I've been a little quiet for a while in this thread, mostly because it has been taking me all day just to catch up the 2-3 pages a day that have been occuring, so any points I'd make would be well out of date or already made before I even got close to the end of the thread to think about posting.
I do have to agree with what Mary_H and Halides1 have said.
We are talking about a legal case here, and so legal rules need to be applied. Science is great for determining how to view the evidence in the case and whether it is useful, but not for attempting to determine a verdict of guilt or innocence. In fact evidence that can be scientifically proven as fact, can be discarded from the equation of guilt or innocence if it doesn't actually allow us to distigush between them in a useful manner (i.e. if can be explained equally regardless of guilt or innocence and so doesn't provide evidence of either.)
To make such a call the question "Has the Prosecution proven its case beyond all reasonable doubts?" needs to be asked. If the answer is no, then by default the verdict must be "not guilty". That doesn't mean that those found such are actually innocent, merely that the State failed to demonstrate its case to meet the high levels required by their burden of proof.
To me this means that for me to declare that a person is guilty of the crime I must do one of the following:
1) Believe that the courts are never wrong (or so rarely wrong as to make little difference) and that since the court determined that the person is guilty, that they must have had the evidence to do so and so even if I don't have all the evidence to show that the person was guilty, I have to believe that the court did and I must be missing something.
2) Be able to use the evidence to create a senario and narrative that will stand up to the burden of proof , but wasn't given in court, and shows that the person did indeed beyond all reasonable doubt, commit the crime for which they were accused.
3) Believe that the evidence provided by the prosecutor and reported by the judge in his summary of the case create a valid and correct representation of what really occured and that such evidence is strong enough to prove that such a narrative is indeed correct, rendering the person charged guilty.
Many of those proclaiming guilt here seem to fall in to category #1, they believe that the court must have gotten it right, and if the evidence isn't there to back up the court's claims, well that must simply be because that evidence has not been publically released, i.e. the court must know things I don't that proves the person is guilty, otherwise they wouldn't have given a guilty verdict. This is an Apeal to Authority fallacy, but one that is rather popular. The claim is that the court is an Authority and so should be accepted, however this is a very dangerous position to take as without the evidence to judge if it's verdict is correct, and without knowing what other courts would say based on the same evidence, it is simply belief in a single authority of unknown merit.
Some fall into category #2, however this is a dangerous place to tread as creating a senario that was not tested in court by the defense can lead to relying on speculations instead of facts when there is no evidence to back the sort of assumptions that are required to fill in the holes of the narrative. It also means that even if the new senario is in fact correct, that a miscarriage of justice still quite likely occured because if the Prosecution's narrative is incorrect, then they most likely failed to prove their case beyond reasonable doubt.
Some claim to fall into category #3, and this is certainly the best place to truely be, however if this were the case, then by using the evidence supplied by the court those that do fall into category #3 should be able to provide a short and ultimately convincing argument for exactly why the court got the verdict right since the evidence for guilty beyond a reasonable doubt would be right there and plainly visable to all. I have yet to see this occur.
So this is where I am. Without a clear argument for category #3, I have to lean towards not-guilty simply because there are still doubts for guilty, and they are reasonable, and until those are cleared up, something that no one seems willing, or possibly able to do, this case appears to be very much a miscarriage of justice.