Continuation Part 3 - Discussion of the Amanda Knox case

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I see we have a couple of new posters that have come out of lurking. Your contributions and questions are of course welcome. For the rest of the lurkers out there, you are not alone. This thread, now in it's third continuation, continues to be among the top views/day on this forum.

BTW: Chris, you are the designated tagger for this round. Please copy any appropriate tags from the previous threads and add them (Edit Tags) to the tag header at the top of the page.


[table='sort;head']First post | Last post | replies | views | Posts/day | Views/day | views/post | Thread

2009/12/04 | 2010/5/30 | 15080 | 360676 | 85.2 | 2037.7 | 23.9 | Amanda Knox guilty - all because of a cartwheel
2010/01/02 | 2011/07/30 | 269 | 11064 | 0.5 | 19.3 | 41.1 | Could Rudy Guede alone have killed Meredith Kercher?
2010/05/30 | 2011/01/06 | 25050 | 616540 | 113.3 | 2789.8 | 24.6 | Continuation - Discussion of the Amanda Knox case
2011/01/01 | 2011/07/24 | 15560 | 440780 | 76.3 | 2160.7 | 28.3 | Continuation Part 2 - Discussion of the Amanda Knox case
2011/02/07 | 2011/07/24 | 1140 | 31375 | 6.8 | 187.9 | 27.5 | The Massei/Mignini Conspiracy Theory
2011/02/15 | 2011/07/05 | 608 | 20899 | 4.3 | 149.3 | 34.4 | Just In: Amanda Knox Parents Must Stand Trial for Libel
2011/07/23 | 2011/07/30 | 678 | 20381 | 96.9 | 2911.6 | 30.1 | Continuation Part 3 - Discussion of the Amanda Knox case
2009/12/04 | 2011/07/30 | 58385 | 1501715 | 96.8 | 2490.4 | 25.7 | (All Amanda Knox threads combined)
[/table]
 
I wonder if Hellmann was concerned that somebody was trying to pull a fast one? Comodi tried to argue that Stefanoni doesn't need to document things like washing her hands and felt this was the same sort of thing. Hellmann was not buying that one so then she introduces this. If it was legit why bother with the first argument at all? Something doesn't seem right about this.

Very fishy. Unknown and unfindable documentation suddenly appears. But it bears coding inconsistent with what it is being offered for? The good news is that the prosecution now has a month to investigate this, and then guess what--they get to cross examine Stefanoni. If somehow they can show her to be lying to Hellmann . . . it won't be pretty. But even if they can't, it looks like Hellmann doesn't care.
 
RoseMontague,

Aww, come on. Do you really think that what gets posted in the blogosphere really matters? Sheesh! Seriously, I am reminded of what William Thompson wrote, "In all of these cases, the analysts were caught faking the results of control samples designed to detect instances in which cross-contamination of DNA samples has occurred."

It's rather telling that the independant experts accuse the Rome lab of virtually every one of the issues the Thomson raises in that acticle.
 
I see we have a couple of new posters that have come out of lurking. Your contributions and questions are of course welcome. For the rest of the lurkers out there, you are not alone. This thread, now in it's third continuation, continues to be among the top views/day on this forum.

BTW: Chris, you are the designated tagger for this round. Please copy any appropriate tags from the previous threads and add them (Edit Tags) to the tag header at the top of the page.


[table='sort;head']First post | Last post | replies | views | Posts/day | Views/day | views/post | Thread

2009/12/04 | 2010/5/30 | 15080 | 360676 | 85.2 | 2037.7 | 23.9 | Amanda Knox guilty - all because of a cartwheel
2010/01/02 | 2011/07/30 | 269 | 11064 | 0.5 | 19.3 | 41.1 | Could Rudy Guede alone have killed Meredith Kercher?
2010/05/30 | 2011/01/06 | 25050 | 616540 | 113.3 | 2789.8 | 24.6 | Continuation - Discussion of the Amanda Knox case
2011/01/01 | 2011/07/24 | 15560 | 440780 | 76.3 | 2160.7 | 28.3 | Continuation Part 2 - Discussion of the Amanda Knox case
2011/02/07 | 2011/07/24 | 1140 | 31375 | 6.8 | 187.9 | 27.5 | The Massei/Mignini Conspiracy Theory
2011/02/15 | 2011/07/05 | 608 | 20899 | 4.3 | 149.3 | 34.4 | Just In: Amanda Knox Parents Must Stand Trial for Libel
2011/07/23 | 2011/07/30 | 678 | 20381 | 96.9 | 2911.6 | 30.1 | Continuation Part 3 - Discussion of the Amanda Knox case
2009/12/04 | 2011/07/30 | 58385 | 1501715 | 96.8 | 2490.4 | 25.7 | (All Amanda Knox threads combined)
[/table]


Interesting Dan O., I don't have a context though. How does this compare to other threads?
 
Interesting Dan O., I don't have a context though. How does this compare to other threads?

Only two other threads in the ones I looked at were comparable. These were "Merged: Norwegian PM's office bombed / Youth camp spree killings" with 3678 views/day and the Japan earthquake "So there was this female speaker on an elevator" with 2626 view/day. Despite the vocal opposition to the Amanda Knox threads in the forum community, these remain some of the most viewed.

ETA: The initial post was relevant to the new posters joining this thread and the lurkers that haven't come out yet. But further discussion would be off topic here and should be taken up in forum community.
 
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a new post on the C-V report

This comment about negative controls illustates a good point. "If sample B underwent concentration procedures, it is important that appropriate negative controls were also concentrated to demonstrate that the procedure did not introduce contamination." link here.
 
This comment about negative controls illustates a good point. "If sample B underwent concentration procedures, it is important that appropriate negative controls were also concentrated to demonstrate that the procedure did not introduce contamination." link here.


When the independent experts say they can find no documentation as to where Stefanoni came up with an amount of DNA from the blade when she in fact testified to the court that she found ample amounts of something > 200 picograms, are they saying she lied to the court?

Does the report on this low quantity (< 10 picograms) mention anywhere or anything about Stefanoni's notes where in someone’s handwriting the words “too low” is written 10 or 12 times? And would that be in reference to this sample from the knife blade?

Finally do the experts talk anywhere about how this sample was run against the design specifications of the machine and of the test kit? And though it is possible to test low copy number DNA, that it requires special precautions and design specific laboratories. Do the experts say that Stefanoni's lab and procedures meet the standards for such low copy number testing?

Just wondering.
 
[IMGL]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/picture.php?albumid=597&pictureid=4789[/IMGL]

The footage show in real time gives the appearance that the clasp was dropped. But I have the footage downloaded to my computer where I can single step through the frames.

Here is a sequence of screen captures starting from the moment the flashlight starts turning away from the clasp. You can clearly see that the clasp is still held in the hand as it obscures part of the lettering on the bunny suit. In the second image, the hand has been lowered and is still holding the clasp.
The third and forth shot sow the clasp is still held between the fingers but is almost on the floor. (notice the shadow under the clasp)

In the last shot, the clasp has been released and the hand is being withdrawn.

____________________

Dan,

I'm not convinced, though I concede this is an ambiguous video. In your first image, what you see as the bra clasp I see as the thumb, which does eclipse the "SCIENTIFICA" lettering. And in your second image, what you see as the clasp I see as. err, maybe an artifact or mere background shadows. Besides, the first and second images are not consistent. In the second image the "clasp" extends beyond the thumb and index finger. Not so in the first image.

There's also a behavioral component to interpreting the video. When the clasp is apparently dropped, Time Index = 1:37, both the holder of the clasp and his co-worker, in the foreground, look to the floor, and both bend over to pick it up. Why would both bend over, as if to retrieve the clasp?

The video can be seen HERE

///
 
Part of the fascination of the case is following the people behind the different sides.

I see long drawn out comments on articles relating to the case. The pro guilt side seems organized.

I read about Peggy Ganong and Peter Quennell.... That Peter guy seems especially nuts.

I wanted to learn more about Peggy so I googled her name and found a 5 part interview with a guy named Strange Dave. I never heard a bigger idiot in my life then that guy..... and felt wrong to be on the same side as him.

Anyway, she`s innocnet.... send her home.
 
This comment about negative controls illustates a good point. "If sample B underwent concentration procedures, it is important that appropriate negative controls were also concentrated to demonstrate that the procedure did not introduce contamination." link here.

What a nice link you have provided, Chris. Understanding the DNA report takes the translation and explains what the experts are talking about.
 
I am not sure what to make of the fact that Knox seems to have lied initially and blamed somebody who she knew to be innocent. Did she really do that or is that a controversial issue also?

Knox and Sollecito were interviewed repeatedly in the 4 days after the discovery of the murder, for periods totalling anything between 40 hours and 53 hours according to reports I've seen. As far as I can gather, the "lies" were essentially unsupported allegations from the police about supposed inconsistencies in their statements, combined with traps that the 2 of them apparently fell into as a result of manipulation during the interrogations.

The 3rd innocent person supposedly "accused" by Knox was her boss, Patrick Lumumba, who ran a local bar. This arose out of an all-night interrogation on 5-6 November which the police claim they did not tape. There are conflicting reports as to what happened during this time, but we know for a fact that Amanda had no legal representation, and no neutral interpreter (her knowledge of Italian at this time was very basic).

The 2 statements coming out of this show every sign of being coerced, bear little relation to the narrative eventually settled on by the prosecution against Knox and Sollecito, and were ruled inadmissible in the trial by the Supreme Court. However, on 6 November the police arrested the 3 of them and publicly announced "case closed". When it later became clear that Lumumba had an alibi, and Rudy Guede was arrested in Germany, the prosecutor simply swapped Lumumba for Guede in his theory of the crime and continued with the action against Knox and Sollecito.
 
Just stopping by to see what the current JREF consensus was. I just followed a trail of articles highly supportive of Knox. I wondered if I wasn't being misled because articles and comments tend to link to other stuff that supports their views and perhaps I haven't gotten a balanced sense of the actual situation.

At this point there's basically only one group of people arguing on the internet who knows anything about the case that still believes in their guilt, and many of them have been following the case for more than three years now and had decided she was guilty long before her verdict, some of them before the trial even started. They apparently had some sort of internal falling out so there are now two versions of the original messageboard, and this is the other website.

Right now, based on a brief review of what may be biased sources I think the following is true.
1. The first prosecutor seems like a bit of a nut case. Lots of problematic stuff like conviction for illegally investigating reporters who had written critical articles and previous prosecutions based on fanciful theories.

Yeah, that pretty much sums up Giuliano Mignini. Incidentally it wasn't just journalists he was illegally investigating, but also former police chiefs and basically everyone who thought digging up bodies comparing pants sizes looking for Satanic cults to 'investigate' murders twenty and thirty years old was ridiculous. He thought instead that meant they were part of the cabal.

2. The DNA experts that recently testified, seem to have pretty much shattered the previous DNA testimony.

Yes, considering how circumspect and reserved most scientists are, the report is rather shocking in its bluntness in certain areas of the body of the report. I believe you've been provided a link to the translation in progress, which is almost complete at this point, thanks to the efforts of Katy-Did and Komponisto.


3. The evidence is strong and incontrovertible against the black guy that was convicted but no significant evidence exists against Knox and her boyfriend if the original DNA testimony is eliminated.

They introduced other 'evidence' at the trial of course, but it amounts to things like this bathmat stain, which you can see for yourself compared against Raffaele Sollecito's and Rudy Guede's print, luminol prints that tested negative for blood with TMB tests and DNA, the results of which the prosecution tried to hide and was discovered by accident but still produced in court as 'bloody footprints,' and the theory that the break-in was 'staged' the 'evidence' for which is dubious, undocumented, and kinda silly once the burglar was arrested.

I am not sure what to make of the fact that Knox seems to have lied initially and blamed somebody who she knew to be innocent. Did she really do that or is that a controversial issue also?

Tell you what, take a look at what was produced during that fateful overnight session on November 5th and 6th. It started at 10:15 PM on the fifth, the statements are timed at 1:45 AM and 5:45 AM November sixth, and she wrote the note directly afterward. It was the culmination of 52 or so hours spent with the police starting with when she and Raffaele reported the murder, 40+ of which were spent at the police station, at least 14 or so being actively interviewed/interrogated. This is a time span of about 90 hours from ~1:00 PM November second.

Note that she didn't write either of those official statements, she signed them in a language she barely read, and as a result of them the cops arrested Patrick Lumumba, interrogated him all day without a lawyer or any tapes of the proceedings, then in a ten car convoy with sirens blaring and lights flashing paraded through Perugia and announced 'case closed.' Police chief Arturo De Felice said: "Initially the American gave a version of events we knew was not correct. She buckled and made an admission of facts we knew were correct and from that we were able to bring them in. They all participated but had different roles."

If you read the statements you might note that outside Patrick Lumumba being 'involved' there's about no 'facts' that they could have considered 'correct.' However in court, the Polizia di Stato said they'd never even considered Patrick Lumumba in relation to the crime, that they were 'shocked...shocked' that she just blurted out something to the effect of 'it's him...he's the murderer!' when they were going through her phone, and then they spent some seven hours feting her with cupcakes and tea to produce those statements which they used to arrest them all, make that big display of themselves, then two days later--without allowing any of them lawyers in the interim--produced them in front of Judge Matteini and said Amanda had held down Meredith while Raffaele and Patrick raped her in some sort of ritualistic rite. There could have been absolutely no 'evidence' outside those statements it occurred, that being impossible as the Polizia Scientifica hadn't even finished the forensics. Mignini just made that up out of whole cloth, much like his theory of pants sizes 'proving' body swaps attempting to link the suicide of that doctor named Narducci or somesuch with the long-cold Monster of Florence case that he was eventually disciplined for.

A week later they'd 'find' the DNA on the knife in Raffaele's drawer (so they could dine with their kill!) and then have Amanda delivering the killing blow, without ever finding anything whatsoever of Amanda in Meredith's room, or anything on Amanda or her clothes suggesting she was involved in a desperate death struggle. Oh, wait. They claimed before Judge Matteini they couldn't find the sweatshirt she was wearing the night of the murder. Turns out it was on her bed, right where she said she left it. Note that CCTV camera video in that Nick Pisa article turned out to be bogus too, it was probably Meredith returning home the night of the murder.

At any rate, I find the police 'story' of the interrogation and what caused them to arrest Patrick to be entirely implausible, even more so when later on in the trial elements were disputed by Edgardo Giobbi, the SCO officer from Rome officially running the interrogation, and of course the fact that after she testified to her version they charged her with calunnia in which twelve police were eligible to file for (only eight did thought) completely discrediting the idea that Amanda's 'interview' was a spontaneous happening that amounted to a friendly chick-chat where she all of a sudden just accused Patrick out of the blue.

I think a reasonable reading of those materials suggests there's no accusation even intended, huge clues are provided by lines like:

"I find it difficult to remember those moments..."

"I vaguely remember..."

"Then I do not remember anything, I am very confused. I do not remember if Meredith was screaming and if I heard some thuds too because I was upset, but I imagined what could have happened."

"In regards to this "confession" that I made last night, I want to make clear that I'm very doubtful of the verity of my statements..."

"But I've said this many times so as to make myself clear: these things seem unreal to me, like a dream, and I am unsure if they are real things that happened or are just dreams my head has made to try to answer the questions in my head and the questions I am being asked."

"But the truth is, I am unsure about the truth..."

"...but I want to make very clear that these events seem more unreal to me that what I said before, that I stayed at Raffaele's house."

And especially:

"Who is the REAL murder [sic]? This is particularly important because I don't feel I can be used as condemning testimone [sic] in this instance.

The police in Perugia (will eventually) claim they arrested Patrick on the basis of this sort of 'accusation' and absolutely nothing else, despite the fact two days later they'd present a litany of 'evidence' against him in Matteini's court, and that her statements had matched "facts we knew were correct."

I think instead they took a stoned Raffaele in that backroom, confused the hell out of him on which night was which, (what he tells police bears resemblance to what had happened Halloween, and not November first) got him to 'admit' he called the Carabinieri after the Postal Police arrived--something conclusively proven untrue by cameras and cell phone evidence as well as simple common sense--and then they took Amanda into that little room and went at her for hours telling her they had 'hard evidence' she was at the scene at the time of the murder, that Raffaele had said she left that night and asked him to lie for her, (not quite what he said) and that they 'knew' she was covering for someone or had 'repressed' the memory. What the hell is she supposed to think? She can spend hours denying it, but eventually she might well assume they must be right, after all why would she think the cops would lie to her about that? She starts imagining what must have happened, as they encouraged her to, and eventually it becomes almost real, and as they won't even 'treat her like a person' until she signs a statement, she eventually is compelled to succumb to their suggestion.

However, as it soon becomes apparent, Patrick has an ironclad alibi: thus the police either admit to the mistake or they just blame her for it, and as they've conjured up the knife as 'evidence' they still think she must be involved, and as the papers have gone hog-wild over it and are creating the 'Foxy Knoxy'/'Evil Fox' mythology, it becomes easy to just lose the tapes of the interrogation (required by Italian law) and blame her for it all. They still think she's guilty and have placed their reputations on the line, why take the rap for the 'lies' of a murderess?

Incidentally, these 'confessions' were deemed inadmissible by the Italian Supreme Court, however Massei--the judge in the trial of the first instance--decided the prosecution could still use the part about Patrick, which they did, by cherry picking lines out of context and ignoring all the qualifiers I listed above.

And where is the JREF consensus right now? Have some of the guilt advocates been moved at least to insufficient evidence for a guilty verdict? Do the people who have been critical of the first verdict tend to believe in the actual innocence of Knox or just in the insufficiency of evidence for guilt? Perhaps somebody could provide a quantitative overview of the JREF consensus divided between guilty, not guilty by reason of insufficient evidence, not guilty even by a preponderance of the evidence standard and actual innocence.

Most of the ones believing in guilt have retreated from the forum, you can find them at the links above, the ones still participating that is. They've claimed that the mods here conspire against them and that innocentisti are just a bunch of meanies. Oh, and that the new judge and his experts have been 'gotten to' by the sinister Gogerty-Marriott PR supertanker, which is one way of explaining why events aren't proceeding like they'd assumed.

My guess is most believe Amanda and Raffaele totally innocent, though they can answer for themselves. The time of death in the first trial is scientifically unsupportable, the most probable one is about 9:15, for which they still have an electronic alibi, and regarding that the defense claims they've managed to recover files that escaped the over-writing of the computer records caused by the incompetent police which would show human interaction with the computer through even the original scientifically impossible time of death.

As for me, my position is that of all the people who could have possibly been at the cottage that night, Raffaele and Amanda are the least likely to have been involved, being as they've been put through the wringer and not a single iota of evidence stands scrutiny or doesn't have a more plausible innocent explanation. The fact that there's no reason to complicate what is pretty apparently the result of a burglar breaking in and being surprised by Meredith's return and then killing her simply adds to the likelihood they're totally innocent in my mind, as does the numerous indications of incompetence and corruption by the police in this case.

After a while it becomes pretty damned obvious the police had mistaken or coincidental reasons to think Amanda was complicit with Patrick in the murder thus they put the screws to her until she freaked out and then arrested them all for bogus reasons. By the time Rudy had been caught they'd convinced themselves Amanda and Raffaele had to have been involved, plus they'd invested their reputations and integrity on the idiot theory Mignini just made up so they just traded Rudy for Patrick and pretended they still had it right.


Thanks, admittedly the answers to my questions probably exist in the preceding gazillion posts but my interest level falls a little below the amount justified to read all of them. My apologies in advance for my laziness.

Then you probably didn't make it down this far! :p
 
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Part of the fascination of the case is following the people behind the different sides.

I see long drawn out comments on articles relating to the case. The pro guilt side seems organized.

I read about Peggy Ganong and Peter Quennell.... That Peter guy seems especially nuts.

I wanted to learn more about Peggy so I googled her name and found a 5 part interview with a guy named Strange Dave. I never heard a bigger idiot in my life then that guy..... and felt wrong to be on the same side as him.

Anyway, she`s innocnet.... send her home.

Good that you point this out in light of the questions regarding why people find this topic so interesting.

The problem with Strange Dave is he only had a basic understanding of the facts and was unable to effectively counter some of the arguments presented by the pro-guilt side.

I would love to see a debate between Peggy or The Machine and Kaosium or Komponisto or any of the regulars here, I believe Rolfe has offered a venue for that in the past. Unfortunately some of the news people and reporters just don't know the details of the case very well and posters from both sides delight in pointing out some of the glaring errors made.
 
...



Then you probably didn't make it down this far! :p

:) I did make it and thanks to you and others for the thoughtful summaries.

Let me ask this: Were there ever any JREF regular posters that advocated for guilt and what is their view now? Was it mostly JREF regulars arguing for innocence and newer participants arguing for guilt?

Right now, almost everything I have been reading about the case including this thread has been in the favor of Knox. I feel like I might be forming an opinion without knowing enough about what the pro-guilt crowd has to say. I might check out the link above to the site with pro-guilt participants.
 
<snip>
On the other hand it was a good point that in the 6 days before the testing disputed now the laboratory did not execute other testing related to the Meredith Kercher homicide case.

"Manuela Comodi ha sottolineato come nei 6 giorni precedenti all’esame del coltello indicato come arma del delitto nei laboratori della polizia scientifica non vennero eseguiti esami relativi all’indagine sull’omicidio di Meredith Kercher."

This lays to rest the frequently heard claim that the lab was full of the victim's DNA.


If six days is long enough to get Meredith's DNA out of the lab machine, then isn't five days long enough to get Meredith's DNA off the kitchen knife?

The investigating officer who took the knife out of Raffaele's kitchen drawer testified that the knife was clean, shiny and lying on top of the rest of the silverware. That was five days after the murder, during which time Amanda and Raffaele were living at his apartment.

Either the knife was being used by them for cooking during that time and, accordingly, washed more than once, or they were using other knives -- carefully ensuring, of course, that at the end of every meal the murder weapon was returned to its place of honor on top of the other silverware.

(In case the cops dropped by.)

Forget this.
With general contamination theories you will never convince a court that the lab was wrong.
You have to be specific and the 6 day break (and possibly other work during that time) makes it illusoric.

Illusoric! I knew him, Horatio.....
 
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Frank gives the details of this and much more.<snip>

"So Hellmann returned in the courtroom and decided not to admit that presumed proof that the controls were done.
Comodi insisted. And here, surprise: not only Helmann said definitely NO, but he pointed out that even if the documentation existed, even if it was really filed on October 2008, even if it was perfect, even if the negative/positive controls were done, that wouldn’t have any importance, since the contamination could have still occurred before!"


http://perugiashock.com/2011/07/30/hellmann-says-no/

I am genuinely stunned that there is a Perugian Magistrate who can use logic.
 
<snip> We can all kid ourselves and think this is a jury trial but the truth is Hellmann controls the jury. His actions clearly show that he is moving for acquittals.

This is the key, as it was for Massei's "presidency." You don't disagree with the judge.
 
:) I did make it and thanks to you and others for the thoughtful summaries.

Let me ask this: Were there ever any JREF regular posters that advocated for guilt and what is their view now? Was it mostly JREF regulars arguing for innocence and newer participants arguing for guilt?

Right now, almost everything I have been reading about the case including this thread has been in the favor of Knox. I feel like I might be forming an opinion without knowing enough about what the pro-guilt crowd has to say. I might check out the link above to the site with pro-guilt participants.

There were JREF regulars arguing for guilt from the beginning of the thread. Some of them are still posting elsewhere on JREF, after leaving this discussion. I am one of several pro-innocence advocates who signed up for JREF specifically to participate in discussions of this subject matter.

There are a few people still here who did not start out on the pro-innocence side of the argument, but have changed their minds. I will let them speak for themselves.

By all means, please check out the guilters. Just don't make a comment, or they'll ban you quicker than you can say "censorship."
 
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:) I did make it and thanks to you and others for the thoughtful summaries.

Let me ask this: Were there ever any JREF regular posters that advocated for guilt and what is their view now? Was it mostly JREF regulars arguing for innocence and newer participants arguing for guilt?

Right now, almost everything I have been reading about the case including this thread has been in the favor of Knox. I feel like I might be forming an opinion without knowing enough about what the pro-guilt crowd has to say. I might check out the link above to the site with pro-guilt participants.


The thing is, most of the people arguing for acquittal* here are not doing so from any sense of loyalty or investment in that position. One would, for example, expect that some of Knox's/Sollecito's family or friends might argue for acquittal even if the facts didn't support such a position.

Instead, most people posting here who believe Knox/Sollecito should be acquitted (including me) do so because we have looked at the available evidence and have come to the rational conclusion that acquittal is the only reasonable outcome. We would change our view in an instant if we were presented with sufficient evidence to prove guilt beyond all doubt based in reason (which is the necessary standard for a correct guilty verdict). Furthermore, many posters here identified and examined many dreadful errors that occurred during the investigation phase, and during the first trial. So far, those errors have subsequently been amply proven - notably in the areas of Curatolo's testimony and the knife/clasp DNA. We are also confident that Massei's court made serious errors in its judgement of other key issues such as time of death, the partial footprint on the bathmat, the mixed DNA in the sink and bidet, the nature of the break-in, and the testimony of Quintavalle (the shopkeeper).

So we're not "rooting" for a particular side - we're simply arguing based upon the evidence we have in front of us. In addition, we believe that the best way of securing justice for Meredith Kercher (and her family) is by ensuring that the correct culprits are correctly convicted and correctly sentenced. In this instance, most of us believe that Rudy Guede was almost certainly the sole assailant, and that proper justice should see him held accountable for his actions accordingly.


* "arguing for innocence" is a misnomer, although there are some here who do argue for absolute innocence)
 
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