Tron, it would appear that L-haha got it wrong when he said Raf painted the cat on her face (we have solid proof that is not true because she had a identical cat painted on her face for Halloween when back, or was that a soccer player) so would that make guilty of major crime? I think it would.
Being misquoted when dealing with a reporter in your own language is not unusual. probably (sorry Bill) more so when both participants don't have the same first language.
Someone sent me a link to get the original story but as of yet I haven't registered at the site. If someone has that original and would send it by PM I'd be grateful. It works as I sent a few of Follians stories to people using that method.
Did she really write about correcting him in the story? How was she so sure of everything that had happened?
Read Follain, you then discover what is wrong with relying on contemporaneous newspaper articles..... newspaper is a double-edged sword....
Note to Tronic - you're actually destroying the police claim that when Raffaele was called in, he was not called in as a suspect. You're also destroying the claim that when Amanda just happened to come with him, when she was approached by Ficarra out in the hall for a second look at her phone, that Ficarra did that with the agenda that Knox was still only, "a person informed of the facts."
You see, the Perugian police probably read newspapers as well - even English language ones - and were most certainly aware of Raffaele's inability to distinguish between Wednesday and Thursday night, which is perhaps why they asked him to surrender his Nike's, even as they were still maintaining that he was only a person informed of the facts and not a suspect.
You see, the case you're making about Raffaele being confused with a Daily Mail reporter in the days' previous about Wednesday and Thursday, was not just part of the cops' belief that Amanda was involved, but that he, too, was involved. Or else why ask him to surrender his Nikes? (Mignini's warning to Ficarra et al. in Knox's interrogation room at 1:45 am, should have applied to Raffaele from the start at 11 pm on the 5th! That is, IF what you say is true.)
The only difference is - you assume guilt before assessing this evidence of Raffaele's memory. When you make that assumption as part of your confirmation bias, then everything Raffaele says is lies, and a constantly shifting story.
When looked at it through innocence - as Hellmann and the courts of Italy have confirmed, all save for the SC - it turns out that Raffaele is telling a consistent story, again all until he's in the hands of the police at interrogation - an interrogation which is not videotaped and in which no lawyer is present.
To the point though, it is YOUR scenario which puts the lie to what people like author John Follain writes: that the cops did not suspect them until "Raffaele withdrew his alibi." Because YOU are demonstrating that the cops were aware of Raffaele's memory problems - and his snotty attitude about being questioned about his memory - days before the interrogation!!!!
So who is lying? Page 134 "A Death in Italy", .... "... Napoleoni slipped out to speak to the Flying Squad chief Profazio. 'Listen, Raffaele isn't giving an alibi to Amanda any more'." This is the conversation, acc. to Follain (who wasn't there), which was the first indication to the police that they now had some proof that Amanda was up to something.
Maybe they suspected her before this, Follain sure seems to think so, but this, acc. to Follain, was the smoking gun. Raffaele had withdrawn his alibi. On page 130 Follain details Raffaele's accounting of Oct 31, which Follain acctually says is his accounting of Nov 1st, without the interference of the police - who acc. to Raffaele had refused him a calendar so that Raffaele could be clear about things.
The point being, though, you've actually demonstrated that the cops should have known and probably DID know about this days' earlier!
They then wake Mignini, because as they say, there's been a turn in the case. They now suspect Knox (acc. to the police, it was ONLY when Raffaele withdrew his alibi.) So when they went out into the hall to get Amanda, they went out
to interrogate a suspect. Further - for what reason did they even think she'd gone out for a suspicious reason?
So who do you believe, Tronic?