Italian police monitored 39,952 phone calls to or from Sollicito family members over six months beginning Nov 2007. These included calls between the family and family lawyers and expert witnesses. It also included patient calls to Dr. Sollicito's office. (He is a real medical doctor, not a lab tech.)
You can see an article about the police monitoring of phones at
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-504083_162-57329774-504083/well-be-listening-amanda-knox-case-reveals-extent-of-italian-wiretapping/
Here are some earlier comments by Katody Matrass and others on JREF.
Interesting new article:
Crimesider - We'll be listening: Amanda Knox case reveals extent of Italian wiretapping
Quote:
Dr. Sollecito told Crimesider that the police also monitored his calls with his medical patients as well as calls he made to his lawyers. Although Italian law prohibits police wiretaps from violating personal privacy, Italian media report those prohibitions are rarely enforced. And police and prosecutors in Italy do not need to show probable cause that a crime has been committed in order to convince a judge to authorize a wiretap. So it is little wonder that Italy is one of Europe's leading eavesdropping nations.
Wiretapping lawyers? Wasn't the recent defence lawyers strike also about it?
39,952 conversations and messages recorded. That's how Mignini and his pack wasted money for nothing. And according to Mignini's lie they had no money to record the middle of the night, head-slapping interrogations. Right.
And some more evidence of misconduct:
Quote:
In September, Raffaele Sollecito's defense lawyers revealed Perugia police had "lost" 29 wiretapped phone calls, many between Amanda Knox and Sollecito. All the calls were made in the two days following
Meredith Kercher's murder. Perugia court-watcher Frank Sfarzo wonders if the 29 calls were "lost" as a result of an accident or something more sinister. Sfarzo wrote in his Perugia Shock blog, "Were they (Knox and
Sollecito) saying something that was proving that they didn't have anything to do with the crime?"
Mignini and the cops: "We did our best, we only lost 29 recordings, fried four hard drives, forgot to record the key interrogations (because of no money ), failed to test the key evidence, let other evidence rot and rust as to become untestable, and failed to secure the CCTV videos from all over the town. But it's all good because none of that would help us keep Knox in jail. To do that we had to lie a little about evidence that was not there, too. In fact, we had to lie a lot"