Matthew Best
Penultimate Amazing
I believe that the court will get to the right decision, having access to all available evidence.
Hey! Looks like you were right all along! Well done, you.
I believe that the court will get to the right decision, having access to all available evidence.
Thank you. And I found this:
Transcript of Amanda Knox's handwritten statement to police on the evening of November 6, the day she was arrested.
The part about "flashbacks" and not knowing for sure if she was at the house that night is best. Probably most other western nations would consider Knox to be crazy. Apparently America does not.
ETA: They also exclude confessions derived from interrogations in which the accused's right to counsel was violated.
Probably most other western nations provide similar protections. Apparently Italy does not.
Normal people lie all the time under high degree of pressure. To pick an American analogy we got lots of Iraqi detainees to lie about their ties to Al-Qaeda when there were no such ties. And those were men, often twice Amanda Knox's age, many of whom had been on the other end of an interrogation many times.
Thank you. And I found this:
Transcript of Amanda Knox's handwritten statement to police on the evening of November 6, the day she was arrested.
The part about "flashbacks" and not knowing for sure if she was at the house that night is best. Probably most other western nations would consider Knox to be crazy or a liar. Apparently America does not.
Nothing.Or, perhaps you are right and she was crazed when she wrote the note. What does that tell us about what the police did to her?
"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 because they were made under the pressures of stress, shock and extreme exhaustion." I don't think she is either crazy or a liar; I think she was subjected to a coercive interrogation on top of being exhausted that day, according to the accounts of others.Thank you. And I found this:
Transcript of Amanda Knox's handwritten statement to police on the evening of November 6, the day she was arrested.
The part about "flashbacks" and not knowing for sure if she was at the house that night is best. Probably most other western nations would consider Knox to be crazy or a liar. Apparently America does not.
I think that one of the sadder statistics that will emerge from this whole affair is that when I googled thRealBob I came up with zero Google hits, so I guess that I'm the real forgotten person in all of this.
Just wait until I learn how to really type.
I find that even very interesting. Because, if mental illness can be ruled out as a cause for that crazy note of hers, it means her "flashbacks" and oh so big confusion about not knowing where she's been and what she's done was nothing but an act.Don't you find it interesting that Amanda had no history of mental illness before she was arrested and that even after her imprisonment the Italian authorities couldn't get anyone to diagnose her with any disorders?
True. Normal people also don't falsely accuse their former employers of killing somebody. Oops, seems Knox isn't all that normal...
Wow, really? You mean that the police actually interrogated her instead of doing small talk while she felt relaxed and happy? I'm in shock.
I find that even very interesting. Because, if mental illness can be ruled out as a cause for that crazy note of hers, it means her "flashbacks" and oh so big confusion about not knowing where she's been and what she's done was nothing but an act.
I'm sorry that Ms. Knox wasn't offered a comfy chair during her interrogation and that she was interrogated while she was "confused and frightened".
Btw I suggest that you instantly set all your convicted criminals free. After all, they all were interrogated while not being all that happy and confident either. Oh, I forgot that your new interrogation standards only apply to Americans in foreign countries, my bad.
In real life Amanda Knox is a convicted criminal who was sentenced to three years in jail for defamation.Normal people can and often are tricked into telling falsehoods in custodial settings. Its the reason why the right to an attorney is considered a "human right" under Article 6 of the ECHR.
Real life is not what you see on TV crime shows. They are fictions designed to entertain you.
Please educate yourself then come back to us with this knowledge. Here is a great place to start: Google "Economist False Confession".
As usual with The Economist there are links to the relevant studies.
In real life Amanda Knox is a convicted criminal who was sentenced to three years in jail for defamation.
Actually Italy does, in fact Italy probably has more stringent rules on police interrogations than most places. The problem is they just ignore them or go around them with the trick of pretending they're interviewing 'witnesses' and either don't tape them or destroy the tapes if they're...unpalatable. There's just not enough oversight of police, and the judiciary is so overwhelmed by its duties towards criminals it can't really provide the necessary oversight of the police.
That's what it looks like to me at least. They've the rules on the books but the police just go around them and the prosecutors and judges just can't afford to look too closely at their only crutch.
In real life Amanda Knox is a convicted criminal who was sentenced to three years in jail for defamation.
