You bring up one of my biggest interests, the interrogation, and I found the arguments you made on another site especially helpful. This is the most important mystery of the case I believe, and I've been researching, asking and posting on it for a long time some people kid me, because I still only have a vague idea what might have happened despite all that. Where is anyone supposed to get incontestable information on this anyway, including Steve Moore? Seriously?
True, but where is he getting his information? You see on injusticeinperugia the claim about being denied food and water. I argued this at length with Bruce and he refused to change it. To me it seems like being willfully misleading, but others clearly disagree. Steve Moore repeats the claim. If he is simply uncritically taking the description of the case given by Amanda's family, Bruce, or whoever... I am deeply suspicious of what he adds to the case. Certainly he has experience that I don't have, but what do he take to be the facts of the case? If one simply took the facts as given by injusticeinperugia, certainly Amanda and Raffaele are innocent.
Amanda Knox was interrogated for 8 hours. Overnight. Without food or water. In a police station. In a foreign country. In a foreign language. By a dozen different officers. Without being allowed a lawyer.
Well, from what I've been able to put together she got there sometime around 10:30 PM, the 'confession' happened at 1:45 AM or so and she officially became a Suspect and I believe Mignini was called in and she signed it at 5:45 or so. Nobody really talks about this anymore I've found, I wasn't kidding when I said I don't think it has advanced much since you stopped posting on it.
Going from memory, I think 10:30 is closer to when she and Raffaele arrived at the police station. She sat there studying for long enough that she got stiff and had to do cartwheels. Also, there was a break between the session ending at 1:45am and the one ending at 5:45am. I'm not sure that the exact timings are so very important though, except for the sake of preventing scope creep.
I'm with you, tentatively I tend to think the forty-some hours must be the time she spent in police presence, starting with the arrival of the postal police. That she was being interviewed and then interrogated for a total of fourteen hours, culminated with the November 5th/6th event, which ended early on the latter day. That just seems to make sense, it's not really sourced. I just have problems with the idea of 40+ hours of active interrogation, I can't see what could possibly take that long to interview or break a twenty year-old girl. I suspect everything before the night of the fifth was just interviews for information, not any active interrogation.
I agree completely.
Here's the problem. Against that we have cold hard silence and a claim that there was nothing taped at all. I simply cannot believe you could interrogate a girl who spoke Italian poorly and get a 'confession' out of her and not have it taped. I can't believe you'd call her in that late at night with at least 12 cops, the number initially supposed to be part of the calunnia charge--four apparently dropped out though since--and not tape that interrogation. So what we have to go on is basically what she wrote and testified to, but it's not her fault that's the only record we have of this event.
I've never seen proof of the 12 cops. I think Bruce indicated that there were 12 names on the document she signed at 1:45am, but he wouldn't even show me a redacted copy of it. Are we sure there were 12 police in the interrogation, that always seemed a little difficult for me to visualize. As to the lack of recording, that does seem to be one of the facts of the case. As I've said umpteen times, it's only significant if interrogations that the police don't expect to be admissible are normally taped in Italy.
I don't understand what you mean about her 'claiming' not to have a lawyer, isn't that why the Supreme Court threw out the 'confession?' I thought that was settled long before I even knew Amanda Knox or Raffaele Sollecito's name.
I probably meant claiming that she was "illegally" denied a lawyer. Bruce took inadmissible to be equivalent to "illegal" and again, we argued this at length. Also, the "declaration" at 5:45 was supposedly requested by her, so at this point no lawyer was denied, or at least it can't be said to be an agreed fact.
What he adds in my view is more information, and the fact he actually knows something intimately about investigations and forensics. What he says about the crime scene makes sense to me. That's not an open crime site, it's a fishbowl and if Raffaele or Amanda were there some sign should have been there, I can't see how there wouldn't be.
Perhaps. I don't dispute that he has long experience of police work, but in the stuff I've read from him I don't believe he can support most of what he says.
As far as the interrogation, he worked violent crimes unit and anti-terrorism, I kinda have a feeling he might have been a part of interrogating some very dangerous people. I suspect that colored his impression of what happened in that room on November 5th/6th. I'd really rather believe that's the case, but the absolute stonewalling on the part of the police and the dubious evidence they collected is not particularly comforting. Nor is the idea that they actually might have set up an interrogation under those terms and then not taped it, and then started cuffing her. I don't think they really physically harmed her, or intended to, I think something else entirely happened, but I tell you the idea they didn't tape it is something potentially ominous in my view.
Again, is it normal practice to tape these things?
Man, the discussion has just gone through a time tunnel to last April.
I don't even know. I get the impression she became officially a Suspect at 1:45 and they interrogated her until 5:45 when she signed that confession. None of this is 'hotly argued' anymore, it's deathly silence from the ones who think her guilty, who as far as I know believe she accused Patrick without coercion and the police arrested him and didn't release him until they got the note from Amanda Knox on the 22nd or so. Or, they got the note a few days later and it took that long to release him but it is still Amanda's fault and all she did is lie.
Surely he was released because his alibi held up rather than because of any action of Amanda's. At the risk of exposing my failing memory, what note on the 22nd? I take it you've read the available material that she wrote/signed that night? Could you clarify, as this strikes me as an error.
As for coercion, I'm sure we can agree that she was under a heck of a lot of pressure, regardless of any additional actions of the police to make things worse.
I've never been able to move beyond the oddness of what she wrote and the attempts at an explanation that doesn't involve Amanda being less than honest don't convince me. Equally, she could be innocent and less than honest.
