loverofzion,
When a reporter cites anonymous sources, he is asking his readers to trust him in ways that a reporter who cites with attribution does not. In the case of the article by Charles Mudede on the anonymous “Matthew” who recalled Amanda's saying “My people killed your people,” the reporter made several factual errors. One concerns the washing machine, which was not running when the police arrived. Two is that feces are said to be in the wrong bathroom. Three is that a surveillance camera captured Ms. Knox that night. Mr. Mudede also mentioned several witnesses whom he said saw Knox and a darkish man in a laundromat the night of the murder. The laundromat story is not as familiar to me, but I are pretty sure it is nonsense, which makes four. Equally problematic for me is the fact that of all the hypotheticals he considers, the possibility that Raffaele and Amanda are innocent is never mentioned.
Another problem is that Mr. Mudede may have reported what “Matthew” said with absolute accuracy, and he is not on a witness stand. Because of all of these problems, I don’t take “Matthew” all that seriously. Why do you? Does Mr. Mudede possess some truth that must be guarded by a panoply of errors?