Mary, as often, you are absolutely correct.
"Often?"
Forgive me if I did not attach the importance to the date Halides cited that you now understandably consider significant.
As I know you are well familiar with, the long and thorough investigation of evidence that takes place under the Italian system *before formal charges are filed* was why I downplay the importance of that date.
I mean, Matthew's fellow employee is under sufficient suspicion of criminal actions that, ....*she is in jail*
Why should 'Matthew' have to wait until all 19 judges completed their long investigation of the evidence, and *unanimously* conclude evidence of Amanda's guilt is *overwhelming* and formal charges with subsequent trial is warranted before 'Matthew' can relate his personal witness of Amanda's anti semitic slur to a reporter interviewing him about her ??
You have a point, although I'm not sure it's the one we were discussing. halides1 commented that,
"It is enlightening when all of a reporters errors fall in one direction..." I didn't make my point explicit, but I intended to convey that it's one thing to represent a limited point of view, but it's another to do it with fiction as opposed to facts.
You're right, it's fair for Matthew to have told his little story, and it's fair for Mudede to have supposedly quoted him, because Mudede also included a few positive comments about Amanda, for example, "'Her world,' said one of Amanda's friends, Andrew, to the TV, 'revolves around making people feel good and making people feel happy.'" Apart from his anonymity, however, there are a few other details that could raise questions about Matthew's words, if we wanted, or needed, to go there.
For one thing, Mudede perhaps falsely lends Matthew increased credibility by telling us he has known him for years, whereas all the positive remarks he quoted from Amanda's friends and family were only heard on TV. He hastens to mention, of course, that, "[Matthew] remembered me before I remembered him," the author thus setting himself apart from all the predatory reporters who had gone before him at the same bar -- as if he weren't there looking for an inside story. Mudede then heightens our interest with the phrase, "...Matthew said, leaning toward me," because it suggests intimacy, like we're in on a secret, which to some people's minds might make what he says seem "more true."
On the other hand, Matthew says he has been on the wagon for a while. Does that mean he was drinking during the period he worked with Amanda? How reliable is his memory about those days? How reliable is Mudede's memory, for that matter, given that he has shared,
"It's a wonder I'm not serving (have never served) time for one of those bad nights that spun way out of control—Who are these people? What is in my hands? What did I just smoke? Did I have sex with her? Why is that policeman looking at me? Will this high ever end?"
Oh, but wait. Maybe he wrote that to let us know he "gets" what can happen when you're stoned out of your mind -- maybe even murder. Hey, Mudede isn't judging, he relating!
But anyway. We don't need to go there, do we? The "anti-Semitic remark" is just one morsel from the tiny little cache of cherry-picked character assassinations the
colpevolisti keep in their back pockets in place of evidence.