I have never agreed with the motive, background etc. part of the PIP arguments but disagree with your interpretation of the evidence.
This is quite obvious for what concerns all innocentisti. Otherwise they would be guilters.
I alkso disagree with your approach to transparency. Whether the defense asked for file at one point or another there is no reason not to release them.
It's not my approach to transparency. To me, it is just an approach to the truth.
If they were offered access to evidence under all law provisions for nine months and didn't request them for two years, they can't say they were denied.
If the request was made orally in sept 2009, and if it was a judge who declared the request inadmissible, you can't say the prosecution refused to release data.
If the request was then not forwarded not even at the Supreme Court, and not even in the reasons for appeal, and not even at the Hellmann trial (where there was even another prosecution), and if even the Nencini court in Florence dropped the request (and there is another prosecution office again), you can't blame the prosecution nor Stefanoni for not releasing things.
If you think the system is not transparent enough, well this is a matter of legislation. You should forward your opinion to the parliament, not try to use it in a personal case.
The prosecution spent huge amounts of money on this case and the additional costs of releasing the file wouldn't be a reason not to do it.
No, in fact. I don't believe there is a reason, except that a request made now is not considered admissible nor relevant by a court.
If you haven't responded to the questions about Frank, please do.
I don't think there is much to answer about Frank, actually. You may just happen to know that he is a man who does nothing for free. Taking money from people and living as a parasite has always been his distinctive trait, over his personal history. You are free to believe him as a source if you want; I've never been interested in discussing about him.