Bill Williams
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2011
- Messages
- 15,713
You beat me to it, Kevin Lowe. I, too, am not quite sure what Tronic is trying to suggest here.What do you think this contradiction amounts to?
I'm assuming you aren't running the tired old game where a pro-guilt poster tries to establish that Knox or Sollecito got something wrong, and then acts as if it proves they are guilty if they did.
Given the extremely powerful evidence that those two weren't there at Meredith Kercher's time of death, no errors or even lies (assuming you can establish by some miraculous means that an error was deliberate) seem likely to lead a rational person to think they are guilty given that people make errors all the time.
Fixating on those two are this late stage just seems wilfully bizarre. Knox and Sollecito had no motive, cannot be linked to the scene of the crime and have a very solid alibi based on computer records preserved by the police themselves. There have to be literally hundreds of Perugians with no alibi who are better suspects than Knox and Sollecito, if for some bizarre reason you are convinced more than one person was involved in Meredith Kercher's murder.
I'm really not sure what point you are making here. That statement isn't wrong, just somewhat imprecise. They raised the alarm and were there when the body was discovered. People speak imprecisely all the time. But even if it were totally wrong, how could that have any implications for their guilt or innocence?
Life isn't an Agatha Christie novel, where if any character says anything which isn't precisely correct then it is a vital clue.
At worst, Raffaele got something wrong. With a reporter. For the Daily Mail. Agreed, this was a reporting before Nov 6th, but at this late date what does it amount to?
In his book Raffaele's contention about his own interrogation is that he asked to consult a calendar, now that it was apparent to him that his memory of the two nights was important. It is at least as incriminating that the police (Chiacchiera et al.) actually did not WANT him to clear up his misremembering. Why? Because they needed something, anything, from Raffaele to use to lean on Knox.
The long and the short of it, once Raffaele himself, and for himself, realized that KNox had not gone out.... he figured this out because she'd need to ring to get back in... he added this to his own knowledge that he had not gone out on Nov 1, to know that both of them were innocent.
He's never really had any other story; other than misremembering in the intital days.
Tronic needs to answer that question - why would Raffaele stick to the story, and not turn on Knox? I mean, that's your claim isn't it, that Raffaele turned on Knox purposely at his interrogation?
Why would Raffaele maintain what he's always maintained if that was true? That they both stayed home, that they both are innocent - therefore Knox has an alibi?