angrysoba
Philosophile
I'm new to this.
What does everyone think about this case?
What does everyone think about this case?
I'm new to this.
What does everyone think about this case?
An African-American man I know made the following observation:
The Amanda Knox case marks the only time in history white police officers caught a drug-dealing, working-class, low-life black man with a criminal record and charged him with committing rape, robbery and murder...before deciding "Nah. He did it?! Come on now. Not buying it. Let's railroad two middle-class, educated and attractive young white people for what he did and let him off easy!"
I think a storm of enormous proportions will begin as a result of this insane verdict. Italy may have won the battle, but just ask Japan who won the war. Buckle your seatbelts Italy, you may have awakened the sleeping giant.
I dont see a connection with nationality, anyway there isn't any "second male" profile on the bra clasp.
There are extra alleles. An allele is a short haminoacid chain, a fragment of polimeric protein, not a person. You can't match it to an individual. It can be transferred from broken DNA left in the environment or derive from degradation or alteration of breaking of a molecule.
One obvious problem for such a request is that the Court of Cassation used Guede's legal process (where both prosecution and defense had a reason to argue for multiple attackers) as a reason to throw out Hellmann's verdict. What opportunity to defend themselves did Amanda or Raffaele have to defend themselves in Guede's legal proceedings? I would say essentially none. Italy would have to answer for this nonsense and much more if it wants Amanda to be extradited. I am more worried about Raffaele at this point.
I wonder if this really does all hinge on the Guede conviction, and the ruling by that court that others were involved as well as Guede? That subsequent courts were bound by that ruling and therefore had to convict, and Hellmann erred in law on some sort of strict liability basis?
Rolfe.
I think you [the central scrutinizer] are just trolling. Nobody could be that thick.
I'm new to this.
What does everyone think about this case?
I happened to hear Dershowitz interviewed on the case after I heard about the verdict. What an unprincipled piece of crap that man is.
Legal experts say it's unlikely that Italy would seek to extradite Knox before its supreme court rules on any appeals. Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz said that if the conviction is upheld, the U.S. would have little choice but to send Knox to Italy to serve her sentence.
"The United States seeks extradition of more people than any country in the world. We’re trying to get [NSA leaker Edward] Snowden back and we’re not going to extradite someone convicted of murder?" he told NBC News.
Some observers have questioned whether the American protection against double jeopardy — being retried and convicted of a crime after being acquitted — would give the U.S. an excuse to balk at extradition.
But Dershowitz doubts that would apply in the Knox case because she was intially found guilty and her acquittal took place at an intermediate appeals level.
Wow. This is possibly the most disgusting comment i've read in 100 pages of this thread.
congratulations USA.
Wow, I wasn't expecting to see people swanning around triumphantly over this. Seriously? A heavily contested (and once overturned) conviction and the reaction is like a gang of middle school bullies.
Amazing. All I can say is that it's pretty obvious the Amanda and Raffaele whom you're celebrating being branded as murderers today are creatures of your own imagination.
The sad fact is that there are a pair of young people with those names who do exist, and who have done nothing whatsoever to deserve any of this. Not suspicion, not interrogation, not arrest, not indictment, not trial, not imprisonment, not conviction. The triumphalism is about something, but not about them.
Perhaps you aren't familiar with Yamamoto's famous quote regarding "waking the sleeping giant" with his attack on Pearl Harbor?
Regardless, Japan was a horrible monster of a nation that invaded China in the '30s with an army of tens of thousands of murderous butchering rapists. Google the "Rape of Nanking" to find out why mere pejoratives are inadequate in describing their awful bloody rampage.
Rudy Guede killed Meredith Kercher when she walked in on a burglary in progress.
Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito had nothing to do with it. But they discovered the crime scene, so they became suspects.
The cops terrorized Amanda into making a false statement before they understood what had happened, and before they knew about Guede's involvement. This led to a public accusation, with a wild fable about a "sex game" that turned deadly. The story exploded in the media and got a lot of official support, such that the truth makes the Italian justice system look bad.
Hence today's decision. And hence the controversy. Too many people understand what really happened, including most of the people who participate in this thread.
I have not followed the case, but I wondered what the general sense is here: What's the ratio of regular participants in this thread when it comes to believing she's guilty/not guilty?
However all that does make me wonder just why as they first got there they started measuring out where the bra was found, and not where the clasp was orignally photographed, as it had become detached.
It has occurred to me that had I registered for free classes at the UW in Italian in fall of '10 when I first became interested in this case that I would be on my eighth semester of Italian now.
A fair question. Lawyers and paid advocates put forth the best possible case for their clients. They only tell one side of the story. This is a behavior which would be unethical if the paid relationship with the client was not identified or obvious.I understand you not liking what he said, but what's wrong with this opinion?
It is very unlikely that Knox would be extradited. The state department, according to a story over the last few days has already said they won't. I wasn't sure about the reliability of the story but as a practical matter there are a lot more issues than double jeopardy that would form a basis to deny the extradition*.. Dershowitz isn't the only person to suggest that the constitutional restrictions against double jeopardy might not be adequate to prevent extradition. There seems to be contradictory case law on that point and Dershowitz might be right on the issue of double jeopardy. That opinion has been expressed in this thread and I didn't think that the suggestion was evidence that the person making the suggestion was an unprincipled piece of crap. I base my view of Dershowitz on a much wider range of things than something like that.Shooting the messenger?
A fair question. Lawyers and paid advocates put forth the best possible case for their clients. They only tell one side of the story. This is a behavior which would be unethical if the paid relationship with the client was not identified or obvious.
But Dershowitz routinely spouts biased rhetoric even when there is no client other than his own ego. Today he was asked for his opinion on the Kercher murder case and he riddled his comments with lies and misrepresentations. His words had the patina of being said by an individual who had thought about the case and that was giving a balanced summary. But it wasn't remotely a balanced summary. It was pure misleading propaganda that for whatever reason Dershowitz felt like pushing today.
I
A fair question. Lawyers and paid advocates put forth the best possible case for their clients. They only tell one side of the story. This is a behavior which would be unethical if the paid relationship with the client was not identified or obvious.
But Dershowitz routinely spouts biased rhetoric even when there is no client other than his own ego. Today he was asked for his opinion on the Kercher murder case and he riddled his comments with lies and misrepresentations. His words had the patina of being said by an individual who had thought about the case and that was giving a balanced summary. But it wasn't remotely a balanced summary. It was pure misleading propaganda that for whatever reason Dershowitz felt like pushing today.
ETA
It is very unlikely that Knox would be extradited. The state department, according to a story over the last few days has already said they won't. I wasn't sure about the reliability of the story but as a practical matter there are a lot more issues than double jeopardy that would form a basis to deny the extradition*.. Dershowitz isn't the only person to suggest that the constitutional restrictions against double jeopardy might not be adequate to prevent extradition. There seems to be contradictory case law on that point and Dershowitz might be right on the issue of double jeopardy. That opinion has been expressed in this thread and I didn't think that the suggestion was evidence that the person making the suggestion was an unprincipled piece of crap. I base my view of Dershowitz on a much wider range of things than something like that.
*The fact that Knox is stone cold innocent might not be one of them, but as a practical matter that will work in her favor.
Stefano Maffei just showed up on the BBC's radio 4 news programme. He was running a Central Scrutiniser-type line saying the verdict was correct and making the point that 27 judges had now upheld it. He also thought there was no prospect of a successful extradition.
I reviewed a civil case here recently in which the overall judicial score, after a first instance decision and three appeals, was 10-3. Unfortunately for the losers, the 3 formed the majority of a 5-judge Supreme Court so tough. I happen to think the court reached the wrong decision and the majority got it right. I don't know whether a majority of other lawyers think the same nor what difference it would make if they did.