Headsup: To those many lawyers amazed that Knox did not get on the witness stand to head off a certain re-conviction: the best guess among Italian lawyers is that Knox's own lawyers feared ANOTHER calunnia charge if she repeated the crackpot and highly disprovable claims that she was tortured. The tough calunnia law is primarily a pushback measure against mafia meddling which is widely suspected in this case.
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
New York’s The Daily Beast Reports Knox’s Lawyers Preparing Her For A Guilty Verdict
Posted by Peter Quennell
[click above for a larger image]
Barbie Nadeau reports on the fallouts from yesterday.
On a mistrial for the withholding of some of the DNA evidence.
Denied their request for a mistrial due to mishandled evidence, Amanda Knox’s lawyers promise “bombshells” in the murder trial””but prep her for a guilty verdict….
The defense requested that the indictments against Knox and her co-defendant, Raffaele Sollecito, be thrown out””essentially asking for a mistrial….. But the request proved futile.
After more than an hour of deliberation, the judge ruled that the trial should go on as scheduled, dealing a crushing blow to the defendants. Even though the defense’s gambit was a legal long shot, the lawyers hoped that, at very least, it might have triggered a mistrial….
Although the defense’s request was denied, they risked nothing by making the request. In fact, the judge’s denial could set the stage for an appeal if the two are convicted. In Italy, an appeal is an automatic part of criminal trials.
And on the down-to-the-wire situation triggered by Guede’s appeal dates.
Rudy Guede, who was convicted for his part in Kercher’s murder, is appealing his guilty verdict, and the race is on now to finish the Knox trial before his appeal begins November 18.
Because his appeal is pending, Guede chose not to testify in this trial, but anything he says at his own appeal hearing can be considered as evidence in the Knox-Sollecito case””and Guede has indicated several times that he was in the house when Kercher died but that he did not kill her.
He has said through his lawyer that Knox and Sollecito were also there that night.
Guede has several times hinted that in his appeal that he will finally tell all. Presumably a self-serving version, but we suspect any confession might be much-hoped-for by Meredith’s family and her Perugia friends.
We have heard conjecture that Guede offered to tell it like it really was at the present trial of Knox and Sollecito but the prosecutors rejected a deal. Perhaps feeling that his proffered version then did not add very much to what they felt was an already-strong case. And seeing no reason why Guede should not serve his full 30 years.
If Rudy Guede does now finally tell all, we sure hope that he does know the meaning of “all”.
Monday, September 14, 2009
Trial: Judge Massei Rejects Feeble Defense Bid To Throw Out DNA Evidence
Posted by Peter Quennell
So the trial has resumed, amid conjecture that it might last for additional months if the DNA evidence is to be independently assessed.
That possibility seems to have disappeared in a hurry. Raffaele Sollecito’s lawyer Giulia Buongiorno (above) made a request that some of the DNA evidence be thrown out.
Judge Massei speedily and very firmly ruled against. He clearly appears to consider the evidence and the procedures that were followed to be sound.
First, the DNA analyses in question were performed in the presence of defense experts, who did not make any comment at the time. And second, no substantive DNA information was wrongly withheld from the defenses and so the defendants’ rights were not violated.
[Judge Massei] added that relevant documents had been made available a month-and-a-half ago, suggesting that defence teams had enough time to review the DNA findings.
Our takes on the DNA component of the case (which our legal watchers say is far from being make-or-break evidence in this case) can all be found here.
Friday, September 11, 2009
With Trial Set To Resume, New In-Depth Overviews By Barbie Nadeau And Andrea Vogt
Posted by Peter Quennell
Above and below, shots through the windows of the deserted Le Chic Bar, now out of business
This is where Amanda Knox had been working as a waitress and where Meredith looked set to soon join her or take her place.
Now out and online are two long, balanced and well-researched pieces by Italy-based American reporters on where things now stand.
- Andrea Vogt in Seattle PI Online: Amanda Knox trial to resume
- Barbie Nadeau in Newsweek: Nuclear Family Fallout
Wonderful that the Seattle PI with its much diminished budget still manages to carry Ms Vogt’s dispassionate pieces. TJMK’s posters are about equally distributed in Italy, the UK and the US, by the way.
In fact TJMK’s and PMF’s readerships considerably exceed that of all other sites on Meredith’s case - combined. TJMK and PMF between them may be seeing 80 percent of all followers of the case
When commenting on the websites, we hope that reporters do one day make that plain. In itself it’s a statement about true justice for Meredith.
Tuesday, September 08, 2009
The Vilification Of Prosecutor Mignini Clearly Continues To Misfire
Posted by Peter Quennell
In this recent post we included an amazing statement from Mr Mignini.
A number of sources then confirmed that he and we had it exactly right in that post and that the claims of the American writer of the lurid “Monster Of Florence” are nasty, mischievous, and simply don’t check out.
Sources tell us Mr Mignini may have sharp elbows - but he is also very fair and careful, rarely leaks or does anything just for the publicity, does a great job for Perugia (where he is rather popular), and really respects the victims of crimes and and their families - in this case, Meredith and her family who repeatedly sound like they respect him.
Now La Nazione is reporting that Mr Mignini is again aggressively fighting back against the so-far-fruitless campaign to vilify him.
He is planning to sue a Joe Cottonwood, seemingly a publicity-hungry carpenter and occasional journalist in California whose knowledge of the case would apparently not even cover a postage stamp. And who seems to feel he has a license to shoot his mouth off slanderously in Italy, regardless of who actually gets hurt.
The publisher of his uninformed take on the case in Il Giornale will apparently also be sued,
From La Nazione:
According to the American writer [Cottonwood] among other things, “perhaps in Italy there is a hatred of American college students who give joy to madness. Amanda will pay not for her guilt or innocence, but because of popular resentment towards rich and superficial Americans. The murder of Meredith Kercher is one of those mirrors that reflect the prejudices of the investigators.”
The last time that the prosecutor had moved for legal action was in January, when the West Seattle Herald described him as “inadequate” and “mentally unstable”. In that case, in a move that many had regarded as completely understandable as well as justified, the prosecutor saw fit to start concrete legal action.And now the same judge [Mr Mignini] is preparing for a new legal battle after suffering yet another attack from the disparaging “‘stars and stripes”. Mr Mignini and his colleague Manuela Comodi are preparing an indictment for after the conclusion of the trial, which resumes in mid-month this month.
Nice going by the fatuous Joe Cottonwood. For those of a less xenophobic frame of mind here actually is the evidence. A series still far from complete.
Friday, August 28, 2009
Maybe Why Meredith’s House Was So Tough For Some Of The Police-Cars To Find?
Posted by Peter Quennell
Most of the police team seem to have made it with alacrity to 7 via della Pergola on the day after.
They have very fast cars and pretty good navigation. But one or two had to call in for directions.
This led to some ridicule among those who actually think that ridicule helps Amanda Knox.
Their fast route to the house is to head east up the hill from the Questura (if that is where they all came from). Then through Piazza Grimana by the School for Foreigners. And then down to via della Pergola, by way of the famous tee junction.
Click above for the route from Piazza Grimana down to the tee junction (the last several shots there are of the stone steps that Rudy ran up) and then click below for the street sign they would have encountered.
Via della Pergola heads down to the LEFT here. The street sign says that via San Antonio begins to the RIGHT here.
And Meredith’s house is clearly off to the RIGHT.
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Justice V Jingoism: UK’s Sky News Tells Us They Are Seeing Hypocrisy
Posted by Peter Quennell
Click above for the report.
Sky News (controlled from NYC when last we looked! by Rupert Murdoch, above, on Sixth Avenue) says what a lot of Europeans are thinking.
A lot of New Yorkers too. A mean-spirited and dishonest PR campaign and a lazy dishonest media have colluded for far too long on this case. And on too many similar examples.
It is quite different in the US when it comes to foreign treatment of one of their own citizens.
Amanda “˜Foxy’ Knoxy, is the young American woman now on trial in Italy for the murder of the British student Meredith Kercher.
I was astonished to see her whole family, parents and children, invited on [ABC’s] Good Morning America and treated with cloying sympathy for all the world as if they were victims of a miscarriage of justice.
Sky News and the other Murdoch vehicles (the London Times, for example) have been among the MOST dispassionate about the case and among the MOST compassionate about Meredith.
Good on you, Rupert. For this, we salute you.
Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Case For The Prosecution #4: Amanda Knox’s Multiple Conflicting Alibis
Posted by The Machine
The Knox Alibis: How They Conflict
The first three posts on the power of the case were on the DNA evidence, the luminol-enhanced footprint evidence, and Raffaele Sollecito’s various conflicting alibis.
Now we look at the various conflicting alibis that Amanda Knox has given for the night in question. We dont yet have full transcripts and have to rely on what was reported in the UK press.
Please click here for more
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Americans Pretending To Be Italians?!
Posted by Peter Quennell
What this blogger encountered, among other things, in an obviously very happy few days in Rome.
We’ve heard that one before, by the way. Quite often. Visiting foreigners envying the Italians for their looks, their fire, and (now and then!) their real class.
And they can be so funny. And so caring.
Images here are of some of the amazing fountains of Rome.
Saturday, August 08, 2009
Before Mozart, Beethoven, And Bach… That Amazing Italian, Scarlatti
Posted by Our Main Posters
Friday, August 07, 2009
Where Sollecito, Knox And Guede Are Now, Sitting Out The Heatwave
Posted by Peter Quennell
Knox is still at Capanne, Sollecito is back at Terni, and we believe Guede is still at Viterbo.
Knox is probably having the toughest time of it right now. Since it was opened several years ago, Capanne had never seen much more than half of the prisoner population it was built for.
Now it is suddenly full to capacity, as a large number of prisoners has just been moved in from over-crowded facilities elsewhere. In fact, it is possible that the women’s wing is full beyond its rated capacity.
Sollecito was in the very modern solar-heated Terni for most of last year. He was moved back to Capanne this year just before the trial, amidst his loud complaints that Capanne lacks the internet connections for his computer-science homework.
Sollecito has just received word that he failed the virtual-reality entrance exam that he took at Verona University last March. When he was being transported there in a police van for the exam, he was yelled at by an angry crowd when the van stopped at an autostrada rest-stop for what Americans call a bathroom break.
He was bundled back in, and the police van took off in a hurry. No bathroom break? That must have rattled his exam-taking composure, that is for sure.
Guede is in the sex-offenders wing of Viterbo - all three were charged with a sex crime, and Guede was convicted of one. Sex-offenders’ wings have a heavy stigma over them for obvious reasons, but they can be quieter and less prone to violence than the main wings of prisons.
Being taught a trade seems a given in all Italian prisons so that when the perps re-enter society they can be employed fast and become useful.