Kevin_Lowe
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- Joined
- Feb 10, 2003
- Messages
- 12,221
First, I'd like to thank Kevin_Lowe for his insightful OP. One of the reasons I enjoy hanging out here is that there are so many people whose view of the world I can find common ground with. I think Randi deserves enormous credit for allowing the community to find itself. So thank you Randi.
I have had an interest in the Amanda Knox case that predated finding the threads here, but my interest has never been strong enough to justify spending much effort in forming an opinion for myself based on research and a detailed understanding of the case.
So, I would check in on the threads every now and then to see which way my fellow JREF posters were leaning but alas, I couldn't discern a clear cut pattern so I have pretty much remained without a strong opinion with regards to the case.
One thing I would note about the threads that I looked at was that it seemed like both sides had taken their eye off the ball a bit. This wasn't something where certainty was likely. The only reasonable goal was to come up with an estimate of how likely a particular view was to be correct and yet the proponents of both sides seemed to be arguing that they had found enough evidence that their view was correct with a high degree of certainty. Why did they think this? From the outside it seemed unlikely that this could be so. Two groups of JREF posters had seen the same evidence and analysis and they were not forming a consensus. This is the same group of JREF posters that have shown amazing insights, and knowledge over a wide range of topics. If this was a situation where practical certainty was possible did the group of JREF posters on the wrong side of the issue suddenly go nuts, or stupid?
What I was looking for was to see some dedicated discussion on the issue of the level of confidence possible in this case. Did the level of confidence that she was guilty satisfy a beyond-a-reasonable-doubt criteria? Were there some posters that thought she was probably guilty but the confidence level was insufficient for a guilty verdict? Were there moderates in the debate or was everybody for her or agin her?
Thanks for the kind reply davefoc, and what I can say over here but can't say over there is that the pro-innocence side have solved the case, but the incredibly rapid flow of the thread means that the proof gets swept away almost instantly and people peering in over the wall see no proof at all, just two sides disagreeing with each other. It's really unfortunate but I don't know what to do about it.
Okay, the proof that the prosecution case did not meet the level of reasonable doubt hinges on a little bit of forensic science. We've hashed all the details out thoroughly so I'll skip the citations (searching for them is a pain, and it's been a long day cleaning up flood damage) for now and get them for you if people want them.
There's a term called t(lag), which is the time it takes for food you have swallowed to start moving from the stomach to the duodenum. It's distinct from t(1/2) which is the time for half the food in a meal to get out of the stomach into the duodenum. T(lag) distribution is a normal distribution on the right hand side of the graph, and depending on the meal and the person it can be as short as minutes or as long as three or just maybe even four hours.
No reliable source whatsoever will state that t(lag) in a normal, healthy young woman who ate a small to moderate sized meal with no alcohol, stress or other known confounding factors can exceed four hours, and a t(lag) of four hours is really, incredibly unlikely. Three hours is incredibly unlikely, and some sources say it's the plausible upper limit, but it's not quite as bad as four.
Meredith Kercher, a normal, healthy young woman ate a meal of pizza followed by apple crumble no later than 18:30. All of that meal was still in her stomach when she was murdered. The prosecution case was that she was murdered at 23:30. If you do the math, that's just not possible.
How the court settled on 23:30 as the time of death is a long story, but the short version is that they picked that time because if Meredith died any earlier Knox and Sollecito couldn't possibly have done it. Computer evidence or prosecution witnesses that the case simply couldn't do without either had them somewhere else at every other time, or there were unimpeachable witnesses outside the murder house who testified that the house was dark and silent when they were there.
It was an impassable logical pickle. They wanted to convict Knox and Sollecito. The prosecution's own evidence and witnesses ruled out the possibility that they murdered Meredith at any time before 23:30. The autopsy evidence proved that Meredith died before 21:30. So they just cut the Gordian knot by ignoring the autopsy evidence and convicted them of doing it at 23:30 anyway.
There are multiple sub-controversies I haven't gone in to, like the spurious reasoning the court used to discard the coroner's opinion that Meredith died around 21:30 in favour of the totally made-up 23:30 time, the fact that the only witness who contradicted their alibi was a homeless heroin dealer the police had the dirt on, who just so happened to have also been a prosecution witness in two previous murder trials, who came forth long after the events in question with an incredibly detailed statement accurate to the minute, and whose testimony has other serious inconsistencies with the known facts, and the fact that when Raffaele Sollecito handed his computer over to the police so they could verify from the time stamps that he had been at home all night they overwrote all the relevant time stamps and then fried the hard drive.
Now since then the appeals team has published what certainly appear to be detailed computer activity logs recovered from Sollecito's fixed laptop that confirm their alibi for the entire night, from 21:00 or so right through to 6am the next morning. So that pretty much rules out even the most tangential involvement in the murder, since they were at home from before it happened to long, long after it was all over.
The pro-guilt response to this could be summarised as (and I quote no particular person) "(long silence) um (long silence) THEY DID IT ANYWAY THEY'RE GUILTY GUILTY GUILTY!". I'm completely serious. We've been asking for some time now for any pro-guilt poster to present even one remotely plausible story for how Knox and Sollecito could possibly have been guilty given the facts we now know and not one of them has managed to do so.
A couple have started out on one, but they rapidly ran aground on the plain fact that Meredith almost certainly died before 21:30 and Knox and Sollecito were almost certainly at home until long after 21:30. There's no way to get around that. It's no longer a matter of whether there's proof beyond reasonable doubt Knox and Sollecito did it, it's a question of whether it's even conceivable that they did do it, and the pro-guilt crowd can't even convincingly argue that it's conceivable.
Yet despite this, not one pro-guilt poster has come forward and said "Well in that case, maybe they didn't do it, I guess I was wrong". Given that several of them are people who've posted at the JREF for some time, that's pretty sad.
The reason why they haven't is, I think, twofold. One, (and there is some hard evidence for this) people who believe Knox are guilty generally aren't the most rational tools in the box to start with. Two, they have immersed themselves in their echo chamber at perugiamurderfile.org where they constantly reinforce each other's falsified factual beliefs about the case, and constantly misrepresent pro-innocence arguments to each other so that they only ever encounter straw man versions of them on their home turf
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