Strozzi
Graduate Poster
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Thanks Nancy
I didn't see anything in there about fugue states. What mental state do you think Guede was in when attacking Meredith Kercher? Tramontano and the Milan school person describe a very cool customer. Someone behaving normally in an abnormal situation. Do you have a mental picture of what may have happened when he followed her to her room?
I don't think this is a fair comparator.
The Zamora/Graham murder a crime of passion and jealousy, with strong sexual undertones. In contrast, there was no indication whatsoever that Knox was sexually jealous of Meredith Kercher, nor that she ever felt that Meredith was competing for Sollecito's attention (and far less that Sollecito had ever had sexual interaction with Meredith).
In addition, it seems that the Zamora/Graham case was one of those instances of a strong, dominant female and a weak, compliant, pliable male who was desperate for attention and for the affirmation of the female's affection for him.
In addition, Zamora and Graham had been romantically involved for around four months by the time the murder was conceived and executed. What's more, their relationship had apparently been extremely intense, since they already had plans to marry. The combination of time and intensity would have created sufficient conditions for the necessary bonds of trust and loyalty that are precursors to any group crime of a serious nature.
In contrast, Knox and Sollecito had been romantically involved for a mere six days, and there was no indication that they were thinking in terms of a longer-term commitment: it appears that for both of them this was nothing more than a university romance.
It's really difficult to know - and I agree that he seems to have acted calmly when caught in other places. I would be interested to know who suggested he had a history of dissociating and fugue states. If this was assessed by a psychiatrist, would it be possible that he had diminished responsibility? Although he seemed to be acting fairly rationally afterwards by locking the door and leaving town - and obviously recalled being at the cottage.
I did a little bit of forensic psychiatry as a student and went to Broadmoor and interviewed a few people who had done horrendous things. I remember commenting to the psychiatrist afterwards how pleasant they had seemed - her thoughts were that in many ways they were 'normal' people, however, if someone made them angry at a time of great stress, they couldn't control their emotions and anger, which led to something horrific happening.
People who dissociate, will likely also experience episodes of hyperarousal - someone may appear calm, but they are like a coiled spring - if I was going to guess what happened, Meredith did something to anger Guede by screaming or resisting and he was unable to control his anger.
This is all a complete guess though and I'm no forensic psychiatrist - although may have some further training in the future and might then offer more insight
It's really difficult to know - and I agree that he seems to have acted calmly when caught in other places. I would be interested to know who suggested he had a history of dissociating and fugue states. If this was assessed by a psychiatrist, would it be possible that he had diminished responsibility? Although he seemed to be acting fairly rationally afterwards by locking the door and leaving town - and obviously recalled being at the cottage.
I did a little bit of forensic psychiatry as a student and went to Broadmoor and interviewed a few people who had done horrendous things. I remember commenting to the psychiatrist afterwards how pleasant they had seemed - her thoughts were that in many ways they were 'normal' people, however, if someone made them angry at a time of great stress, they couldn't control their emotions and anger, which led to something horrific happening.
People who dissociate, will likely also experience episodes of hyperarousal - someone may appear calm, but they are like a coiled spring - if I was going to guess what happened, Meredith did something to anger Guede by screaming or resisting and he was unable to control his anger.
This is all a complete guess though and I'm no forensic psychiatrist - although may have some further training in the future and might then offer more insight
Nancy, several books or articles point to Rudy being the perpetrator of the break-in and fire in his neighbor's house and the break-in and theft of a computer and cell phone at the office of the lawyer in Perugia. That was a second-story break-in with a rock through the window. Although it was not proved that he was the burglar, Rudy was found in possession of the stolen computer and cell phone from the lawyer's office. He was also in possession of a woman's gold watch and it is noted that a woman's gold watch was stolen from his neighbor's house.
The perpetrator of each of the break-ins - the house and the lawyer's office - is alleged to have done some unusual things. It appeared that in the house break-in the perpetrator may have taken a nap in an upstairs bed. He prepared and cooked a hot meal - a fireman is alleged to have used the Italian word for feast to describe the kitchen counter scene.
In the lawyer's office break-in it is alleged that the burglar assembled (pieced together) several pieces of broken window glass on a desk or table, as if assembling a jigsaw puzzle.
The times of the above crimes suggest that the burglar did not expect anyone coming back soon. The house was broken in during the day and Rudy had observed the house's owner, a neighbor lady, loading her car for a trip to the country. The lawyer's office was entered at night.
In the Milan nursery school break-in where Rudy was caught, he had spent the night, cooked (not just eaten but cooked) a meal, and was the next morning (a Saturday) at 8 am using the director's desktop computer. He had disconnected the cable to connect it directly to his laptop.
What does that suggest to you about Rudy's state of mind when he is inside someone else's property?
Very possible. I imagine something weird like this. He might have wandered along the corridor and ventured some creepily normal opening line, got an extremely startled response that then activated something, like when a mouse moves and makes a seemingly uninterested cat pounce.
Rolfe,In the photograph I have seen, the glove is split at the end of the thumb. The tip of the thumb and the thumbnail (which has some random dirt under it) are bare and are touching the clasp. That should be enough to have that evidence disallowed.
Rolfe.
What I've never understood is the pro-guilt theory which would make those spots in Filomena's room incriminating. As I understand it, the spots were blobs rather than footprints. If that's true (not having seen a picture of them) then surely that would necessarily mean the DNA from Amanda and Meredith had to have been deposited at different times - unless, of course, it was inadvertently transferred there by a third party.
What I've never understood is the pro-guilt theory which would make those spots in Filomena's room incriminating. As I understand it, the spots were blobs rather than footprints. If that's true (not having seen a picture of them) then surely that would necessarily mean the DNA from Amanda and Meredith had to have been deposited at different times - unless, of course, it was inadvertently transferred there by a third party.
For example, take Machiavelli's theory that Meredith's DNA was transferred there from the bloody towels. If that were true, then unless Amanda's DNA were also transferred from the towels (not impossible since she'd certainly used them) this means her DNA had to have been left at a different time. Even if just by a matter of minutes earlier/later, we know it can't have been left simultaneously. Since we therefore know for sure (again, barring third party transfer) her DNA was left at a different time to Meredith's DNA, how can we possibly be certain it's linked to the murder? Had Amanda really never been into Filomena's room in the two or so months she'd lived at the cottage? Hell, maybe she snuck in there from time to time and stole from Filomena's pot stash.
The point is that even according to pro-guilt theories, Amanda's DNA being in the same spot as Meredith's is pure coincidence. The question isn't whether their DNA being in the same spot is incriminating, but whether Amanda's DNA being in Filomena's room is incriminating. And given that they lived together - Amanda was in Filomena's room that very morning, after all, when she discovered the break-in - it's very hard to see how it can be.
The Cartwheels thread started at the end of the Massei trial. As soon as his report was complete and being translated the fact that his time of death was impossible became a big issue, as you may recall. The infallibility of the Italian Court System was at issue and some took up the argument that those skeptical of that 11:45 ToD were wrong, as at issue was Curatolo who, among other things, was the 'witness' who broke the alibi. He was 'certain' he saw Raffaele and Amanda standing outside from ~9:27 until just before midnight, when the disco buses that didn't run that night left for the last time.
I quite agree...nothing about Yummi/Machs posts is beneficial for anything at all except to perhaps get a glimpse of an illogical dysfunctional thought process in argument style of the typical Italian.
If you cant dazzle them with brilliance then baffle them with BS would be the metaphorical equivalent here.
I'm not sure how much anybody can rely on the State Department. To a large degree State's idea of a "fair trial" is that a country treats an American the same way it would treat one of its own citizens, that an American isn't being singled out for unusual treatment (or mistreatment). It doesn't mean that a trial in another country meets American standards regarding legal representation, juror selection, admissibility of evidence, etc., etc. There are Americans around the world doing long hard time on drug charges that might not have looked pretty shaky in the U.S. Amanda and Raffaele were convicted by an eight-person jury that included two judges; that alone is wildly different from the American system. But it's "fair" in Italy; it's how the Italian system works.
http://studentsabroad.state.gov/emergencies/arrestedabroad.php
3) Guede entered the cottage alone, by breaking in through Filomena's window, with the initial intent of stealing money and valuables. Meredith then came home, locking the front door behind her. Guede probably tried unsuccessfully to escape via the front door, then confronted Meredith. The situation escalated as Guede's physical altercation turned to a sexual/power motive, and culminated in Guede stabbing Meredith in the neck.
If readers have not seen it, please watch the YouTube video interviewing the owner of the Milan nursery school who discovered Rudy Guede in her office on a Saturday morning six days before the murder. I suspect that she believes Knox and Sollecito are innocent and have been railroaded, but in Italy you can't say that aloud.
The video is at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yfA7rrmfedE
It also does not help that in many cases they are elected positions especially in the south. When I voted for Commonwealth Attorney for my home city, I had to base my vote on a couple of factoids.
This was indeed the theory before we knew the full story of the shoe prints. I find it quite unlikely that Guede would have forgotten so soon that the encounter with Meredith resulting in her death was specifically because the front door was locked and he was trapped inside the cottage. With the new information derived from the bloody trail it makes it more likely that Guede encountered Meredith in the kitchen area before he could reach the front door and chased her into her room where he murdered her. Afterwards he tried to walk out and discovered the door locked with a key. He returned to Meredith's room, retrieved her keys and left locking her door on the way out but leaving the front door unlocked.
Ok. But it didn't survive an appeals court in Italy, either.
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