anglolawyer
Banned
True, only my opinion. An opinion fortified by the fact that Mignini lied about her status, claiming she was only a witness when she arrived at the questura when we all agree here, you included, that she was strongly suspected of very serious crimes.Well that this was not "shown" is your opinion. At the EC the State may bring its case saying there was a need to catch a rapist murderer.
I get to call straw man if you keep arguing that the right to a lawyer is not 'absolute' since no one here has made that claim. The ECHR uses the word 'fundamental' in the same passage in which you highlighted the 'not absolute' thing.Machiavelli said:As for excerpts of the Salduz vs. Turkey:
There are parts that some will like to see as “favourable” to Knox:
But even the favourable parts contain som conditions and limitations that are of key relevance (like “unduly”)
Fine, what you quote from illustrates that the right is not absolute. We are already agreed about that. This was not a mafia or terrorism case, the police were not dealing with an organised group and they had the means to pursue their investigations without depriving her of her fundamental rights. They could have got the information they wanted simply by looking at her phone and finding the messages arranging the meeting (irony intended).There are also parts of the case that tend to put Knox’s claim definitely off the reach of ECHR standards:
Well, you can't be serious about the Matteini hearing since her lawyers did not have a proper opportunity to take instructions and advise, so it seems they recommended silence, as indeed did Raf's lawyer too, advice which he disregarded to his detriment.As you see, the difference is that Knox was given the opportunity to correct her statements immediately, she did appear before judge Matteini, and she refused to release statement or to answer questions. Then she was given the opportunity to explain herself again on the Dec. 17. Interrogation, and when it came to the false accusation of Lumumba she invoked again her right to not answer questions. The High Court did take a stance about the usability of the statements and the first instance court (Massei) also made a ruling about their usability. The charge for which Knox was accused (calunnia) had not be filed at the time when she released the statements and there was no investigation about it. And finally, Knox did not only release a statement, she repeated further accusations and placed further false evidence against Lumumba again in her written memoriales, which were not statements released to the police and they are considered fully admissible.
As for the rest, the harm was done. The statements could not be unwritten and by various means, which I have listed, they were disclosed to the court hearing the murder rap. How do the various opportunities you say she has to set the record straight rectify that?
Last edited:
and we can't have that, can we?