katy_did
I don't have a Mac at hand to test it now, but I have the Spotlight documentation in front of me right now, and it looks like it memorizes opening date for any doubleclicked file in a metadata attribute independent from the file system.
[Can't post url for now]
Looks like you were right, not me. Sorry for the mess-up.
It would also suggest that the cops indeed watched Stardust on Nov 6 and Massei is covering them
Aha! Nice work clearing that up folks.
P2P software definitely doesn't open a file when it shares it. So Massei's handwave to explain the opening of Stardust isn't just implausible, it's knowably wrong.
He should have known that the only way that file could have been opened while the computer was in police custody was for the police to have opened it, thus out of malice or stupidity the police destroyed a vital piece of evidence that could potentially have destroyed their case.
We might need to compile a list of vital pieces of evidence that the police falsified, destroyed, concealed or just failed to properly document.
The falsified list would include all the media leaks that turned out to be lies like the bleach story, Curatolo's evidence (since we now have strong reason to believe that they were at home
opening Naruto when Curatolo claims he saw them), the claim that Guede's bloody shoeprint matched Raffaele's shoe, and the claim that the bloody footprint on the bathmat matched Raffaele's foot. Additions welcomed.
The destroyed/concealed list would be the hard drives, the metadata for Stardust, the computer files and logs from the DNA lab, the recording of Amanda's interrogation where she claims she was browbeaten, struck and encouraged to fantasise about being in the murder house, and the negative results for blood from the luminol footprints. Additions welcomed.
The not-properly-documented list would be the alleged evidence of a staged break-in and the failure to image the hard drives. Additions welcomed.
To me it's striking how much of the guilters' "go to" evidence is on the list of things we should reasonably doubt. All the best evidence for Amanda and Raffaele's guilt (the "staged break-in", the DNA results, the confession) is improperly documented or partially concealed. For me it's cause for serious concern if the only time the police can find good evidence it's when they have the opportunity to conceal what they are up to. It's a bit like someone who claims they can levitate, but only when nobody is looking.
Similarly it's worrying when the evidence that we know the police destroyed is exactly the evidence we've now established could well have cleared Amanda and Raffaele. When they can only get good evidence when nobody is looking, and they "accidentally" destroy the evidence that could have spoiled their case, it adds up to a disturbing picture.