getting mighty timid about him climbing back out again. Remember, the biggest issue with the entry is that there was no external trace of it.The considerable athletic ability required to have done that and done it inadvertently would make leaving by the same route a piece of cake.
Has anyone argued it would have been physically impossible for Rudy to have gotten back out that window if he really wanted to? (Ignoring for a minute the question of whether he could have done so without leaving any evidence). I didn't see that, so I think you're engaging in straw man tactics here.
Once again, all the defence needs to establish is that it's possible that leaving by the front door seemed like a better idea to Rudy at the time.
So after having carefully locked Meredith's bedroom door for the express purpose of delaying discovery by the apartment residents, Guede suddenly decides that the extra several seconds required to lock a door he has just unlocked with the key he is still holding in his hand is too risky, and abandons any idea of concealing what had happened for any length of time.
Sorry. I ain't buyin' it. This is another one of these spins that tries to claw its way into the possible without ever getting anywhere close to the probable.
Sorry. I ain't buyin' it. This is another one of those talking points where PMFers wildly exaggerate the improbability of a given oddity, on no good grounds at all.
As I've said before, the more details you examine the more "oddities" you will find, especially with confirmation bias sitting on your shoulder. We've already shown how you can find exactly the same kind of "oddities" in the testimony of Filomena and the police. Stacking up a huge pile of such oddities is not amassing evidence, it's amassing meaningless curiousities. Whether Rudy did it or not, you could assemble an equally large pile of such irrelevant points.
Even so I don't believe that someone who so carefully thought out and executed a plan to delay discovery by locking that bedroom door would so easily abandon it because of the imagined danger of several extra seconds in a dim and obscured entry alcove. Whether or not the issues with the spring latch were noticed is irrelevant to that.
Here's you're making things up again.
Nobody ever asserted Rudy "so carefully thought out and executed a plan", that's purely your own rhetorical invention, to try to exaggerate the improbability of his not locking the door.
All the defence needs is that it be
possible that it seemed like a better idea to Rudy at the time to leave by the front door, and that it's
possible that it seemed like a better idea at the time not to take the time to lock the door properly,
or that he thought the door had locked behind him,
or that he tried to lock it but had some problem finding the right key or whatever and decided to just walk away,
or something else.
That's it. That's all the defence needs.