Contrary to expectations Costagliola threw his full force behind Mignini today.
Does anyone here know anything about the co-judge Massimo Zanetti?
Well, my meetings morphed into a night out, but I've just got back and caught up....
Firstly, of course Costagliola "threw his full force behind Mignini" (whatever that even means) today. In case you've forgotten - and it appears that plenty of commentators and even media inside the court
have forgotten - Costagliola is actually the
lead prosecutor on this appeal trial. Costagliola is therefore not only one of the prosecutors of the case against Knox and Sollecito in the appeal trial, he's nominally the head of the prosecutor team! It would therefore be utterly inconceivable for Costagliola to do anything other than be entirely supportive of the prosecution's case. I have no idea why you think that anything otherwise would be the case.
But much more pertinent a point for you to have raised would have been this: why did Costagliola limit his participation today to a general "introduction" speech, and then hand the baton over to Mignini - a prosecutor who shouldn't even be present in the court in this trial, and whose role is supposed to be merely one of support and assistance? And in a wider sense, why has Costagliola been virtually mute throughout the entire appeal trial? I think you might find these questions to be far, far more telling than any overt statements of intra-prosecutor support.
Finally, my take on today is that Mignini is an increasingly out-of-control despot who is throwing everything into a last-ditch attempt to salvage both this case and his reputation. I am practically certain that he will fail in both endeavours. As others have pointed out, as far as I can tell, Mignini made absolutely no progress today in meeting the prosecution's burden of proof that Knox/Sollecito participated in the murder. I also can't believe that some members of the media who ought to know far better are seemingly reporting today's proceedings as a "setback" to Knox and Sollecito, when in fact it is absolutely nothing of the sort. All that happened today (and for the next few days) is that the prosecution (and victim's representative) is attempting to persuade the court that Knox and Sollecito killed Meredith. So we are hearing just one side of the story right now, and not only that, it's an exceptionally weak side of the story when viewed objectively and dispassionately.
It's clear to me now that prosecutors have no coherent case to put forward, and that they're consequently trying to obfuscate, bluster and misdirect with character smears and appeals to emotion. Obviously they will have a crack at rehabilitating the knife/clasp evidence (but they will fail), and it seems that they are even in such trouble that they are trying to give Curatolo's testimony some weight!! Believe me, if the prosecution had a strong case, there is absolutely no way whatsoever that they would be trying to rehabilitate Curatolo, and it's also probable that they wouldn't waste so much time and effort fighting the Conti/Vecchiotti DNA report.
If prosecutors had a strong case that was based on other evidence/testimony, they would clearly be confident enough to tell the court something like this:
"Well, we think Curatolo's testimony was accurate and reliable, but we realise that his testimony is open to some question. And we realise that there are questions over the knife and bra clasp. But just to be clear, let's put these pieces of evidence aside for one moment. We don't even need these pieces of evidence in order to prove to you that Knox and Sollecito participated in the murder of Meredith Kercher."
The fact is that prosecutors don't have anything near to sufficient proof of Knox's/Sollecito's guilt. As a matter of fact, they didn't have anything near to sufficient proof at the time of the first trial, but they benefited (in my view) from defence mistakes, a very poor, credulous, prosecution-friendly judge in Massei, and the overwhelming weight of public opinion that believed Knox and Sollecito to be vicious killers. As of today, not only has key evidence/testimony from the first trial been properly re-evaluated and found to be bogus, the lead judge in the appeal appears to be fair-minded and disinterested, and there has been a very large shift in public opinion (to the degree that prosecutors pointedly complained about it today!).
Knox and Sollecito are going to be acquitted in early October. I am to all intents certain of it. Not only has nothing I observed today changed my mind on that, today's proceedings have actually tended to strengthen my belief that acquittals are inevitable. Everyone should bear in mind that the next few days will quite naturally be dominated by prosecution talking points. But wait until all sides have presented their case. At that point, even the most clueless journalist in the courtroom (OK, maybe not Vogt, but everyone else....) will be clearly able to see which way the verdict is going to go.