LondonJohn,
That is an interesting analysis of the time of death that I don't think was available 6 months ago, or at least I haven't seen in that level of detail before. Clearly any arguments against innocence/in favour of guilt must address it. Presumably the Judges report covers the other perspective?
From reading the Massei report it looks like Massei was well aware that this was a huge hole in his story. My interpretation of the affair is that Knox and Sollecito's defence lawyers, not being experienced in these kinds of case as LondonJohn explained, simply didn't realise that they had a knock-down argument on this point. The defence dropped the ball.
Massei was well aware that a 23:30 time of death was absolutely incompatible with the state of Meredith's stomach contents.
He was also aware that the only stab at a fairy story the prosecution had made on that front was to suppose that
if Dr Lalli had not tied off Meredith's duodenum and bowel before examining them then
conceivably Dr Lalli might have accidentally and unknowingly squeezed the contents of Meredith's duodenum all the way down the length of her bowel to the very end, thus creating the illusion that there was nothing in her duodenum at the time of death.
He was also aware that this fairy story was rubbish, because Massei had seen the autopsy video and Dr Lalli
did tie off Meredith's bowel into segments before examining it because for his sins he wasn't a total incompetent.
So Massei came to a very curious conclusion: He wrote that "Besides this, the alimentary remnants in the small intestine must also be considered, and thus, as hypothesised by Professor Umani Ronchi, it would be possible to think that these remnants could have been found in the duodenum either because of an imperfect apposition of the ligatures, or because of an apposition of the ligatures that took place with such manner and timing as to make it impossible to avoid a sliding of material from the duodenum to the small intestine. The fact [that the] duodenum [is] empty is not [necessarily] fully reliable."
So imagine you've got an elastic tube four meters long. You've got a golf ball at one end of it. You are going to get some lengths of string and tie them tightly around the tube at various points to stop things sliding along it. Massei's argument is that "it would be possible to think" that it is possible to tie those knots tightly around the tube in such a way that not only
can the golf ball slide all the way along the tube, but that it's
impossible to avoid this happening.
This is frankly just utterly bizarre - it's like arguing "To commit this crime Amanda would have had to walk through multiple doors that had been nailed shut... but maybe they were nailed shut in a special way that actually sucked Amanda right through them! It would be possible to think this, therefore we can assume it happened".
I don't think there's any other point in the Massei report where it's so crystal clear that Massei was assuming guilt
a priori and then making whatever other bizarre assumptions he needed to make in order to get to the conclusion that Knox and Sollecito were guilty.
I'd like to think that if the defence had thumped the table about this issue with due diligence the original trial might have had a different conclusion, but lacking a time machine we'll never know. Certainly by any definition of a fair trial that I would consider acceptable the Massei report's conclusions on this issue will not stand in a fair appeal.