Mary_H
Philosopher
- Joined
- Apr 27, 2010
- Messages
- 5,253
The point of the post you have resurrected was that the issue of the verity of the DNA results for the knife was made moot by Sollecito's own admission that he had reason to believe it could be found there. Had, in fact, a reason to expect it could be found there, by explicitly reciting the particular circumstances which had caused it to be there. At that point it was the verity of his account which became the issue, not that of the lab. That was true then, and remains true now. Your analysis of the lab results, however scholarly and well footnoted, and no matter how often repeated, became irrelevant as far as the knife was concerned. The lab could have stated unequivically that there was no DNA found at all. We'd still be left wondering why Sollecito wanted to claim that there ought to be.
Why do you think Raffaele's statement about the knife has more credibility than the other 99% of his prison diary, in which he claims to be innocent of the crime?