After the Daily Mail article, we can be fairly sure that Patrick was physically and verbally abused on the day of his arrest, and if he had been thinking rationally, he would have realised that Amanda must have been subjected to something of the same treatment. But as you say, he didn't have any knowledge of false confessions, and in addition, he (maybe subconsciously) knew that it was a bad idea to take sides against the police in any argument of facts.
It's highly-significant that in spite of the horrendous treatment described in his DM article, he disowned the account for whatever reason, once he had a chance to "reflect" on his situation.
I'm well aware that it's possible to add the the time she spent with the Postal Police, the time she spent in the back of the police car and so on and come up with a figure of 50 some hours. To me it feels like an exercise in coming up with the largest number that, with the wind behind it, can possibly be justified. Shouldn't we be trying to come up with the number that best communicates the specific facts of the case to people? Calling that time "interrogation" is a bit naughty, but I won't quibble. It then gets used to talk about why she confessed to the murder in an hour (or shall we say three hours as an upper limit so we don't have to debate it?).
I've been asked to check Google recently. If you Google 'amanda knox "53 hours"' you find this claim over and over on media sites and blogs. Some think that it was all interrogation, but spread over four days - most of them thing that the whole denied food and water thing was spread over the four days. Many clearly believe it was a single 53 hour interrogation - in which she was denied food water and toilet breaks. Sure, I can decrypt that what Bruce means when he says 53 hours of interrogation, is 53 hours in close proximity to the police, but it's a willfully misleading way of putting it.
Now I think about it, the denied food and water claim is stupidly misleading as well. She confessed because she was denied food for a couple of hours three-four hours after she ate dinner?
-I don't think it matters if it was 53 hours or 3 hours. Amanda was, by all accounts, subjected to a fierce interrogation, starting in the late evening and continuing overnight. She was clearly very tired and scared, and was being interrorated in a language she was not fluent in. If you read the statements that she signed, both the first and second, they clearly sound written by the police, not her. Everyone agrees, including Mignini and the police interogators, that she broke down in tears, sobbing almost uncontrolably. Miginini says this indicated to him that she got a weight off of her shoulders. It sounds to me like she was abused to the point where she would agree to whatever they wanted.
I say this not to blindly defend Amanda -- just read the statements she made, and the "gift" note a few hours after. All of them sound disoriented. No matter how many of the hours between the murder and the interrogation of the 5th/6th she was being questioned, it is clear that for many more hours she was under stress, lack of sleep, etc., and the police took advantage of that.
So you agree she sounds very confused in the letter. Would you arrest someone for first-degree murder without investigation, based only on a confused, rambling letter written by a young suspect whose story has changed twice in the last 12 hours?
It is not accurate to say that Amanda only tentatively claimed that she could not be relied on to accuse Patrick. First, there was her statement, which clearly shows her withdrawing her knowledge of the crime. Then, there is the recording of her telling her mother than she couldn't accuse Patrick because she wasn't there. Her mother gave the story to the press, and they printed it. Not only that, the police had the story because they were listening in. Her lawyers had the story, too.
There is also the fact that she simply stopped accusing Patrick of the crime once she was in a jail cell.
I don't know what exactly he said during the interrogation and how it came to that statement other than that I'm sure he was pressured immensely.
In Candace Dempsey's book his signed statement was written down; it said that Amanda left his flat from 9pm to 1am … that's what he signed …
Oh, was he talking about another night? I don't know that, he was really confused probably …
It was a weird statement for sure because it was contradicted by Johanna Pavovich who saw them at the time he claimed to have been in town with Amanda in that signed statement.
The impression of this seems to hinge on each person's POV on the police, and also on Amanda.
To me, it is so obvious that:
* The police considered Amanda a suspect, not just that night, but before that
* The interrogations of Amanda and Raffaele were not things that happened at the spur of the moment, but were carefully planned
* They started with Raffaele, with the goal of getting him to say anything that contradicted Amanda's version, so they could start on her using that. When he got confused and gave the version of what they did on a different night (was he confused, stoned, or ???), that was all that they needed
* It was not a coincidence that they had tag teams of police there late in the evening, as well as an interpreter
* It was not a coincidence nor a mistake that they did not record the interrogation -- they did not want an objective record of it to exist
Whether someone believes in Amanda and Raffaele's innocence, or thinks they are guilty, I don't understand how people can argue that this interrogation was not planned. To believe that they had no interest in interrogating Amanda at all until Raff changed his story, and that she was not considered a suspect until then, etc. is not, in my mind, looking objectively at the facts. All police everywhere are human beings, and they develop a suspicion about certain people from the minute the crime is discovered. Then they try to prove that case against those people, and if they can talk to them and get them to confess, so much the better. But to believe they just went forth and let the facts take them where they took them, and that the interrogation was not a pre-planned event, is just denial to me.
-First, it's my opinion that Knox knew her boss was innocent the whole time. She wrote that she didn't want to have to testify him. She told the court that she was relieved at Patrick's eventual release. Regardless of her own innocence or guilt these voluntary statements are indications that she knew. Slicing and dicing it isn't helpful.
Rhea,
I can. They probably lied about their intentions and since we have no recording... there's no way to absolutely disprove it.
It's a known fact that cops lie in order to get confessions etc. It's why in the US there was actually a court case about the police lying to get a confession and the defense tried to get that confession thrown out, because it was obtained as a result of a police lie, but a higher court actually ruled that a police lie doesn't negate a confession or statement made by a witness/ or suspect even though it was what made them confess. Can't remember the cite off hand, but maybe someone else here can recall it,
Dave
-Hi everyone. I just joined up. I am a Pro Innocent lurker. I decided to join the discussion because every once in a while there is a topic I would like to comment on. I don't have a lot of time for posting so please forgive me if my postings are not always current.
Does anybody know if the police have more success extracting false confession when they have multiple suspects? With multiple suspects they can lie to each and play them against one another in order to create confusion and doubt.
In a similar vein, I think having multiple suspects can also increase perceived evidence. Especially circumstantial evidence. For example the police are likely to find twice as many innocent actions/statements/events that can be construed as suspicious if they have two suspects instead of one. Double your suspects, double your suspicions. Mignini is a master at this. I think he had more than 20 suspects for his Monster of Florence theories.
First, it's my opinion that Knox knew her boss was innocent the whole time. She wrote that she didn't want to have to testify him. She told the court that she was relieved at Patrick's eventual release. Regardless of her own innocence or guilt these voluntary statements are indications that she knew. Slicing and dicing it isn't helpful.
-
Rose Montague,
I'm thinking the same thing as you, but still, how long does it take to match fingerprints? Two weeks? Did they do that with computer software or manually? How did they come up with a sketchy description of him on the 18th, but not a name until the 19th? Has it ever been confirmed that his DNA was not on file?
And "Denver" does bring up an interesting question. Who was Guede's lawyer for all those other "break-ins".
I know it does sound like a crazy theory and the "police informant" theory does have more validity, but still it is an interesting theory none the less,
Dave
-In the end I think we will learn for certain that the police didn’t have a clue who made the hand print, shoe prints and who left the strange DNA until Rudys friend went into the police station and said...hey I just talked to my friend Rudy Guede and he has run off to Germany. I think he may be involved in the Kercher murder. That’s what really happened.
I know there have been stories about ID'ed finger prints and immigration cards but these light bulbs were not that smart. Truth is, Rudys pal gave the police the name address and possible current location of someone he thought was involved. Later the police had the friend re-contact Rudy by Skype and thus we have that hours long recorded conversation (you know the one where Rudy never mentions AK or RS)
Without Rudys friend they would still be trying to pin this on Diya….the man paid 70,000 Euros to dish out on AK. His police interrogation section which he later denied can still be read there…Hey, the guy still has to feed his family no matter who he gets back at right? The police or AK …he chose to go after both…I wonder how that’s working out for him now?
And finally…our good friend Diya approached Amanda after her class on Monday morning (that would be the 5th of Nov. ahemmmm) and ask how she was doing and how the case was going and would she be interested in speaking to some reporters. I wonder if the police tail happened to notice this conversation? I mean they noticed that she ate pizza later so …..
Ever wonder if Amanda thought it strange that Diya just happened to run into her after her class on the 5th? Maybe even stranger that he was asking about the murder? Just saying…
Hi all.
I was reading an article in the Toronto Star.
http://www.thestar.com/news/article/1052267
It mentioned that Amanda changed her story 9 times. Do you know what these were?
I'll give you a clue:And maybe provide some insight as to why she did it?
Caper,Hi all.
I was reading an article in the Toronto Star.
http://www.thestar.com/news/article/1052267
It mentioned that Amanda changed her story 9 times. Do you know what these were? And maybe provide some insight as to why she did it?
I don't know how accurate it is, but it is still an interesting theory. Read it and judge for yourself:
http://www.groundreport.com/World/AMANDA-KNOX-CONSPIRACY-THEORY/2940838