LondonJohn
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 12, 2010
- Messages
- 21,162
Indeed. How many murder trial have there been where the prison informant wasn't a lying rat?
Nice generalisation!
And there is a reason why many prison informants are treated with acute suspicion: most prison informants are either remand prisoners awaiting trial, or post-trial prisoners awaiting sentencing. There is therefore a very real chance that the informants stand to benefit from their testimony - either in terms of criminal charges faced, or in terms of sentence reductions.
http://www.justicebehindthewalls.net/resources/jailhouse_informants/informants.pdf
By definition, a jailhouse informant is an inmate, usually awaiting trial or sentencing, who claims to have been the recipient of an admission made by another prisoner awaiting trial, and who agrees to testify against that prisoner in a court of law, usually in exchange for some benefit.
Additionally, of course, almost all prison informants testify for the prosecution, since they usually report something incriminating that the defendant has told them. This ties in with the suspicion (or reality) of reward: the only people capable of rewarding pre-trial or pre-sentencing prisoners for their testimony are police and prosecutors.
By contrast, neither Alessi nor Aviello appears to stand to gain anything from their testimony. And neither is testifying in favour of the prosecution. There is nothing that Knox's or Sollecito's defence teams can do for any of the inmates who appear to be willing to testify in their favour. That's one reason (among others) why this case of prison informants is very different from the norm, and (in my view) why they stand a far greater chance of being believed.