Headsup: Disney's Hulu - mafia tool?! First warning already sent to the Knox series production team about the hoaxes and mafia connections. The Daily Beast's badly duped Grace Harrington calls it "the true story of Knox’s wrongful conviction of the murder of her roommate". Harrington should google "rocco sollecito" for why Italians hesitate to talk freely.
Category: Trials 2008 & 2009
Friday, January 16, 2009
Trial: Amanda Knox Takes Her Place At The Start Of The Trial
Posted by Peter Quennell
Click above for a selection of shots. This may be the last time Knox is photographed in court.
Some shots available seem to catch Amanda Knox at a gleeful moment. It is hard to know what to make of those shots. Photographers click away at a “gotcha” moment. It may have lasted only five seconds and meant nothing.
These are a few of the less loaded shots. They show Amanda Knox being led in, looking around the courtroom, perhaps for people she knows, and reading some passage in the Italian legal code.
It appears that an uncle and aunt were present at the back or in the balcony. Her biological parents will be witnesses and so are not allowed to attend the trial before they testify.
It seems certain now that Rudy Guede will testify. And Knox and Sollecito have just both said they’re eager to do so.
So far as we are aware, the Kercher family and the parents of the defendants have not yet ever come face-to-face. That is probably an encounter that none of them look forward to.
Trial: Court Report In Italian From Italian TV Network LA-7 DRAFT
Posted by Peter Quennell
Edited: The embedded video has been phased out. The six members of the jury and the four alternates (wearing sashes) could be seen seated on each side of the two judges. The courtroom is at the back of the court complex facing east, away from the Piazza Giacomo Matteotti. It is right at the edge of the Perugian massif, where the ground falls away sharply for several hundred meters. There is a spectacular view in that direction, though the court windows appear to be frosted over here.
The trial is now adjourned for the day (journalists will now be busy filing stories we’ll check out) and the BBC has reported that the next trial date will be 6 February. The other dates announced are: 13, 14, 27 and 28 February, plus 13, 14, 20, 21, 27 and 28 March, plus 3, 4, 18, 23 and 24 April. About five each month.
Trial: The Proceedings Commence: The Times’s Lunchbreak Report
Posted by Peter Quennell
Click above for the story. The Kercher family is not present. Nor are the biological parents of Amanda Knox. It is not yet reported if Raffaele Sollecito’s father is present; his mother passed on.
And note this breaking news on yet another possible eye-witness, near the bottom of David Owen’s piece - the significance here being that Rudy Guede may have known both defendants prior to the night in question.
Il Giornale dell’ Umbria reported that a new witness, a researcher named only as Fabio G, had told police he had seen Ms Knox, Mr Sollecito and Mr Guede together near the cottage Ms Kercher shared with Ms Knox on 30 October 2007, two days before the murder and sexual assault.
Trial: The Proceedings Commence: The UK’s Daily Mail Reports First
Posted by Peter Quennell
Click above for the story. From Nick Pisa’s report:
Dressed in a hooded grey sweatshirt Knox, 21, smiled and shook hands with her legal team as she was led into court. She seemed overwhelmed by the mass presence of over 150 journalists and TV crews - who, bizarrely, had been herded inside a caged area in the court normally reserved for terrorists.
Nick Pisa appears to be sitting in the terrorist cage at bottom-right below. Click for a better look at him.
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
Okay The Whole World Gets To Hear Who’s On The Jury
Posted by Peter Quennell
The need for security must be minimal.
And Judge Massei’s desire for transparency perhaps maximal - he has already taken pains to emphasize that the conclusions of the six Peoples’ Judges get equal wight with the conclusions of the two Court of Assizes judges when they all huddle together to decide guilt or innocence.
La Nazione has published the names - so far, the only Italian paper to do so - and a couple of biographical details.
- Anna Maria Artegiani (51): her profession is listed as secretary of a primary school and she lives in Marsciano. There is a prominent Perugian artist. with the same name.
- Angelico Evangelisti (38): no details of him as yet
- Maria Ludovica Morelli (37): no details of her as yet
- Angela Irene Ceccarini (43): she now lives in Perugia and is originally from Todi
- Andrea Valentini Valentini (35): he is a criminal lawyer in Perugia, and is originally from Umbertide
- Paolo Rapetti (57): no details of him as yet; there is a Perugian footballer of that name.
Several of them have apparently not been following the case, and were uneasy at the wall of reporters’ notebooks confronting them and the coming publicity.
Judge Massei remarked that the role of Peoples’ Judge in this case is a civic duty, and with a dry smile urged enthusiasm for something that does not happen often in most peoples’ lifetimes.
Too much publicity? Perhaps. The Italian papers have new stories several times a week. Periodically some of them do seem to go ape over what look like defendants’ stunts aimed at sympathy.
Yesterday Nicki kindly posted negative comments from Corriere della Sera on Rudy Guede’s shot at fame as a poet. The backlash could lead to more secluded digs for the perps if found guilty.
But frequent commenter DS was left wondering if the perps - one perp, anyway - could still come out way ahead of the game.
Discussing the case on a dedicated blog is one thing, but the tabloid press have gone to town on this story… Even I’m getting sick of seeing Amanda in the press and I’m following this story like a bloodhound!!
If Amanda is found innocent, she’ll be in Italian Hello magazine showing off her fab new kitchen & her amazing figure by the end of her first week of freedom. If she is found guilty, she will be notorious and have TV movies made of her life.
Considering that she will be out of prison even with a guilty verdict by the time she is 50, she will have a nice media-paid-for nest egg to come out to and slip into obscurity.
[Australian prisoner in Indonesia] Schapelle Corby (according to the Sydney Morning Herald libel fans!) is making piles of money by handing all her biography copyrights to her sister’s Balinese husband but then people are more assured of her innocence and she hasn’t changed her story.
Regardless, Amanda will no doubt find a way to profit from this media interest whatever happens. In a sick hideous way, this case is possibly the best thing that has even happened to Amanda thanks to the papers.
They need to starve her of the publicity oxygen that her and her parents so clearly crave by their continuing to feed the media beast.
Monday, December 22, 2008
Perugia: Jury Selection May Be Completed Today
Posted by Peter Quennell
Update: three men and three women ranging from 35 to 57 years old, including a young lawyer, have been selected. Three women and one man have been selected as alternates.
Italian media are reporting that a jury of six, with four alternates, should be announced by the close of court business today. We remain curious as to whether their names will become public.
Judge Beatrice Cristiani is now mentioned to be the second judge alongside Judge Giancarlo Massei, the President of the Court of Assize. The name we have been seeing previously was Judge Carla Giangamoni.
Also being reported is this attempt at poetry by Rudy Guede, six weeks into his 30-year sentence.
My tears are born from the darkness of solitude, full of pain. My tears, my tears. Transparent as water are my tears, but full of truth and love.
Doesn’t read to us like a confession or a reaching-out to the Kerchers for forgiveness. Reader comments under the story on the Corriere della Sera website are universally negative.
He has twenty-nine years and 46 weeks to rework it.
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Perugia: The Jury Selection Has Now Begun
Posted by Peter Quennell
The evidence in the Knox/Sollecito trial starting 16 January will be heard by two judges, six jury members, and six jury alternates.
The Italian media are reporting that Judge Giancarlo Massei has now narrowed the jury pool down to 50 names.
From these 50 he will select the final twelve next week. For what promises to be a 2-to-3 day task, each month, over a number of months.
Will their names become known around Perugia? We’ll see. But preferably not.
Friday, December 05, 2008
Formal Kercher Request That Trial Be Behind Closed Doors
Posted by Peter Quennell
The Kercher family have now formally filed the request that the trial of Knox and Sollecito be held behind closed doors.
The Kerchers’ request was filed by their extremely capable court-appointed lawyer, Francesco Maresca, with the Court of Assizes in Perugia.
The Court will announce its decision on this at the first, public, session of the Knox/Sollecito trial on 16 January.
The trial of Rudy Guede - which was also behind closed doors - largely hinged on evidence from Meredith’s bedroom and from her autopsy.
That evidence was said to have been extremely disturbing to many inside the court-room, and resulted in Guede’s very stiff 30-year sentence.
If the evidence not yet in the public domain really is as sickening as is rumored, it is hard to see the defense teams resisting the request.
And the Italian system hardly needs to prove publicly its extreme caution, carefulness, and fairness. Despite some absurd claims to the contrary.
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
So The Trial Date IS Postponed, Now It’s 16 January
Posted by Peter Quennell
This is a translation of the report from La Stampa.
Meredith process, hearing postponed
Amanda and Raffaele have to answer to the charge of murder
The case against Amanda and Raffaele is postponed to allow for the reading of additional investigations carried out by the Public Prosecutor
Postponed to January 16, 2009, is the hearing for the murder of Meredith Kercher, which initiates the trialproceedings against Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito, who are accused of murder in the taunting and violence against American student (Rudy Guede has already been sentenced to 30 years jis trial having been expedited, ed.)
The presiding judge, Giancarlo Massei, deferred the opening session to enable the parties to get to know the contents of the additional investigations carried out by the prosecutor of Perugia. Tomorrow is the deadline for the submission of lists and texts that will amount to a total of about a hundred.
And a brief summary of some of the other recent developments in the case….
- A witness who knew her claims to have seen Amanda Knox in a supermarket early on the day after the crime
- A second witness claims to have heard a scream on the evening of the crime, this one stating a precise time
- A witness claims to have seen Knox, Sollecito and Guede together previously - if so, they did know one another
- A cut was apparently seen on Knox’s neck by another house resident; autopsy and scenario are being reviewed
- A fund-raising event in Seattle apparently raised $11,000 to help defray Knox’s parents’ defense and travel costs
- And a Kercher family request for a closed-door trial - permitted in Italy for sex crimes - is now being reviewed
One of the great areas of conjecture is whether the alleged defendants actually pre-planned an assault on Meredith. Or whether it was perhaps just a taunt, one that took on a deadly spiral.
There was an apparent simultaneous switching-off of their mobiles earlier in the evening, for a reason not so far explained. And now an apparent prior three-way relationship between the two charged and the one sentenced? This does not look good.
Friday, November 14, 2008
La Nazione Is Reporting There Will Be Nearly 100 Witnesses
Posted by Peter Quennell
Including a possible three new eye-witnesses in the vicinity of the house on the night in question.
And that the lawyer for the Kercher family, Mr Maresca, says they would prefer no TV cameras in the courtroom.
English translation here if and when we get one. But that is the main news in the piece.