"Ha ha" indeed. I am glad discussing the despicable murder of a young girl is so amusing to you. But I will overlook that for now.
What made you think I was laughing at the crime or the victim? And if you're this sensitive, I strongly recommend you don't visit certain other forums dedicated to this case....
As for the abstract you linked to, one point that jumps out at me is:
Yet, your whole argument is predicated on normal distribution. How do you justify that?
I justify that by actually having some knowledge of statistics. Do you know WHY the T(1/2) and T(lag) don't follow the normal curve? It's because in these cases the curve happens not to be exactly symmetrical. The left hand side of the curve is slightly squeezed relative to the right hand side. This means that the arithmetic mean is not the same as the median, and one cannot use standard distributions to ddesribe the curve. This is why the authors quote the median and 25%/75% points on the curve. You'll notice that the 25% point is 16 minutes below the median, and the 75% point is 20.5 minutes above the median. Hence asymmetry.
However, what I know and you don't know is that the
shape of the curve either side of the median follows a normal bell pattern - it's just slightly squeezed on the left side of the median relative to the right side. But by knowing the 75% point, one can accurately extrapolate the right side of the curve out, as I have done. Please ask me if you have any further questions on this.
And as others have argued here, this was apparently a carefully controlled experiment (although it's hard to tell from just the abstract), with carefully controlled amounts and conditions of eating.
In real life, people eat more (or less) than in an experiment.
How much was eaten in this experiment? I cannot determine that just from the abstract.
Frankly, I find this subject difficult to research as a layperson with a scientific background, because I do not have easy access to more than medical abstracts. MEDline is too expensive for me to subscribe to.
So, please enlighten us with a real argument based on more than just a bare-bones abstract about one 90-person experiment (only 45 women!), eating under controlled conditions, when Meredith was a real person eating under real conditions (probably greater amount, a different type of food probably, and an extended eating period consisting of three main sub-meals: pizza, ice cream, and apple crumble, spread over 2.5 hours, and even possibly followed by another mini-meal of mushrooms and a small glass of beer or wine).
I don't really understand this. Are you suggesting that all the research is null and void unless it exactly replicates what Meredith ate, and when she ate it? Because if that's what you are saying, then I can't help you....
I supplied an abstract which said that you can't use stomach contents alone to determine time of death. I repeat it here:
Did you ever find a reference that refuted Jaffe? I can't remember.
In this case, it's far easier to pin down a time of death from stomach/duodenum contents. If Meredith had started her pizza meal at 8.30pm, then it would indeed be extremely difficult to narrow her ToD down to anything other than 9.00pm to midnight. But because we know she started the pizza meal by around 6.30pm, and she was definitely still alive at 9.00pm, we can - in this particular instance - fortunately remove most of the imprecision.
As for the duodenum being empty, Dr. Ronchi said the following (pp 178-9 PMF English Translation of the Massei Report):
Thus, we are talking of a possible partial emptying of the stomach before time of death.
Again, as I've said before, a small amount of food matter was found at the very end of Meredith's small intestine. Again, I don't know if you're aware of this, but the average human small intestine is around 5 metres in length, and it's not a rigid tube but a semi-elastic tube (sausage skins are made from pigs' small intestines, as an example of the consistency and elasticity). So Dr Lalli would have had to manipulate food matter along over 4.5m of Meredith's small intestine, if that food matter had actually been present in Meredith's duodenum at the start of the autopsy. This is not feasible or credible.
Regardless, the time of death argument is not critical to the argument for Knox/Sollecito's guilt. They have no alibi from 8:40 pm onward. The computer activity at 9:10 may not have even required human interaction. They certainly have no alibi after about 10 pm if you consider Curatolo their alibi (funny how he's considered reliable by Innocenti when it's convenient for them, and a "bum" that "lies for the police" when that's convenient for them).
Their sole alibi is the girl who wanted to go to the airport. After that, they're each other's alibis. And I don't even remember Sollecito alibi-ing Knox on the stand. Maybe I missed something.
In other words, say they killed Meredith before 10:30 (even though I still don't believe it, because of other evidence). So what. Works for me!
I don't think many of the "innocentisti" find Curatolo credible under any circumstances. They have merely pointed out the irony of him - as a prosecution witness - providing Knox and Sollecito with an alibi if the ToD is before 10pm.
And, for the n-th time, criminal defendants do not NEED to have an alibi in order to defend themselves. It's helpful, of course, but by no means necessary. Rather, it's the job of the prosecution to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendants committed the crimes of which they are accused, and it's therefore incumbent upon the the prosecution to prove that the defendants were at the crime scene at the time when the crime was committed.
And, just incidentally, the girl (Jovana Popovic) didn't want to go to the airport. She wanted to collect a bag from the railway station. And she spoke to Knox - who seemed to be sober and lucid - at 8.40pm. Please tell me what automated software opened the video files on Sollecito's laptop at 9.10pm and 9.26pm. I'd be interested to know.