Kevin_Lowe
Unregistered
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2003
- Messages
- 12,221
No it is not enough. One thing is "unusual", one other thing is "murdered". The time of death does not depend on whether anything strange occurred before or not. I bet something "strange" was going on at around 21:00 in the cottage, independently from the 20:56 call, but I don't think this something strange was a murder. You are thinking at the murder of Meredith Kercher as a quick attack, as would be from an external intruder. You are not thinking the murder scenario as a situation which can well start since before Meredith's arrival or around 21:00, and could go on for hours.
If the "situation" started at 21:05 then Amanda and Raffaele weren't there, and in addition the Massei narrative is false and hence Amanda and Raffaele should not have been convicted.
You are just unfolding your list again, I already know it, and I disagree. I don't want to enter a discussion on this system of points, since I have a few other topics to talk about before. I need to finish explain my ideas on Nara Capezzali and why the autopsy report and findings is a circumstantial evidence of a multiple aggresion. Peripheral topics, but worht to be defined.
The Titanic is still sinking under you. Rearranging those deck chairs isn't going to make any difference to the hole in the side. If Amanda and Raffaele weren't there and Meredith died around 21:10 you can have all the talk about Nara's magic ears and evidence of multiple aggression you like but it's vacuous. Nara didn't hear a scream at 21:10, and even if you somehow proved that sixty people attacked Meredith, if Amanda and Raffaele were somewhere else when it happened they cannot be amongst those sixty.