Originally Posted by Kaosium
No, hardly everyone was involved, most probably even believed it all the way through the trial, everyone did.
No evidence of this, you're just making it up.
Poetic license? I think the fact the good townspeople of Perugia got up at midnight to applaud the decision suggests at the end of the trial Amanda's guilt was still a given. I don't think
most if not nearly all the cops would be different in that regard, perhaps even more adamant.
Originally Posted by Kaosium
That was a big part of the conviction in my view, the fact the jury went in there knowing Raffaele and Amanda were guilty.
No evidence of this, you're just making it up.
Which would be why I qualified it, "my view."
I came to this conclusion by a fair sampling of media articles on the atmosphere in Perugia before the trial. Here's
one you may not have seen that imparts some interesting information.
"Most important, however, is the change in Italian public opinion. Unlike in the U.S., where jurors are carefully screened for bias and sequestered during the proceedings, in Italy they are known as "civilian judges," and are free to hold preconceived opinions and to drink deeply from the media well.
Indeed, in Knox's first trial, the jury foreman was a criminal lawyer whose firm had briefly participated in the investigation."
No bleach receipt was presented as evidence at the trial.
Precisely,
but it was still there! In the minds of the jurors who may very well include that in their inventory of information about the guilt of the accused. There was no 'bleach receipt zapper' that removed that (dis)information from the minds of the jury. Some of these guys are sleeping, no one is paying attention every minute and in a trial that goes on for about a year with a long summer recess just where memories came from about the murder can become confused.
That photo was not presented as evidence at the trial.
Same as above, but this time ingrained with two dimensions.
YOU think the case was weak. The jury who saw and heard all the evidence didn't. You have not seen and heard all the evidence.
Yeah I have, there wasn't much of it either. Not of murder. They didn't produce one iota of evidence of murder, and precious little peripheral evidence. They wouldn't have forgotten to leave that out of the 400+ page Massei Report.
Quote: Kaosium
The only ones who really had to 'know' were the ones who perjured themselves, Monica Napoleoni for one
Again, no evidence of this, you're just making it up.
I must assume that the ones who told provable lies might well know what they were doing, and Napoleoni is double-damned because she as Head of Homocide would know that neither the bra clasp or the 'murder knife' was even evidence of murder even if everything was entirely up to snuff with them.
You still have nothing but an elaborate conspiracy theory.
What is a conspiracy theory to you and how does it differ from a historical account or a magazine article for instance?