Bill Williams
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2011
- Messages
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By the way - where is Machiavelli with his spin on today's events? Apparently he was tweeting from the courtroom and stopped tweeting when the Ris Carabinieri was testifying.
Machiavelli, please share your perspective on this. Is there a way that information taken from the defendants by police is given to the media - sometimes within hours - without the police leaking it?And people like Machiavelli have the GALL to say that the prosecution was not leaking these things to the press to poison the well against Sollecito and Knox.
Bill Williams said:And people like Machiavelli have the GALL to say that the prosecution was not leaking these things to the press to poison the well against Sollecito and Knox.
My guess is that Machiavelli would find some way to blame the defence.Machiavelli, please share your perspective on this. Is there a way that information taken from the defendants by police is given to the media - sometimes within hours - without the police leaking it?
My relative, who lives in the Ozark Mountains in Missouri, has a pack of "coon hounds." The most exciting thing to him is to hunt racoons with his coon hounds. I guess they are tastier than squirrel. If he were more sophisticated he would own English setters and shoot grouse.
Machiavelli, please share your perspective on this. Is there a way that information taken from the defendants by police is given to the media - sometimes within hours - without the police leaking it?
I think you have that backwards. You see the greys all over the Northwest and none of the Reds. But in the Midwest where we use to hunt squirrels and knoodle for catfish, you only seem to find the reds. It's been a long time since I've been to Iowa...but I don't recall ever hunting or eating the greys.
In the U.S. there are federal laws referred to as HIPAA laws that protect the privacy of healh-care information. To use an example similar to what the prison medical staff did to Knox - if in the US a prison doctor (or other health care worker or, possibly, a guard or warden) released health information about a prisoneer, the FBI would investigate and the doctor would probably be criminally prosecuted, lose his prison employment, and probably lose his medical license. After that, the doctor would probably be sued in civil court.
Does Italy have any similar laws that protect the privacy of health-care information? If so, perhaps Knox should file a formal complaint and cause an investigation to be initiated.
I got the feeling (from Barbie's CNN report when Knox was flying home 2011) she really wasn't sure which way the general public was going to go with this and she kind of wanted to move back to the center and say "well who really knows the truth".
Almost like she wanted to get a feel of how readers would perceive if she jumped ship.
Kind of like her article she just wrote. She avoids the DNA results that point to one side or another and stays with angry judge story.Her Movies the same way.It's about her and not so much the case itself.
I think long term she want's to be viewed as neutral now so as to keep from falling when the prosecution's case finally falls for good.
I think she want's to hide from the truth that she (like Mignini) benefitted from these outright lies and furthered her career at AK/RS expense. Not to mention one MK who may never get the justice she deserves thanks to Barbie's willingness to deceive the general public.
She may want to pretend she's a regular Sherlock Holmes now but I still see her as voice of theNaziPLE Propaganda machine. She owes more than an apology for her role.
They have something similar, Strozzi, but those laws are probably as nebulous and "flexible" as other Italian laws.
The police made sure they would not be prosecuted for the crime by turning Amanda's diary over to a journalist, Fiorenza Sarzanini, who published it in the form of an embellished book. Amanda's lawyers did sue Sarzanini and won damages, but I believe the decision was overturned on appeal. It is probably in its second appeal at this time, I would guess. I will see if I can find a more recent article about it.
Here is an article about the original suit.
"Amanda Knox's lawyer, Carlo Dalla Vedova, told ABC News that in the proceedings against Sarzanini and Rizzoli, he had argued a violation of Knox's privacy as far as her sexual activity and medical history were concerned, both of which are protected by privacy laws in Italy."
I think if Italy had laws like HIPAA, the "doctor" who gave Amanda the HIV tests would be in jail.
Pages 107-108 of Honor Bound discuss the diary. Raffaele showed to Maori to see if it would be useful. Maori asked to keep it, but the guards took it from Maori. Maori complained to Mignini that this violated the law and got the diary back. However, Raffaele thinks that someone must have photocopied it in the meantime, because it later appeared. Pages 91-92 discuss the time when Raffaele cooked at the women's flat and touched Meredith's skin with a knife.
Today it might have, yes.
But wait til Bongiorno drills home the inference in relation to Meredith's "DNA" on 36B in closing arguments.
Those of us who realise the significance of the Carabinieri experts' testimony today are thinking one step ahead - in that it's now obvious that the defence teams will (in closing) link today's testimony back to Stefanoni's disastrously-inept examination of the knife to show why 36B (and therefore the whole knife) should be thrown out as evidence.
I imagine that much of the media haven't made the link yet. And defendants speaking in court are always more "mediagenic" than dry and detailed scientific testimony - especially when the findings linked to that testimony have been leaked in advance.
However, it happens that today the scientific testimony unearthed a rough diamond in the "two or more tests are needed to validate the DNA results" testimony. Once Bongiorno has polished that diamond and presented it back to the judicial panel, I think they'll sit up and notice alright.
I agree with your take on this, GreyFox. We should gird our loins for the possibility the Winterbottom movie will transform Barbie into a pro-innocence heroine.
I agree with your take on this, GreyFox. We should gird our loins for the possibility the Winterbottom movie will transform Barbie into a pro-innocence heroine.
Jesus, Mary and Joseph, give me strength.....
The SC stated that 36i would be the critical finding. Lets see if they back up on that or if the appeal court in Florence has already heard enough. I still suspect some face saving tricks remain up the sleeves of these 3rd rate clowns.