Wherever do you get your scientific facts from?
Do you just pull them out of your head?
How about THE FACT that some of the alleles the lab credited to Sollecito's profile doesn't belong to Sollecito.
Wherever do you get your scientific facts from?
Do you just pull them out of your head?
Yes - wasn't the knife removed from the original container in which it had been placed, in a non-sterile environment? (And wasn't this original container, in any case, not a proper evidence bag, but rather some sort of box from Sollecito's apartment itself?!)
This totally violates chain-of-custody rules, as far as I'm aware. If the police were going to Sollecito's apartment to look for forensic evidence (among other reasons), then it's abundantly clear that they should have taken a number of sterile evidence collection bags of varying sizes with them. What would they have done, for example, if they'd found a blood-stained jacket in Sollecito's wardrobe? What "suitable receptacle" would they have places such a large item in, in order to remove it from the apartment?
The "crack" forensics team quite clearly erred badly again in this instance. The knife should have been placed in a sterile evidence bad in situ at Sollecito's apartment, and this bag should not have been opened until the knife was in the lab and about to be tested. There's no excuse whatsoever for this not to have been the case.
They should have handled it differently, but it probably wouldn't have made any difference in this particular case, because the most likely source of Meredith's DNA was a tweezer, pipette, or some other instrument in the lab. I have posted photos and video that show how Stefanoni mis-handled evidence at the crime scene... she dropped a swab from a tweezer, picked it off the floor, and resumed scrubbing as if nothing had happened. She handled evidence swabs like cleaning rags, covering a wide area and bearing down on them with her thumb in a way that was all but certain to spread material from one sample to the next. Did her techniques magically improve once she got to the lab? I doubt it.
But we must accept his DNA was in the cottage.I don't see that it being the day before overwhelms the time they spent in the apartment preceding that.
We cannot assume his DNA wouldn't get there anyway.True. As were the police, and Filomina's boyfriend I think. In any case, he never entered Meredith's room.
His DNA trace was a tiny quantity.In teeny, tiny quantities though. She would have been transferring hugely greater quantities of her own DNA.
It contributes to the amount of his DNA deposited all over the cottage.I don't see how that is significant.
I don't see any other piece of evidence incriminating with comparable magnitude. Taken that DNA trace away, would you still convict?But this is only one piece of evidence. As has been discussed before, you could be 99% sure of guilt, but have relatively low levels of certainty about individual pieces of the evidence, even below 50% certainty.
I don't see any other forensic evidence incriminating him.Being consistent with something you don't think happened doesn't mean a lot.
Please clarify.That's only one way the DNA could have gotten there with Raffaele still being involved in the murder. The bra clasp was removed at some point after all.
No. According to the prosecution's theory Rudy and Raffaele held her down, and Amanda and Raffaele stabbed her with knives. It was 4 people struggling in a small room.Depends what he did, doesn't it? Rudy supposedly did a heck of a lot, and sure there was DNA and fingerprints, but it's not like they were gathering them up by the bucketful. Raffaele and Amanda, if they were involved, presumably were less physically involved than Rudy.
Wise moveI'm not going to touch a discussion about footprints.
No need to complicate. Single cop who wanted to make sure the obviously guilty daddy's boy doesn't get away with the murder would be enough.True, that's a different scenario with other problems. Are we talking about the police, the prosecutor, and the lab working alone, or together to frame them here?
I do believe you have that backwards. The knife was originally placed in a sealed evidence bag. Back at the police station, it was removed from the bag and placed in a box that formerly contained a calendar
What assumption?
The on/off button on my old Sony/Ericsson 810i is also a "small button on top of the phone", and I've had several other phones like that.
They should have handled it differently, but it probably wouldn't have made any difference in this particular case, because the most likely source of Meredith's DNA was a tweezer, pipette, or some other instrument in the lab. I have posted photos and video that show how Stefanoni mis-handled evidence at the crime scene... she dropped a swab from a tweezer, picked it off the floor, and resumed scrubbing as if nothing had happened. She handled evidence swabs like cleaning rags, covering a wide area and bearing down on them with her thumb in a way that was all but certain to spread material from one sample to the next. Did her techniques magically improve once she got to the lab? I doubt it.
Was the knife found to have DNA from Sollecito? No. Any unidentified DNA came from knife? No. Don't think the knife was "contaminated" by the shoebox, then.
I don't see how the bidet collection was inappropriate. Used swabs like cleaning rags? She did it right. What do you think removing material with a swab actually is but cleaning the surface?
No "tweezers" are used in laboratories. They are called *forceps*.
You'd better tell these guys that they're getting the names of their own products wrong, then.....
http://www.crime-scene.com/store/A-6955.shtml
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Was the knife found to have DNA from Sollecito? No. Any unidentified DNA came from knife? No. Don't think the knife was "contaminated" by the shoebox, then.
I don't see how the bidet collection was inappropriate. Used swabs like cleaning rags? She did it right. What do you think removing material with a swab actually is but cleaning the surface?
No "tweezers" are used in laboratories. They are called *forceps*.
They are called forceps in Italian? Then again it depends on what type of tweezers/forceps you purchase on whether or not they are called tweezers or forceps. Then again those tweezers at the knox/kercher home were not used in the lab, they where used outside the lab.
They are called forceps in Italian? Then again it depends on what type of tweezers/forceps you purchase on whether or not they are called tweezers or forceps. Then again those tweezers at the knox/kercher home were not used in the lab, they where used outside the lab.
I find the evidence of multiple attackers too compelling to consider a lone wolf scenario. If Rudy was so nervous he could not contain his bowels, would he have not just fled, rather than incur further risk? He seems to transform from petrified petty criminal to a cool, calm hitman in an instant. And somehow he had the presence of mind to clean up, but not flush the toilet... why would he even bother to clean up.. there is broken glass lying around, yet he takes off his socks and shoes and tramps around in the blood... none of this adds up.
And I just think breaking in via Filomena's window has always been a non-starter. It is insistence on the least plausible explanations that has so far really put me off the arguments presented by the pro-innocent.
They should have handled it differently, but it probably wouldn't have made any difference in this particular case, because the most likely source of Meredith's DNA was a tweezer, pipette, or some other instrument in the lab. I have posted photos and video that show how Stefanoni mis-handled evidence at the crime scene... she dropped a swab from a tweezer, picked it off the floor, and resumed scrubbing as if nothing had happened. She handled evidence swabs like cleaning rags, covering a wide area and bearing down on them with her thumb in a way that was all but certain to spread material from one sample to the next. Did her techniques magically improve once she got to the lab? I doubt it.
You've got one thing correct. The killing of Meridith was senseless. I saw as show on America's most wanted Sunday night where a black man killed his white girlfriend by stabbing her 15 times while she was trying to escape in her car. He fled the scene and lived in various homeless shelters for months. So the 'well done' goes to the German and Italian police for finding Guede so quickly.