Anonymous wrote:I think she was an accessory to murder, possibly incited the murder but did not necessarily physically commit murder.
Anonymous wrote:
1. There is a strong mistrust of foreigners among the Italian population.
2. Italian culture is rather misogynistic with a strong madonna-whore complex. Foreign women, especially young American and English women studying in Italy, are viewed by the general Italian public as promiscuous.
Anonymous wrote:This is so true.
Only a woman would try to preserve another woman's dignity, yes even if that same woman just raped & murdered her a minute ago.
A Male killer acting alone would never take a look at a bloody naked corpse + have the compassion to cover up a woman's nudity. Ever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yup.
The claim that there is no evidence is baffling. Among the 10,000 pages of evidence presented is, of course, the DNA evidence.” Knox’s DNA was found on the handle of the murder weapon – a knife belonging to Sollecito – and Kercher’s was found on the blade. Whether it’s really Kercher’s DNA is hotly contested by Knox supporters, but contamination was ruled out at the latest appeal. The probability that the DNA on the blade did not come from Kercher was found to be one in 300 million billion.
and what tinfoil hat blog did you pull this from?
Salon
Anonymous wrote:Those stories that she was interrogated endlessly, behind closed doors, etc., are completely, 100% false. But, I am trying not to get drawn into this again . . . .
If you look at the facts, she was questioned for 2 1/2 or 3 hours -- in a room with a glass panel so others could see into it -- before she pointed the finger at her boss (after being told of the evidence that someone of African extraction had been in the apartment).
She grabbed at the chance to point the finger at someone innocent. That is why her conviction for that false accusation stands.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have read the trial transcripts. She was definitely present and heavily involved. Whether she actually cut the victim's throat is unknown. She got off on a technicality, but only after serving time for false accusing her boss (a black man).
So you bought the procecution's story despite the actual evidence. The prosecutor is a charlatan who exploits the fact that there are gullible people like you in the world to push his political aspirations.
She didn't get off on a technicality. The appellate court (which conducts a full review of the case) found that there was no evidence of her guilt. Then the Supreme Court found that the case was without foundation, and strongly criticizing the conduct of the investigators and prosecutors. That's not a technicality--it's the opposite of one.
They reheard the case after it was found the police mishandled evidence (a bra clasp with DNA evidence). She was found guilty before the massive PR effort and pressure from US. I recommend "Murder in Perugia" for a concise summation of the facts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have read the trial transcripts. She was definitely present and heavily involved. Whether she actually cut the victim's throat is unknown. She got off on a technicality, but only after serving time for false accusing her boss (a black man).
So you bought the procecution's story despite the actual evidence. The prosecutor is a charlatan who exploits the fact that there are gullible people like you in the world to push his political aspirations.
She didn't get off on a technicality. The appellate court (which conducts a full review of the case) found that there was no evidence of her guilt. Then the Supreme Court found that the case was without foundation, and strongly criticizing the conduct of the investigators and prosecutors. That's not a technicality--it's the opposite of one.