Bill Williams
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2011
- Messages
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With Rudy Guede, the murderer of Meredith Kercher, set to be let out on day release this year, it seems that the neverendum on Knox's and Sollecito's wrongful conviction will simply go on and on.
Trial By Osmosis: Amanda Knox, Raffaele Sollecito and the Nightmare of Italian Justice
by Andrew Gumbel
See: http://lareviewofbooks.org/essay/trial-osmosis-amanda-knox-raffaele-sollecito-nightmare-italian-justice
I know understand the reasoning behind a lot of Machiavelli's postings. It seems that in Italy one does not have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt...
.... one only has to assert a scenario, often even against the evidence, and satisfy the courts that one's reasonings are "logical", not necessarily based on evidence.
It's why Machiavelli openly admits when claiming that Knox traded sex for drugs, that he's not really saying that this is "factual", only that it is "logical to consider".
Trial By Osmosis: Amanda Knox, Raffaele Sollecito and the Nightmare of Italian Justice
by Andrew Gumbel
See: http://lareviewofbooks.org/essay/trial-osmosis-amanda-knox-raffaele-sollecito-nightmare-italian-justice
When the pair was first arrested, more than six years ago, they were left to rot in jail and for months — in Sollecito’s case in solitary confinement — before charges were brought. They didn’t qualify for bail because bail does not exist in Italy. The prosecution regularly leaked information to the media but did not formally share its investigative findings with the defendants or their lawyers until the summer of 2008, by which time the public was broadly convinced they were no ordinary college students, but rather, depraved sex addicts who had forced the victim, 21-year-old Meredith Kercher, into a satanic orgy before brutally stabbing her to death.
The case went to trial with the prosecution refusing, despite repeated requests, to hand over the raw data on which it based its forensic analysis. The data was crucial because the prosecution claimed it had found traces of Kercher’s DNA on the tip of a kitchen knife believed to be the murder weapon (Knox’s DNA was on the handle), and traces of Sollecito’s DNA on a torn bra strap recovered from the crime scene. Neither claim would survive independent scrutiny.
That scrutiny, though, did not come until after Knox and Sollecito had already been convicted. The first trial judge, Giancarlo Massei, decided he didn’t need to ask the prosecution to hand over its full data, as would be a matter of course under US rules of evidence. He figured he could sort out the competing DNA claims without it.
The answer to that question has to do with the Italian legal establishment’s attitude to the very idea of reasonable doubt. In short, they don’t like it, don’t trust it and, despite the explicit introduction of a “reasonable doubt” standard in a legal reform introduced in 2006, don’t generally base the way they prosecute cases on it. Giuliano Mignini, the first public prosecutor in the Meredith Kercher case, sounded almost alarmed by the concept when he made his closing statement in the first trial:
Yes it’s true you need to find the defendants guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, as the high court has said, but the high court was merely codifying a principle that already existed in our jurisprudence […] It doesn’t mean you need to find the absolute truth, which is the province of God alone […] You need only be certain enough for the purposes of a trial. What does that mean? It means two things, essentially: that the reconstruction of the facts is based on logic, and that its elements are not in contradiction with each other.
Tellingly, Mignini did not direct the court to look at the evidence per se, but to look at the logic of his reconstruction of the murder. And the high court endorsed his view when it sent the case back to trial last March.
I know understand the reasoning behind a lot of Machiavelli's postings. It seems that in Italy one does not have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt...
.... one only has to assert a scenario, often even against the evidence, and satisfy the courts that one's reasonings are "logical", not necessarily based on evidence.
It's why Machiavelli openly admits when claiming that Knox traded sex for drugs, that he's not really saying that this is "factual", only that it is "logical to consider".
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