LondonJohn
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 12, 2010
- Messages
- 21,162
I think Hellmann had reached the point where reasonable doubt had already been met and was eager to get it done.
This would depend on Hellmann pre-judging the other evidence involved in this case. After all (as I've said before), this means he has to have already rejected the prosecution evidence on the bathmat partial print, the mixed DNA in the bathroom, ToD, the veracity of Quintavalle's testimony and the whole "staging" theory - all before the argument phase of the trial has even taken place!
Let's not forget that this is a standard criminal trial - not an appeal in the US/UK sense of the term. Both sides will present arguments based on the evidence/testimony - and this includes all the evidence/testimony from the first trial, as well as the new stuff that has appeared since January of this year. The judicial panel will then deliberate and deliver a verdict, based on its interpretation of the arguments coupled with its own theories of the crime (again, based on the evidence/testimony).
That brings us to a final point. It's fallacious of other people to suggest that Hellmann's court will not revisit things like the partial print, the break-in, ToD, Quintavalle etc. All of these pieces of evidence/testimony (and more) will be argued in his court in September - it's merely the case that these arguments will be based on the evidence/testimony from the Massei trial rather than any new supplementary evidence. In my view, the defence already has enough ammunition from the evidence/testimony presented in Massei's court to easily make this a reasonable doubt case. And that's why I am highly confident (intellectually, rather than emotionally) that Knox and Sollecito will be rightly acquitted by the end of the Autumn.