Charlie Wilkes
Illuminator
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2009
- Messages
- 4,177
How can a confession that was extracted from a person using brainwashing techniques (sleep deprevation) and techniques of torture (threats, intimidation, and other deprevations) could then be sued for slander for something leaked by the police? Seems like the Italian police and the Italian media are the only ones guilty of libel.
The USA has a stronger constitutional right to free speech that protects individuals from such. However, when you couple that with the fact no lawyer was present, that is totally foreign to me. These libel/slander charges in another era would be called acts of barbarism.
In the USA, the information wouldn't have been leaked because disinterested parties cannot get the police reports. In the USA, the people that repeat a libel/slander are also guilty - the newspapers and police would also be guilty. In the USA, more is protected as freedom of speech. In the USA, a lawyer would have been present. In the USA, this type of interrogation is illegal.
The audacious have even suggested that the Italian system is better than the system in the USA. Anybody recall any such slander/libel charges EVER being filed in the USA or any other country?
I would not compare the US system favorably with Italy's. First of all, Amanda is better off at Capenne than she would be at most US prisons. Second, US courts and juries have presided over many, many egregious cases of wrongful prosecution. What strikes me most is how similar they are to this case in terms of the way officials try to manipulate the evidence and hide the truth, digging their heels in deeper as initial public support gives way to skepticism and, eventually, outrage and disgust.