Diocletus
Illuminator
- Joined
- May 19, 2011
- Messages
- 3,969
I jumped ahead long ago, as you may have noticed. My theory predicts what you will find in your estimable enquiry: that the prosecution case on the lamp consisted of insinuation only, not direct evidence. This was unfair. Ask Diocletus.
Unfair, yes. But, I've become jaded about Italian concepts of fairness, particularly as it concerns the admissibility and use of items of evidence. Having placed Amanda's lamp in the room, I think the courts let the prosecutor make up whatever wildass theory they want about how and when it got there and what it was used for, foundational facts be damned. I just think that's how it works over there.
So, the lamp, which no doubt was put there to allow the first responders to clearly see that crime scene, and then left there, becomes instead an item of evidence that in effect was planted by the police and used to incriminate the defendants. Just like the "glass underneath" the clothes (compliments of Filomena).
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