andreajo
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Nov 5, 2013
- Messages
- 307
Actually it's quite the contrary; the perception that the break in was staged preceeded all narrative about the crime. Actually it even preceeded the discovery of the body. Battistelli and Marzi suspected it was staged even before they discovered the murder.
And, of course, they revisited this perception that the break-in was staged when they learned that the man whose DNA and prints were found on the scene was an athletic burglar who had a history of breaking in by throwing rocks through windows.
Oh wait. They didn't.
They had evidence that the break-in was staged, as I said, not a 'perception'.
Machiavelli, you said perception (see above). Maybe you meant evidence.
Machiavelli said:Nobody ever seriously considered that the break could be an authentic one, it just doesn't look so, and nobody ever will.
Yes, that's the problem. Nobody in the police and prosecution camp ever seriously considered that the break-in could be authentic. How do you evaluate the likelihood of something when you never think about it in a serious way? Wouldn't you think that the fact that peoples' futures are at stake would obligate people with power to consider all the possibilities in a serious way?