Meaningless in this case because the victim's home is also the suspect's home.
No, I'm pretty sure most investigators would find this significant, as the person with the greatest motive for locking the door is the suspect.
Firstly, it hasn't been established to general satisfaction that there is no credible sign of forced entry. Entering a second-story window after breaking it with a rock is consistent with Rudy Guede's (highly probable) criminal MO, and it's solely the prosecuting team's opinion that he couldn't have gotten in the broken window without leaving traces. Their opinions have been proven to be conveniently wrong before.
It hasn't been established to
your satisfaction, but it has to the court's, and based on what I have seen, I am inclined to agree with their assessment. You write: "Their opinions have been proven to be conveniently wrong before." as justification for concluding they are wrong in this case. This is an example of a
Hasty Generalization.
Secondly, it makes just as much sense for Guede to fake a break-in as AK and RS, if he talked his way in the front door using his acquaintance with the downstairs tenants.
No it doesn't, because the only witness to his entry in this case (Meredith) is dead! As such, in this case, Rudy actually has a
disincentive to fake a break-in; by not staging a burglary, Rudy would naturally focus the attention of investigators even
more on the only key-holder without a solid alibi: Amanda Knox.
It has not been established that AK or RS lied about anything, as opposed to misremembering.
To an external observer, lying and "misremembering" are equivalent. In both cases, the suspect provides verifiably false statements. Only the suspect herself knows her mental state and whether her false statements are intentional or accidental. It is left to the observer to judge the likelihood in any instance of deception or forgetfulness. There is no way of independently "establishing" which is true.
Having read many trial excerpts, I am inclined to believe that many of AK's false statements to investigators could be reasonably inferred as simple mistakes of memory. However, there are many, major statements about which I am led to the opposite conclusion of willful deception.
As has been patiently explained time and time again, the circumstances under which that statement was made, the content of the statement and its subsequent retraction are all more consistent with a false statement made under duress (a well-known and unsurprising result of the kind of treatment Amanda was subjected to) than with a true confession.
I do not think so. I have read some of the examples provided of false confessions, and I do not believe that the circumstances of AK's interrogation are analogous to those. Primarily, there are two problems for those supporting this argument: 1) AK is not of below-average IQ, nor possessed of any significant mental disabilities, and 2) the time-frame of her interrogation is far too short when compared to the cases I have seen presented as examples of false confessions.
I'm pretty sure this one is pure PMF spin - everything AK and RS get right is "evidence they have perfect recall when they want to!" and everything they get wrong is "evidence they are lying, because they have perfect recall when they want to!".
I do not think so. As I stated above, I think that some of AK's false statements can be reasonably interpreted as not being willful deceptions. However, we are not talking of minor details when it comes to AK's amnesia. Much of her difficulty in defense can be attributed to her inability to establish a solid alibi, which is largely a consequence of her persistent "forgetfulness" as to her actions and whereabouts on the night in question.
Apart from the fact that we know some of these claims were media beatups, so what? Is it really more incredible to you that a young woman would at abnormally after a housemate was killed, than that the prosecution fantasy story is true?
In violent crime, more often than not the perpetrator is known by the victim. As such, investigators are often attuned to the aspect and behavior of the victim's family, friends, co-workers, etc. when conducting their interivews. There is a range of normal human reactions and behavior which investigators have experienced over the years when interviewing a victim's associates, the overwhelming majority of which are, in any given case, completely innocent. When someone close to the victim behaves in a manner outside the bounds of what is normally to be expected, suspicion will naturally upon them from any competent investigator.
As for the "prosecution fantasy story", it is a reconstruction based on partial knowledge, and even they will tell you it is only their best appoximation and will make no claims as to its complete veracity. As such, it is probably not true. However, it does not follow from this that AK & RS are innocent. Morevoer, I fail to see the relationship between AK's pre-trial behavior and the prosecution's theory of the crime. As such, I see no way of effecting a meaningful comparison of the two elements.