Amazer
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Jun 23, 2008
- Messages
- 1,711
Maybe you need to reread the comments?
In a case that is clearly high profile and the jury returns with a guilty verdict it would be political suicide to overturn the jury's decision. Basicly I'm agreeing with Massei's decision not to overturn the verdict, because even judges have their own form of politics within their ranks. If he would have overturned the verdict he would have disassociated himself from the rest of his peers.
So instead of overturning the verdict, Massei has to make the evidence fit as best he can in his report. I'm pretty sure every judge in Massei's position has to do this, and every judge has this exact dilemma. In their report they have to make the evidence fit the decision of the jury. Massei's task of trying to make sense of all the crap the prosecution fed the jury wasn't an easy task. You can see that by reading the Massei report and then looking at the appeals of Sollecito and Knox and see where they are attacking it at.
Or to answer your question.
He could have just committed political suicide within the judicial ranks and said not guilty. Losing his job would have been a possibility however most likely he would have lost the confidence and respect of his peers. Or do you think there would have been no repercussions if he said, "not guilty?"
Yes, there wouldn't have been any repercussions if he had said not guilty.
As for losing his job.... who would fire him and on what grounds?
As for losing the confidence and respect of his peers (those being other professional judges, not the lay judges); they more then anyone else are aware of the problems he would have faced, I'd expect that the loss of confidence and respect would be a good deal greater if it did turn out that Massei gave in to those kind pressures and returned a bad judgement.