Kevin_Lowe
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- Joined
- Feb 10, 2003
- Messages
- 12,221
An alibi, that is supported solely by the accused isn't an alibi. It's not having an alibi.
It's supported by the computer evidence.
They also provide an alibi for each other and this is not a trivial thing. You can't completely get around that by saying "Okay, well, if they vouch for each other than we'll just say they both did it together". You have to make a case that it's credible for them to have done so and to have stuck to their stories for all this time.
Massei/Mignini did this by fantasising that all three of them stabbed Meredith as part of some sort of group rape gone wrong but that story is all sorts of crazy and I haven't seen any better ones.
Running times don't matter, only human interaction matters. As for the Stardust thing. It's crap for Amanda and Raffaele, but it isn't an alibi and we don't know what time it would have turned out they actually watched it, if indeed they did. For a long time I hoped that the data was recoverable, but my recent reading indicates that this possibility is theory only.
Sorry, but I place a good deal of weight on a verifiable alibi given immediately, especially when the police after having been told about the alibi proceed to destroy the evidence that could have confirmed it before destroying the hard drive itself just to make sure.
If, hypothetically, they'd claimed that alibi and then Raffaele and Amanda had destroyed the hard drive to make it impossible to check I would be very, very suspicious of their actions to say the least. By exactly the same token when Raffaele and Amanda state their alibi and hand the relevant evidence over to the police, who then write over it and destroy the hard drive for good measure, I am equally very, very suspicious of their actions.
They don't need "time sensitive evidence". Nice to have, but they don't need it. All they need is to prove involvement in the murder. It doesn't really matter when the murder happened, so long as they can prove involvement.
On the contrary if Amanda and Raffaele can prove they were somewhere else when the crime was committed, then any other "evidence" that purports to show that they were involved in the murder must have some other explanation - error and outright falsification being the obvious ones.
If they weren't there when Meredith was murdered, the DNA on the bra clasp either isn't Raffaele's or wasn't deposited at the time of the murder, for example. Nothing about that evidence precludes the possibility that the DNA got there before or after the murder.
The problem with coming up with a pro-guilt story is, as I said, the reasons for the murder taking place will necessarily not pass the "sniff test" because they will be many thousands to one, if not twns or hundreds of thousands to one against. Also we do not agree on the facts of the case that this theory is supposed to fit. If it is supposed to agree with the facts as agreed with the pro-innocence people then I suspect coming up with a narrative will be hard work. It isn't even really necessary to fit all the evidence in the prosecution case.
Here is a one out of a thousand stories that might have happened:
A thousand stories, none of which are remotely plausible, does not add up to a case. Especially when there is a plausible, consistent story that explains all the evidence: that Rudy did it, and the Perugia police made a complete dog's breakfast of the case.
Meredith let's Rudy in. Things are fine at first, but very quickly go down hill. Amanda and Raffaele turn up (for one of a hundred reasons). Meredith wants to call the police an get Rudy arrested for sexual assault. Amanda and Raffaele try to calm things down, maybe they think she's over reacting. Meredith is hysterical and has to be restrained to prevent her calling the cops and is now accusing Amanda and Raffaele who are now convinced that she is over reacting. Rudy restrains Meredith while Amanda and Raffaele discuss what the heck they're going to do. Meredith breaks free, runs for the phone in her room and the whole thing ends with Rudy and a knife in Merediths room. After that, Rudy leaves, Amanda and Raffaele decide that the best thing to do is cover up what little evidence of them there is, make it look like somebody broke in and hope for the best. Between Amanda and Raffaele entering the house and the murder is only 20 minutes.
Again the odds of this being what happened are low, and the prior probability of these events occuring and a million to one against. If it wasn't an incredibly unlikely event kids would be getting murdered all over the place.
That's not a logical argument: "It's okay for my story to be incredibly implausible, because it's incredibly implausible that they did it!". The fact that your story is incredibly implausible whereas the case for their innocence is quite straightforward makes me think that there might not exactly be proof beyond reasonable doubt that they did it.
