Bill Williams
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2011
- Messages
- 15,713
As I said before, Massei bent over backwards to help the kids. If you carry a knife - for no matter what reason - the reason becomes a moot point if you use it take someone's life in a sadistic manner.
The prosecution identified the knife as the murder weapon, so the onus was on them to show how and why. That's all. That particular knife, they discovered later, was specifically itemised on Raff's rental agreement inventory.
There was no burden of proof on the prosecution to demonstrate the murder was premeditated as it was not a disputed issue by the defence. The defence position was that the pair were completely innocent of any involvement. In any case, even if there was an issue about premeditation, the fact at least two potentially lethal weapons were used on a totally defenseless innocent young woman, is never going to be seen in a favourable light.
So far I am displaying more patience than LondonJohn in replying.
This response of yours is pure nonsense, as-in it makes no sense in relation to this - Judge Massei, like it or not, wrote that as for as the alleged involvement of AK and RS in this murder was concerned, their involvement was unpremeditated.
His narrative of the crime is this: it was Rudy and Rudy alone who initiated the attack on the victim. The motive was his. Literally at the last minute, acc. to Massei, AK and RS made a completely uncharacteristic, "choice for evil". Their motive was a last second choice - for evil.
Judge Massei, then, at least has the sense to try to fit Raffaele's kitchen knife into this narrative. To do that, the knife needs to leave Raffaele's cottage for innocent reason, some reason completely unconnected to the crime.
Do you understand this so far? Probably not.
If AK and RS had left the cottage that night with that knife - for innocent reason - then the issue of the phones becomes superfluous. Turning them off, too, has nothing to do with the crime because (acc. to Massei) neither AK nor RS thought about murdering the victim until that last second, "choice for evil," about an hour in the future.
In fact, everything non-thinking-guilters say is suspicious prior to that "choice for evil", has nothing to do with the crime - acc. to Judge Massei, one of the convicting judges.
Yet you've gone on and on about the phones, using phony (pun intended) "evidence" to suggest there was something suspicious about them being turned off. You've even speculated that turning them off, doesn't really turn them off (!!!!!).
Why say dumb things like that when all the judicial guilter-narratives make it superfluous anyway? For Nenicni - who believes Rudy Guede's account of the murder (no one else does) - the idea of murder did not arise until Amanda and the victim started scrapping over rent-money.
Aside from the fact that the only person to ever have claimed that is Rudy - this also renders Nencini having to invent an innocent reason for the knife making the trip to the cottage - which Nencini did - compounding idiocy upon idiocy. And he's a judge! And he disagrees with your idiocy.
And here is you posting that now motive doesn't matter, because the real issue is that a life was taken. "(T)he reason becomes a moot point if you use it take someone's life in a sadistic manner."
You are the only person who think that. Good for you. Both Massei and Nencini thought different. At least you spare yourself compounding idiocy with another idiocy.
Why do YOU think the kitchen knife left the apartment. Note, I'm not asking you who, I'm asking why.
My feeling is that none of this makes the remotest sense to you.