Ms. Nadeau wrote, “Just days after Kercher's body was found last November in the villa Knox shared with the victim, security camera footage showed the couple buying lingerie in a local store, with Knox giggling and telling Sollecito, ‘Afterwards I'm going to take you home so we can have wild sex together.’”
This passage might mislead the unwary; the security camera did not have sound, and the shop is loud. Moreover, Ms. Nadeau leaves out the critical information that Ms. Knox had no clothes except what she was wearing or could borrow at that time.
However, Ms. Nadeau also wrote, “And by her own account in a prison diary leaked to the media, she details her sexual escapades with
at least seven men she'd been with in her three months in Italy before her arrest.” This is false.
Amanda’s statement refers to her whole life. But Ms. Nadeau’s choice of the word escapade is indefensible. It might apply to Karen Owen’s extremely ill-judged powerpoint, but not to Ms. Knox’s statement. Ms. Knox was in fear of a possibly life-threatening disease, thanks to ILE’s mishandling of this incident.
For these reasons and others I have previously outlined, I do not think that Ms. Nadeau is an infallible source. Your attempt to use her credentials with
Newsweek is an argument from intimidation, and it is nonsensical.
1)
The video recording is not the only piece of evidence adduced in respect of Knox's g-string purchase. The lingerie shop keeper testified in open court, no? Were you, like Nadeau, in the courtroom to hear him testify? Even if you were able to do so, would you have understood a word of his Italian? On what grounds are you going to impeach his testimony, Halides?
2)
If Knox had gone to the Italian equivalent of a Target for some no-name cotton undies, your argument (the PR spin) would be a little less laughable. However, she took her sex partner (of 6 days duration) with her to buy a single G-string (and, no, the "G" does not denote "Grandma Undies") in a fashion that raised the eyebrows of a man accustomed to watching couples purchase 'sexy underwear' on a regular basis. Does THAT accord with your idea of 'grief stricken' or 'in fear for her life'?! Does it accord with your notion of an 'emergency underwear re-supply trip'? Get real: ONE G-string instead of a 6 pack of cotton 'Fruit of the Loom' to get her through the week?!
3)
Knox entered an ex post facto revision of the title for her list of sex partners, thereby raising confusion as to the time frame. On what grounds are you asserting that Nadeau's interpretation is incorrect? What number would you prefer? 3 in 6 weeks? (By any reasonable interpretation, Knox was busier between classes in Perugia than she was in Seattle.)
4)
The "prison diaries" of the 3 accused/ convicted are one of the most astounding aspects of this case. There is, in ANY jurisdiction you can name, NO REASONABLE EXPECTATION OF PRIVACY IN PRISION. NONE.
Every detainee is advised of this fact. By the police. By the warden. By their own counsel. Repeatedly.
There isn't a self-respecting lawyer on the planet, in either the civil or common law systems, that would advise a client to keep a "prison diary"! It utterly vitiates an accused's greatest asset: The Right to Remain Silent.
Anything an accused says in prison, to anyone other than their lawyer, can, and often will, be recorded and used in evidence. Similarly, anything written can be confiscated and used in evidence.
That these 3 accused/ convicted chose to IGNORE the advice of their expensive counsel in order to engage in these transparent, self-serving attempts to manipulate the proceedings is FASCINATING to me!!!
Strange, then, that you, Halides, would now intimate that the POLICE were somehow 'corrupt' for "leaking" the diaries!
The only reason you or I have even heard of these diaries is the direct result of one thing, and one thing only: The will of the 3 accused to manipulate (their families, their friends, their own lawyers, the police, the judges, the prosecutors, the jury pool, the media, the general public and, best of all, ONE ANOTHER.)
I, for one, am glad that the accused have chosen (presumably out of a deadly combination of hubris and ignorance) to largely ignore their right to remain silent because these "diaries" have helped to bring us all a lot closer to the truth.