Do you have any evidence that any of this led to the convictions?
Well, there's the numerous misstatements attributed to police throughout the case, some of which are probably just errors, others which may have been misunderstood by the press, and still others that are neither which are most curious. There's also Mignini's trial and subsequent conviction on abuse of power charges, to go along with a whole new host of extraneous charges in this case, some of them quite bizarre. Then there's 'Foxy Knoxy,' and having missed this part of the drama initially due to total disinterest at the time, it's quite fascinating to go back and look and see how many people once believed this comics super villainess actually existed. One page I read is dedicated to showing the pictures that caught her in 'sinister' poses which apparently caused some to believe she truly was this vaguely satanic vestige capable of killing for pizza.
There's quite a bit of evidence of why this occurred out there, and I imagine people will be talking about it for a long time trying to figure out which was the most responsible for the conviction. My mind is still open on the subject.
The following are the reasons why I think they are guilty. I think everything else can be disregarded. Yes, most of these are circumstantial but then Scott Peterson was convicted on circumstantial evidence and I don’t think anyone here is going to argue that he is not guilty.
1. The timeline - I think it was very short (9:05 to 10:00) so it’s much more likely that there was multiple attackers considering the extensive wounds on Meredith’s body and everything else we know that happened.
What difference in time do you suppose there is between one person killing someone with a knife, compared to two or three? I'd think in any case all the wounds would be inflicted in under a minute, though it would likely take her somewhat longer to die.
Doesn't it bother you that extensive evidence of murder was found for one person, and absolutely nothing for the other two? (one)
2. Amanda’s lamp in Meredith’s room.
I'm afraid I don't understand the significance of this.
3. Inconsistent and contradictory statements in regard to her email back home, her trial testimony and his prison diary (none of which were coerced).
Ah, I'm glad you brought this up. I've been going through these statements lately trying to find evidence of 'lies' and have been having a hell of a time. What inconsistencies do you find suspicious?
Would you consider it differently if it were found that there was regular computer usage until late into the night of the murder?
5. Amanda's phone calls on November 2:
- In the 48 minutes between 12:07 – 12:55 she spent a total of only 23 seconds trying to phone Meredith though she stated she was “panicked” as to her whereabouts.
- Amanda was back at her apartment by 12:34. The Postal Police didn’t show up for another 21 minutes with Meredith’s phones. Why didn’t Amanda stand outside Meredith’s door, call her phones and listen for rings?
As I understand it she tried to call four times in that forty-five minutes. I don't understand what's suspicious about that. What behavior would you
not find suspicious?
- Both Amanda’s mother and Filomena told Amanda to call the police based on what she told them, she didn’t.
She had had Raffaele call, right? She delegated that necessity to the Italian boyfriend, not an uncommon choice for a young woman who spoke Italian poorly. Perhaps she thought she was serving in a supervisory role regarding the phone call.
6. Raffaelle’s call to the police:
- He told them that nothing taken from Filomena’s room, there was no way he could know that.
- He told the police “there is a lot of blood” when everyone at the scene agreed there was very little blood.
- why would he mention a closed door?
The whole purpose of this was to bring attention to the murder scene and get the cops involved. I don't understand how his impressions and perhaps even good guesses would make him look suspicious. If he saw valuable things out that weren't taken then he might jump to that conclusion, so what? Why would he say anything about it if he was guilty? Why would he be calling the cops at all?
7. Raffaele’s lie in his prison diary regarding the knife.
If he didn't do it, do you suppose he might wonder how it got there? I notice you don't bring the 'murder knife' into the discussion outside this, so do you think it probable that knife was sitting in the drawer the whole night, and if so can you see how Raffaele might be trying to figure out how and why Meredith's DNA got on it? No one has actually
disproved this, have they?
8. Amanda’s behavior:
- not flushing the toilet with the crap in it
- not looking in the murder room
- overexplaination regarding the mop
How does the dump in the toilet fit in? Why would Amanda not flush it were she guilty? As for the murder room, perhaps it's the case that outside twelve year-old boys not everyone is all that interested in viewing dead bodies at murder scenes. For instance I have not yet seen anything more than a foot of Meredith at the murder scene and have no intention of seeing any more, and I
have seen dead human bodies outside funeral homes.
As for the mop, I think the police were most interested in it, not Amanda.
9. bra clasp – sorry it is Rafaelle’s DNA on it.
Even if it is, then so what? How does a micro-speck with nothing around it suggest presence at a murder scene to you? What makes you think those picograms were deposited during a bloody life and death struggle?
10. evidence of a cleanup:
- the bathmat – FBI guy Steve Moore said no one could have left that room without blood on their shoes yet there are no bloody footprints leading to the bathroom. Moore said he has seen all the crime scene photos from the bedroom so who is anyone to question his analysis?
It appears Rudy did a cursory clean-up to prevent detection of the scene while he established an 'alibi' and left the country, but even the police had to discard the idea that Amanda and Raffaele managed to scrub away their DNA with bleach.