and the Washington Post cited Maundy Gregory a week or so ago who's a member of that site and does nothing but try to temporize the nonsense promoted by them and TJMK.
Do you think this a positive development or one that ought to be contested?
I don't know if you saw the weird fantasy they had about an Amanda Knox arrest in Canada decades from now. Remember they were expecting
- disaster at trial
- disaster in sentencing
- a disaster when Amanda returns home
None of which has happen. Right now AK has to decide if she wants to be a celebrity or not. She's going to do the tough interview, where the police can't hit her with calumina for using words like "coercion" and discussing the facts of the interrogation. And of course my guess is the PDL might help her by leaking other cases where there has been severe judicial misconduct.
She could be mighty impressive and effective with a little coaching.
I meant confronting Giulia Buongiorno as a group shouting 'shame' and I think they might have even thrown something, details were unclear. As for the media some of them looked a little shook up by the 'protesters.' There was even a report Mignini himself got the treatment. I'm just thinking that's awfully arrogant of the police union, and might not sit well with some.
I don't think it will be a problem. Mignini has done much worse during this trial. No one who supports him now is going to be shocked he badmouthed the court.
I've wondered about that, (not the shanking--yikes!) Mignini having some pull inside the prison, especially with the Aviello debacle. Did you follow that little tangent? That's just another reason they could make a black comedy of this case. Incidentally it also suggested you might well have been right regarding the cause of his two front teeth missing.
Yeah. He is a major prosecutor. That was one of the reasons to keep the support up, so Amanda didn't die in an accident.
Considering the conditions, I don't think convincing her for a few hours that the mental images must have been 'recovered' memories is really that much of a distortion. She didn't actually witness the murder, she was supposedly covering her ears in the kitchen. She wouldn't have actually 'seen' anything all that crazy, and as per her testimony most of it is confabulation to connect those images. All she needs to do is try to think about it and have those images come to her mind. It would explain the 'hard evidence' of her being there and the 'fact' Raffaele said she left, making it more compelling 'evidence' it 'had' to happen.
I understand your theory. I just don't see that level of brain washing in 2 hrs. She has to build a seperate plan of events, like leaving Raffaele's house after they make love and going to back home to hear the murder...
OK, I've never done hash, I thought it was just strong marijuana which is more like 2-4 hours in my experience.
It is. But the more pot you do the longer it lasts. And hash is much stronger.
Can you remember what it was like to be young and innocent and trusting of authorities?
Nope. I dealt with retched abusive authorities at age 7. I didn't have the best home life either. I can't remember ever really trusting authorities, I just trust them less and less as I get older. I'm frankly shocked whenever authorities do anything good.
How does she square the 'hard evidence?' She's definite about the fact she didn't ask Raffaele to lie, but she puts that on him, not them. Otherwise she seems to be trying to figure out how everything she's been told can be true and her memories not, outside of those flashes of imagination. Those are just props like the misinformation like the 'hard evidence' and what Raffaele said, all they have to do is convince her for a few hours with 'You must be lying! You must be guilty! and that the only explanation for this is she was there and repressed the memories. She gets a chance to think on it and she starts to realize the 'inconsistencies' and how it doesn't seem so probable anymore.
I understand. But that's pretty tricky.
1) You have to have her create a narrative and attach imagery to it.
2) She has to believe that narrative as memory. Which means forgetting the construction process.
3) She was to repeat it over and over, and deal with the tons of missing detail.
In a few hours?
Heh, heh, heh...I hope he becomes the model for an archetype villain for a generation. The seemingly sophisticated old-world gentleman with seemly harmless esoteric knowledge and eccentricities whose friendly demeanor can turn suddenly to freakish antagonism and who simply refuses to admit he could be wrong and takes it to perverse levels regardless of consequences chasing more and more bizarre theories.
I agree. He's a great villain for all sorts of TV shows. Cop shows are regular on television and the Mignini style prosecutor.... It would be great justice if Mignini becomes like Iago.
Did you ever look into what he was doing in his 'Monster of Florence' 'investigation?'
No the book was on my "to read" list and I bought it. I still want to read it.
I think Patrick spending four years pounding on Amanda and promoting his martyrdom probably had an effect as well. They get to absolve the local police and 'do justice' for a Perugian who's been described as a leader in his community and blame it all on the Polizia Scientifica from Rome and the naughty American girl who might not be a murderess but makes for a convenient solution to the entire issue from a Perugian standpoint.
Good point. All the Perugians are good, all the outsiders evil. That does a nice job of explaining the verdict.
That's why I'm wondering how its going to come out in the Motivations, as one of the redeeming qualities of the Italian System is they have to try to make sense of it that way. I'm wondering how it can possibly be done!
I don't see it as that complex. Remember my early scenarios I started with. I think those are all defensible based on the evidence we have. Once you assume Amanda had motive to derail the murder investigation... Think about the Scooter Libby indictment for perjury and how it got Cheney and Rove off. The prosecutor just focused on the leak.