Katody Matrass
Master Poster
- Joined
- Aug 18, 2010
- Messages
- 2,119
1) Knox always claimed that the "cuffs to the back of the head" were because the police were frustrated that she couldn't "remember" - not because the police were accusing her of being directly involved in the murder.
2) You still seem to be under some sort of misapprehension that those of us arguing on the side of acquittal are somehow bound together in a homogeneous group, which follows some sort of prepared script or strategy. It's not only clear that this is not the case, but also that it speaks more to your powers of reasoning and observation...
3) Where do you get the idea that the "early and precise ToD" (as you put it) has been "abandoned" (as you put it)? Meredith died before 10pm, and probably before 9.30pm. All the external evidence shows that, and the preponderance of the expert testimony from the first trial (including that of the prosecution's own experts!) shows that. I have little doubt that if the appeal trial gets that far, the defence will be able to show that to the court's satisfaction as well.
PS You don't know what the word "trope" means. Maybe you should look it up before using it next time...
...If I said Amanda does not fit the profile, that opinion would not carry extraordinary weight...
The claim about him never being wrong reminds me of a claim about lab contamination that you took great exception to. One would have thought profiling would be less of an exact science. Doesn't he normally do serial killers and people where the violence is a result of their need to kill rather than unplanned events where people have ********** up? There are threads on here about whether profiling is in the same bucket of woo as astrology.shuttlt,
If I said Amanda does not fit the profile, that opinion would not carry extraordinary weight (I lack expertise in profiling). However, when former FBI profiler John Douglas said it in Maxim magazine, it has a certain amount of heft.
Definition of TROPE
1
a : a word or expression used in a figurative sense : figure of speech b : a common or overused theme or device : cliché <the usual horror movie tropes>
English is a fine language you should learn it sometime.
...after thousands of posts pushing the "Internalized False Confession'/ waterboarding" trope...
The movie contained the standard horror-film trope of the girl breathing with relief as she thinks she's safe, followed immediately by the killer bursting through the door and attacking her.
Judge Massei spent a year examining *all* evidence as well as listening to the best lawyers in Italy arguing your points and presenting 'scenarios'.
He labored another 3 months detailing in addition to his scenario, his 470 page reasons why *all* the jurors were convinced of a 'scenario' of guilt.
the Liverpool group selected a hundred stranger rapes in the United Kingdom, classifying them according to twenty-eight variables, such as whether a disguise was worn, whether compliments were given, whether there was binding, gagging, or blindfolding, whether there was apologizing or the theft of personal property, and so on. They then looked at whether the patterns in the crimes corresponded to attributes of the criminals—like age, type of employment, ethnicity, level of education, marital status, number of prior convictions, type of prior convictions, and drug use. Were rapists who bind, gag, and blindfold more like one another than they were like rapists who, say, compliment and apologize? The answer is no—not even slightly.*
From the same page as the previous quote.Alison "gave the details of the crime, the profile prepared by the FBI, and a description of the offender [who had been caught] to a group of senior police officers and forensic professionals in England." They rated the profile as highly accurate. Alison then gave another group of officers the same case materials to evaluate, except that he created an imaginary set of traits for the killer. Again, the officers rated the profile as highly accurate. Like Ray Hyman discovered years ago, it doesn't matter what you tell people; they'll validate your claims if they want you to be right. They'll ignore what doesn't fit and work hard to find meaning and significance in your reading or profile.
I hope that the police community reads Gladwell's account and recognizes that it is not an accident that some of them think that people claiming to be psychic sometimes seem to be right. They'll at least get a laugh, as I did, when Gladwell reports that after Douglas told a group of detectives what traits were likely in the bad guy they were after, one of the detectives asked him if he were psychic. He wanted to know because the FBI profiler was saying the same things a psychic had told them the week before.
Behavioral profiling has never led to the direct apprehension of a serial killer, a murderer, or a spree killer..
shuttlt,The claim about him never being wrong reminds me of a claim about lab contamination that you took great exception to. One would have thought profiling would be less of an exact science. Doesn't he normally do serial killers and people where the violence is a result of their need to kill rather than unplanned events where people have ********** up? There are threads on here about whether profiling is in the same bucket of woo as astrology.
Anyway, I'm responding to a claim, not building a case.
http://www.skepdic.com/refuge/funk58.html
Skeptic's Dictionary article claiming criminal profiling is just confirmation bias and post hoc rationalization.
Since you've chosen to take up the baton on this, I'll take the time to tell you as well that you're wrong. Here's why:
The word "trope" was used incorrectly in the sentence
This is an incorrect usage of "trope". The correct word here would be "mantra" (if one wanted to be derogatory, which the writer clearly did), or "argument" (if one wanted to be civil).
And the reason why "trope" is inappropriate and wrong in that sentence is actually directly alluded to in the definition you so kindly provided. The clue is in the words "theme" and "device", and the example given. An example of the correct usage of "trope" would be something like this:
Judging by your post, you can't see the difference. But maybe this post of mine has helped to enlighten you.
English is a fine language: you should learn it some time (I've corrected your grammar - you're welcome).
She has never claimed this so far as I'm aware. I guess it might be the case and there were reasons why she hasn't mentioned it.
Definition of TROPE
1
a : a word or expression used in a figurative sense : figure of speech b : a common or overused theme or device : cliché <the usual horror movie tropes>
English is a fine language you should learn it sometime.
Could someone please help me to understand where/how this unsolicited argument completely about 'communications engineering/correcting another's grammar' relates in any way to the discussion of Amanda Knox ?
Was the 'argument' per chance intended to be about use of word 'trollop'
I read the article. That's his opinion.shuttlt,
Here is what the article said: "'In both cases—West Memphis and Knox—the police allowed theory rather than evidence to direct their investigations, and that is always a fatal error.'
He may have never been "proved wrong", but what difference does that make given that profiling has never actually caught anyone and profiles seem to be reported post hoc as being accurate even if they are randomly assigned just like astrology.He has never been proved wrong. (He took a then-controversial stance in support of JonBenet Ramsey’s parents, declaring their innocence in the death of their daughter long before DNA absolved them. He did it by once again stressing evidence—or, in this case, the lack of it— over theory.)"
I disagree with putting a criminal profiler forward as an authority as you did when criminal profiling itself is unvalidated and highly questionable. As for Mignini's claim, it sounds like the sort of stuff a criminal profiler would come out with, though they normally say "white male, mid 20s to early 30s" I think, rather than "female", but then they mainly deal with serial killers.The actual wording is subtly different from yours, and the situations you are trying to compare are quite different. I am also including some of the context of the quote. Do you disagree with him that letting theory instead of evidence to direct one's investigation is bad? What do you think of Mignini's claim that the covering of Meredith's body suggested a female murderer?
Thank you tsig, but that was unnecessary - although the well known definition you provide is indeed applicable in this context.
[Perhaps google alone isn't a substitute for erudition]
More to the point if platonov uses a term he understands what it means and uses it correctly.
If it should ever happen that nobody else is aware of the usage then he has merely coined a neologism![]()
There are studies that show it does better than chance?The problem with offender profiling is that many people (including many in the police force and criminal justice system) do not understand its very clear limitations. Profiling has only ever had proven success as a tool to point investigators in the direction of a more narrowly-defined group of suspects.
Thank you tsig, but that was unnecessary - although the well known definition you provide is indeed applicable in this context.
[Perhaps google alone isn't a substitute for erudition]
More to the point if platonov uses a term he understands what it means and uses it correctly.
If it should ever happen that nobody else is aware of the usage then he has merely coined a neologism
ps @ pilot - tsig was merely putting the E in JREF.