Sorry, What's True ?
That I explained first time around & that you forgot or misunderstood OR are you just ignoring the thrust of the post thereby illustrating the point about groundhog day.
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Originally Posted by platonov
Sorry, What's True ?
That I explained first time around & that you forgot or misunderstood OR are you just ignoring the thrust of the post thereby illustrating the point about groundhog day.
In response to this and all the other posts you've made tonight (or whatever time it is in your world), I like what Kevin said:
"So what's left? Only the Chewbacca Defence - spread as much confusion as possible and act like you presented a compelling argument."
It 'kinda' does - as regards emphasis certainly & the defence wasn't stuck for experts in the trial.
But they are constrained [by reality, professional reputation, opposing experts etc] to a degree obviously - unlike online experts.
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Well, they are, but the reality is that experts know that they know more about their subject matter than the attorney who cross examines, the judge and the jury. I can tell you from personal experience that it is difficult to get people at the cutting edge to have any interest in legal cases. Some people who act as expert witnesses are truly experts; some of them are intellectually honest, and some are not. Some are hacks. The ones who are not honest think they won't be caught if they lie because, even if they are a hack, they know more than any lawyer, any judge, and certainly more than any juror.
I once encountered a geologist to testified in a drainage case to a theory of defense that, to be true, would require that water run up hill--a fact which he reluctantly had to admit under cross-examination. I have seen another expert--a medical doctor--thoroughly impeached when confronted with diametrically opposed testimony he had given in previous cases. Actually it was worse than that; he had testified one way in a number of cases, and in the opposite way in others. Someone had the wit to do the research to find cases where the M.D. testified, and got certified copies of the testimony. The doctor's testimony was always in favor of the side that hired him. It was ugly at the trial.
Funny. I remember a lengthy debate in which it was made clear that the pro-guilt side's feeble attempts to "deal with" the stomach contents evidence consisted of:
1. One sentence taken out of context from someone's on-line lecture notes, which ignored the rest of those notes which supported our position.
2. One sentence taken out of context from the abstract of a paper the pro-guilt side had not read, the body of which supported our position.
3. Incredulity that "experts" could get this wrong and we could get it right, which seemed to be impervious to the pesky fact that the scientific literature was on our side and that the job of an "expert" is to correctly state the results of peer-reviewed studies, as opposed to it being the job of peer-reviewed studies to conform with the statements of "experts".
After having been comprehensively spanked on this issue, and slunk away into the corner from some time, your new tack seems to be to just rewrite history and pretend that the entire thing happened completely differently...
How would this apply if she was released and went back to the US?
Funny. I remember a lengthy debate in which it was made clear that the pro-guilt side's feeble attempts to "deal with" the stomach contents evidence consisted of:
Can they both be excellent reasons if we know that at least one of them is false?Platonov's attempt at a gotcha is to pretend that we are simultaneously arguing that Amanda and Raffaele were in front of Curatolo and also at home (which we are not), and then jump from this to the conclusion that since there are two excellent reasons to believe that Amanda and Raffaele were not at the murder scene, and one plus one equals zero, that adds up to no alibi at all.
Perhaps I'm being pedantic, but for the alibi to be sound, don't they need evidence to support it rather than an absence of evidence proving that it is false? Without getting into an argument about their validity, surely the the bra clasp and the knife are evidence that their alibi is false? If those bits of evidence hold, and again I'm not seeking to start an argument that they do, then it doesn't really matter if they were seen out and about when they claimed to be at home or not.2. If Curatolo is not a sound witness, then there is absolutely no evidence that Amanda and Raffaele were not at home at the time of the murder, so their alibi is sound.
I suppose there are a number of terms which could be used to describe the testimony of a witness who heard an "urlo fortissimo" in the night, learned the following afternoon of a murder which had occurred across the street, and then neglected to tell the police for months afterward - but "very reliable" would not be at the top of the list.
Interesting that she seems not to have heard the "running on the steel staircase", which was directly below her apartment, heard so clearly by Capezalli at a greater distance. Perhaps a little further reading about the case during her period of self-imposed silence might have avoided this inconsistency.
Funny. I remember a lengthy debate in which it was made clear that the pro-guilt side's feeble attempts to "deal with" the stomach contents evidence consisted of:
1. One sentence taken out of context from someone's on-line lecture notes, which ignored the rest of those notes which supported our position.
2. One sentence taken out of context from the abstract of a paper the pro-guilt side had not read, the body of which supported our position.
3. Incredulity that "experts" could get this wrong and we could get it right, which seemed to be impervious to the pesky fact that the scientific literature was on our side and that the job of an "expert" is to correctly state the results of peer-reviewed studies, as opposed to it being the job of peer-reviewed studies to conform with the statements of "experts".
(...)
How would this apply if she was released and went back to the US?
Well, OJ was found not guilty in the criminal case, but guilty in the civil case, so maybe the civil liability would still hold!The ruling applies to her if she is found guilty, obviously.
Recall: You neglected to cite a peer-reviewed journal or authoritative text in support of your claims in respect of the ease of displacement of alimentary matter within the human intestine during autopsy.
You've steadfastly refused to confirm or deny whether you have a M.D. (or any other training that would involve experience with/ knowledge of the human intestine in this regard) on the ground that you fear "stalkers" on the internet.
Well, OJ was found not guilty in the criminal case, but guilty in the civil case, so maybe the civil liability would still hold!
But what you cite is what is in the Massei report, and a confirmation of what I am saying.
Frank is talking about the request claiming an equivalent of mistrial based on the delay in the release of evidence to the defence.
But - apart from court rulings about the legal implication - the point on which everybody agreed in the trial, is that all files that were requested with the defence complaint, then had been later released to the defence. Not only but the prosecution agreed to the release of all files they had. The were not ordered to do so by the court aginst their will: the prosecution expressed the position were favourable to release all files to the defence. This is what is found in the trial documents.
And, there were no futher claims expressed by the defence after this in order to files allegedly withheld buìy the prosecution. The controversy about the release of files had been already solved.
It is a deceptive claim to present facts as if the contention were still pending, as if there were a pending request or pending refusal. The issue had been solved, and is used in the appeal document only as a complaint in terms of procedure in order to propose again a kind of mistrial. But there is no actual request to obtain files, nor any claim that there are still files needed by the defence and are to be released.
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And yes, both defenses tried to do something, they explained that without raw data, without knowing the setting of the machine we still don't know how we got to that result. And they filed a claim to the judge. A little claim, simply the annulment of Micheli's decree of trial. Which means to cancel the whole process and send everyone home, free. As a sub-claim they asked to invalidate the sole DNA results.
But the time for vacations is over and Massei doesn't make gifts anymore, he doesn't feel like hearing subtleties. And came back with his ruthless verdict: the trial continues, the DNA results are fine like this. Whether we like it or not we have to trust Stefanoni. And that's it.
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1. Ordinanza dibattimentale del 14 settembre 2009 nelle parti relative a: (i) al mancato accoglimento dell’eccezione di nullità avanzata dalle difese Sollecito e Knox, per lesione del diritto di difesa; ed (ii) alla rigetto dell’eccezione circa inutilizzabilità dell’intera attività d’indagine per omesso deposito. L’ordinanza impugnata viola il principio del giusto processo (art. 111 Cost.) che prevede il contradditorio tra le parti in condizione di parità innanzi a un giudice terzo e imparziale”.
The Kercher family demands an expression of sympathy, yet they haven´t given one either.
It´s OK to reply to me...
Yet he continues to insist, with boorish indignation, that he is correct and the forensic pathologists who have access to the actual evidence are wrong.