This is how Kevin Lowe eludes having brought a false point:
Instead of admitting it is not true that Rudy built a one person scenario, the issue of truth disappears and the answer becomes not relevant.
The question is not relevant, and based on a not true assumption. Rudy had no reason to think it was likely that evidence of others would be found, and even in the case could have anticipated it, he would have had no reason or interest to tell about it in advance. Besides, the plain fact is Rudy - contrarily form what you state - actually did tell in advance a story including three people who entered the close space of the murder room and had hostile or incriminating contact with the victim.
He claimed Meredith said Amanda stole money from Meredith's room, but this is not remotely the same thing as claiming that Amanda wrestled or stabbed Meredith in the murder room.
He also did not claim to have wrestled or stabbed Meredith himself.
He definitely did not tell a story where three people simultaneously struggled with Meredith, and not only was this exactly the story presented by the prosecution in court, but a frequently employed guilter meme is that Meredith would definitely have had more or different defensive injuries if she had only been attacked by one person.
The simple fact remains that Rudy did
not tell a story where three people simultaneously struggled with Meredith, because such a thing never happened. If it had happened, then he would have made up a story where three people simultaneously struggled with Meredith, because the idea that three people could struggle with Meredith yet leave absolutely no forensic trace except possibly a speck of DNA on a bra hook is ludicrous.
No, your opinion is pointless to me. My understanding of justice - in particular of Italian justice - is not compatible with yours. What you say is not true. A miscarriage of justice does not consist in a difference between the judges reconstruction and the dinamic of the crime. All facts must not be proven, not even necessary facts must e proven: only facts sufficient to determine guilt must be proven.
Of course if there is sufficient evidence to prove guilt then guilt is proved: that is what sufficient means.
However if a necessary premise is false, then in a consistent universe a true, sufficient premise
cannot possibly exist.
Logically unless all three did it together and simultaneously, they are not all three guilty of murder. That is logically necessary. The court's verdict was that all three were guilty of murder.
If, for example, Amanda's coerced false statement was actually true and she was on the couch covering her ears when Meredith was murdered, she would not be guilty of murder, correct?
Or if Raffaele was asleep at his house when Meredith was murdered, as some have speculated, and Amanda and Rudy did it, then Raffaele would not be guilty of murder, correct?
The idea that the verdict can be justified, without there being proof beyond reasonable doubt that all three were directly involved in the murder, is specious. If any one of them was not involved, the conviction is a miscarriage of justice.
Justice is not something based on the Massei theories nor on prosecution theories. Some of judges theories can be just a speculative response to questions and be inessential choices among possible alternatives, theories can be changed, people can be convicted also upon an array of conflicting theories.
Certainly, however if a necessary condition for their guilt (such as the necessary condition that Meredith died at 23:30 or so, since there is absolutely no coherent theory consistent with Amanda and Raffaele's guilt that has Meredith dying at 21:05) turns out to be false, then we know immediately that you will never, ever find sufficient evidence of their guilt. It is logically impossible for any such evidence to exist in a universe where a necessary condition for their guilt has been proven false.