LondonJohn
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 12, 2010
- Messages
- 21,162
Happy Birthday Malkmus! Have a good one.
Bias, exaggeration and a false claim of criminal conduct would be massive to going to prove a wider defence contentions about the prosecution. So no, you'd absolutely go for it if you could.
Absence of appeal is absence of appealability in this regard, logically.
Co-prosecutor, Giuliano Mignini attempted to prove that he can read minds and has psychic abilities to see the past in way previously unknown to man. I have to say that out of all the cases I've followed, I've never seen a prosecutor who make so many unsubstantiated assumptions based on no evidence. However, the fact the Mignini is forced make such assumptions highlights just how weak his case truly must be.
"Amanda has the occasion to get back at that overly serious and moralizing English girl who she felt was too tied to the closed group of her English friends, and who accused her not too subtly of not being orderly or clean, and who criticized her for being too easy with boys," Mignini said.
"Amanda nurtured her hate for Meredith, but that night that hate could explode. For Amanda the moment had come to take revenge on that prissy girl. That is what she must have thought. And in a crescendo of threats and increasing violence, Meredith's ordeal begins."
Sorry. My bad.
You see, when you began a post by prefacing it with the address,
followed by the statement,"SA,"
and shortly after that,"You made a personal attack on LondonJohn."
and concluded with,"You attempted to bring a typical PMF tactic over here,"
I was misled into thinking that you were making the assertion that SA had brought over claims from PMF and you were demanding an explanation from SA."I will await your response to my bolded question."
You can understand my confusion, I hope.
Happy Birthday Malkmus! Have a good one.
Is there anywhere else one can go for this?
You are correct, I knew I had read that in a diary but I was thinking Raffaele.
As far as the appeal, what would they appeal? It is not mentioned in the Massei report as part of the judges Motivation. All the comments I have seen seem to indicate Mignini was engaged in quite a bit of fanciful speculation during his closing and most people understand that to be the case.
I think you've misread the quote from Massei. The person visiting the house isn't Marco Marzan (obviously, since he lived there) but one of Rudy's friends from basketball, Giorgio Cocciaretto.
Also, I think there may be a translation error in the sentence you quoted:
So Giorgio only saw Amanda, Meredith and Rudy at the boys' house once, during the party. This matches both what Amanda said in her testimony, and the testimonies from the boys downstairs.
Perhaps then, the least SA could do, is change the author of the LSD allegation from Amanda and Raf to Mignini in his video as they can't actually be cited.
Perhaps then, the least SA could do, is change the author of the LSD allegation from Amanda and Raf to Mignini in his video as they can't actually be cited.
Ahh, but remember, if these allegations haven't been specifically addressed in Sollecito's written appeal submission, it must necessarily mean that they can be corroborated and - by extension - they must be true....![]()
Ahh, but remember, if these allegations haven't been specifically addressed in Sollecito's written appeal submission, it must necessarily mean that they can be corroborated and - by extension - they must be true....![]()
On the mops - I posted a pic which was from the broom closet in the cottage not Raffaele's flat. That's the broom cupboard you can see in the video where the forensic team are wrapping it up to protect the surface from contamination - not sure where all the "OMG" stuff comes from - that's them videoing them taking the evidence away.
"Behavior issues"...
What is he (allegedly) getting at there...
Sporting flick knives, animal porn, street drugs, and throwing rocks at cars...not "behavioral issues"?!
And your source for this would be???
(I promise to read it, consider it and remember it. Unlike some, I will not 'pretend' to have forgotten your citation in the event you decide to refer to it again somewhere down the road.)
You keep trying to play the man ("leading me to suspect your may be making things up as you go") and you have failed to address the issue. For the second and last time, will you please stop the former and deal with the latter.
You have been unwilling to offer any evidence the computer was in use throughout the entire time. You simply assert that it is. That is a complete fail on this board, as you know.
1.The defence say they have evidence the computer was in use between 9pm and 6am.
2. You say this is supported by "ones and zeros"
3. I ask you what those ones and zeros (i.e. computer activity which must be recorded on hard disk since they are examining hard disks) actually are and what applications caused their creation. Because otherwise this is a meaningless assertion. How do I know it's caused by human interaction and isn't just Operating System event logs caused by a power-on but unused laptop?
4. I underline we are examining a defence line of questioning which you must substantiate before you get to turn it back and say "prove what I say is not correct". The point is you have offered no evidence at all to support YOUR claims.
Since this is a defence argument which you can't substantiate, you should simply say "I don't know".
I contend that if the defence actually had something material then the appeals would say "showing consistent computer activity between 9pm and 6am" caused by the XYZ application(s)". I think that omission is likely highly telling and this line of argument is going to undermine their credibility.
Me, skate away?
No.
You're the one that's trying to skate away from that massive blunder.
What "factually false claims" are you referring to? Are you trying to divert attention away from that fact that you just fell apart.
You're the only one caught (red-handed, no less) in a "factually false claim", Kevin.
It seems you couldn't be bothered to understand the report before you disparaged it, how is that 'rational'?
(I actually feel embarrassed for you. After all of your claims about "trained thinking" and your powers of rational analysis...)
Better primary source needed it appears, yes. I think it's in one of the books as well but I'd need to check.
I have to say, you certainly have the appeal point incorrect in terms of seriousness and why the defence would challenge it. You can't have a prosecutor impinge the reputation of a defendant baselessly by alleging the taking of two class A drugs (in UK parlance), the act of which is criminal and rightly thought to be more serious than smoking dope. That reduces the reputation and standing of the defendant in the eyes of the jury and would be an absolute home run if you could land it against the prosecutor at the time or in appeal that they made a claim about prior criminal conduct without evidence or testimony.
Bias, exaggeration and a false claim of criminal conduct would be massive to going to prove a wider defence contentions about the prosecution. So no, you'd absolutely go for it if you could.
Absence of appeal is absence of appealability in this regard, logically.
<snip>
Your demand for specific applications I interpreted as a deliberate attempt to confuse the thread by demanding irrelevant data, since I assumed you were at least passingly familiar with what the issue was about. Since I now know this was incorrect and was the result of honest ignorance about what we were talking about I forgive you.
<snip>