Withnail1969
Banned
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2010
- Messages
- 866
Exactly. And, in addition, platonov seems to be advocating a position that "the end justifies the means" - which runs contrary to most modern jurisprudence practice. If this maxim were applied rigorously, then we might as well tap everybody's phone (a la Police State), and as a result we could undoubtedly stop more crimes from taking place. But in a civilised democratic state, we instead require there to be clear evidence of criminal activity taking place before someone's phones can be tapped.
BTW with regard to the inter-EU-member-state travel situation, it's possible that my transit between Germany and France last week was unusual, and I see that Switzerland only joined the Schengen area in December 2008 (and I last crossed the Italy/Switz border in February 2008). So I think I'm probably wrong about the "normal" state of affairs, and apologise for my false confidence on this issue. But of course it doesn't change the fact that Knox would have had to have a passport to return to the USA - which was explicitly the concern of the court when deciding on imprisonment over any form of house arrest.
Going 'on the run' with no passport is far from straightforward these days and way beyond Amanda's capabilities, as anyone with a lick of sense can see. But trying to make these common sense points with some people is like trying to nail jelly to the ceiling.
She should have been under house arrest, but it suited Mignini's narrative to pretend she was a flight risk or serious threat to the public. If Mafia bosses, war criminals and child molesters can be given house arrest, then so can Amanda.
Of course, two of the people I mentioned, the Indian priest and the Nazi war criminal, are not Italian, which seems to blow out of the water this idea that non-Italians can't get house arrest. Another lie exposed.
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