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Meredith Kercher case

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  • Chris
    replied
    Ally

    No surprise there.

    But just to comment on your remark about "asking [John] to do [my]homework for [me]" - of course (as I said) what I'm asking is that you provide some evidence to back up your own claims about the blog - about "the amount of evidence they ignore and the amount of falsehoods they continue to cling to despite them having been long since disproven."

    You lectured Tracy at some length about the importance of providing evidence to back up her opinions. Doesn't that apply to your opinions as well?

    Leave a comment:


  • Ally
    replied
    Well being that I am the Queen of the straw man and you are the king of the ad hominem we make a fine debating pair don't we? But why you presume I didn't see a post addressed to John, asking him to do your homework for you, rather than just not responding to it because a) it wasn't addressed to me and b) I don't have an inclination to do so, I really can't fathom. I don't really consider you worth spending a laborious amount of time pouring over that website so that you can have the details spoonfed to you. Your contribution to the thread doesn't warrant the effort on my part.

    If you had even bothered to read back over THIS thread you would see that John and I (John mostly, I readily give credit) have already pointed out quite a bit of the facts that are wrong in the blog and if you did a little cross checking you could easily suss it out.

    As you already stated you know very little about the facts of the case, and don't seem to have any real desire to learn them through an expenditure of effort on your part, I am not too inclined to lead the baby by the hand.

    Leave a comment:


  • Chris
    replied
    Originally posted by Ally View Post
    I was quite surprised. Surprised that anyone viewed that crap as a fair and balanced review of the evidence considering the amount of evidence they ignore and the amount of falsehoods they continue to cling to despite them having been long since disproven.
    Well, the phrase "fair and balanced review" is yours, not mine. What I actually said was that it discussed the arguments on both sides in detail, which is rather different. But as I said, I understand that it's easier to ridicule straw-man arguments of your own invention than actually to address what the other person has said.

    Anyhow, presumably you didn't see my post above (addressed to John), linking to a post on that blog and asking for examples of which evidence had been ignored, and which disproven falsehoods had been included.

    If what you say is true, presumably you won't have any difficulty backing it up. I know how keen you are on people backing things up rather than just stating opinions ...

    Leave a comment:


  • Errata
    replied
    I gotta say though, the phrase "marijuana induced rage" just made me laugh til I cried.

    Leave a comment:


  • Ally
    replied
    Originally posted by Natalie Severn View Post
    Why not read the link Chris gave Ally? You may be quite surprised.
    Norma
    I was quite surprised. Surprised that anyone viewed that crap as a fair and balanced review of the evidence considering the amount of evidence they ignore and the amount of falsehoods they continue to cling to despite them having been long since disproven.

    But hey, she's a cartwheeling she-devil whore so what does it matter if she's actually guilty or not?

    Leave a comment:


  • Fleetwood Mac
    replied
    Originally posted by tji View Post
    Hi FM



    They were proven guilty though.

    Apparently even one of the Judges is not confident that they weren't involved - however on the evidence that had been allowed to be presented to the court he had no choice. That evidence may have stood up in court if the collection had been a little better planned.

    Right or wrong I still think that evidence collected (or missed) could have proven they were there that night, but it doesn't matter now because it would all be classed as tainted.

    Tracy
    Hi Tracy,

    And of course democracy is underpinned by a right of appeal.

    Leave a comment:


  • Natalie Severn
    replied
    Originally posted by Ally View Post
    Are you kidding? Why point a finger? If I were in a foreign country, had only rudimentary knowledge of the language, was fairly a weak person and was interrogated for 18 hours straight, I'd probably point the finger at all sorts of people who might have been involved.

    I find it interesting that with not a single piece of physical evidence tying her to the case, not a single shred of actual physical evidence and not even circumstantial evidence tying her to case either, people are so easily convinced she did it. Based on absolutely nothing.
    Why not read the link Chris gave Ally? You may be quite surprised.
    Norma

    Leave a comment:


  • mariab
    replied
    Originally posted by Natalie Severn View Post
    It was the cartwheels that did it for me I must confess.A bit like Nero 'fiddling' when Rome was burning------[and he had caused the fire].
    The cartwheeling was certainly disrespectful and silly, but I have a confession to make: Until a couple years ago, up to my late 20s, whenever I was in a vast space I invariably indulged in jumping a series of Axels in a circle. I might have done this on campus, in the garden of a museum, before taking an exam, anywhere and anytime. Obviously I would refrain from doing this in front of the cameras as the defendant in a murder case, but teenagers and people in their 20s often have a LOT of energy to burn. I frequently travel with freshman students, and they sometimes quit what they're doing and start dancing around, rapping, chasing each other, rolling on each other on the ground. It's typical and certainly not criminal behaviour.

    Originally posted by Ally View Post
    But you take a confused, stupid, vapid immature person put them in a grueling interrogation and you can get them to say almost anything.
    Precisely.

    Originally posted by Ally View Post
    The fact that the tapes are not there, in evidence, despite Italian law requiring them means there is something not right.
    The BBC documentary and some other (non Italian) press coverage insinuated that Knox was being pushed to confess that she was present during the night of the murder.

    Leave a comment:


  • Zodiac
    replied
    Originally posted by Chris View Post
    Of course I realise it's more convenient for you to ignore what people post and reply to a straw-man argument you've just invented yourself, but it really does seem a bit pointless.
    Ally/Elphaba,

    Chris speaks of you inventing a "Straw-Man"!!! He must somehow have found out about how you saved poor Fiyero, by turning him into the man of straw!!! He must be dealt with Elphie!!! Do want to use your Winged Monkeys... or shall I unleash "The Wheelers"???

    Best wishes,
    The Nome King/Zodiac
    Last edited by Zodiac; 10-07-2011, 10:47 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Chris
    replied
    Originally posted by Ally View Post
    No I really can't. All of these people going "THEY LIED: they must be guilty" must have never in their lives been teenagers or young adults who lied to get themselves out of trouble. Man. That must be a nice feeling to know you have never told a lie. Me, who I count as enormously truthful, I've told lies, I don't think I've ever in real life come across people such as yourselves who have never told one so I would like to chat one day, just to figure out how you managed to go through your whole lives never telling a lie even when under duress.
    Of course I realise it's more convenient for you to ignore what people post and reply to a straw-man argument you've just invented yourself, but it really does seem a bit pointless.

    Leave a comment:


  • tji
    replied
    Hi FM

    Originally posted by Fleetwood Mac View Post
    Tracy, you're missing one salient point with regard to the law (well not Italian law).

    The burden of proof lies with the accuser, not the accused.

    Underpinning the idea of a democracy and citizen's rights is this: innocent until proven guilty.


    They were proven guilty though.

    Apparently even one of the Judges is not confident that they weren't involved - however on the evidence that had been allowed to be presented to the court he had no choice. That evidence may have stood up in court if the collection had been a little better planned.

    Right or wrong I still think that evidence collected (or missed) could have proven they were there that night, but it doesn't matter now because it would all be classed as tainted.

    Tracy

    Leave a comment:


  • Ally
    replied
    Originally posted by Chris
    Obviously innocent people do sometimes tell lies, so the fact that Knox and Sollecito told lies isn't proof of their guilt (though the sheer number and variety of the lies they told surely put them into contention for some kind of record, if they are really innocent).

    But of course that's quite different from saying that if someone tells lies that isn't a valid reason to be suspicious about them. Even if you aren't suspicious yourself, you can surely understand why other people are?

    No I really can't. All of these people going "THEY LIED: they must be guilty" must have never in their lives been teenagers or young adults who lied to get themselves out of trouble. Man. That must be a nice feeling to know you have never told a lie. Me, who I count as enormously truthful, I've told lies, I don't think I've ever in real life come across people such as yourselves who have never told one so I would like to chat one day, just to figure out how you managed to go through your whole lives never telling a lie even when under duress.

    And considering I have pointed to cases where people told lots of lies, and they weren't guilty at all, lying is obviously not indicative of guilt.

    If Amanda and Sollecito had told lies about Meredith herself or their interactions with her or stole money or tried to hock her watch or jewelry in the aftermath of her murder, then maybe I can see how the lies would have meaning.

    But you take a confused, stupid, vapid immature person put them in a grueling interrogation and you can get them to say almost anything. The four navy men did the exact same thing as Amanda...after their confession and telling how they raped and killed the girl, the next day they went...wait a minute, that didn't happen like that and tried to recant.

    The lied in interrogation too. They came up with stories of what they did that wasn't true and then they recanted it. No different. It does happen.


    Originally posted by tji
    Also that would be well and good on the night but why did she change her story after that.
    Because people's stories change. As pointed out above. People can be coerced into saying something and then when they get distance later go...wait a minute. People's memories change. Both Amanda and Sollecito have stated they smoked dope and drank that night. It may very well be they don't actually remember what they did that night, and they are creating memories as they go along. It happens. Memories are not the immutable things we would like to believe they are, and asking some stoned drunk to remember exactly what occurred isn't necessarily going to work. Just because you remember something happened in "this exact way" doesn't actually mean it happened like that. You can implant memories into sober people, and it's even easier when someone doesn't have a firm recollection of the events, it's easy to plant memories.

    But again, WE DON'T KNOW her story changed, or how often it changed or in what context. We only know that's what the police said and we don't know what she actually said because they didn't record the conversations.

    Originally posted by caz View Post
    Post #3 of this thread, following my post #2.

    No evidence whatsoever at that point, and only Knox's behaviour to go on.

    Hindsight is great, isn't it?
    Uh actually no. At that point, the trial was well under way and I had whole bunches of information to go on. However, when I first heard about this case (as I stated in a subsequent post, I heard that the prosecution had definite DNA evidence that linked Knox to the crime via finding that DNA on the murder weapon. I hadn't actually heard a thing about her behavior at that point as it was somewhat past the "she devil" media hysterics as I got involved somewhat late in the case. Then when I started investigating, I found at that the so-called "murder weapon" was a knife that was randomly selected from a drawer full of knives (they didn't even bring the entire drawer in to test just picked one at random) and contained such microscopic and unprovable amounts of "DNA" as to be worthless. So no. Actually, I was not basing my initial opinion on her behavior at all, I was basing it on the mistaken belief that when a prosecutor says he has incontrovertible evidence that links victim and perpetrator to the murder weapon he actually has the murder weapon and has DNA. My mistake there. So no, my initial impressions were not based on anything so nebulous as her behavior, but on the belief that there was actual physical evidence linking her to the crime.



    And no, I am not personally offended when this or any other thread goes off topic. I was just trying to steer this one back on course, for the sake of a family whose daughter was at school with mine.

    No need for anyone to get snotty about that, surely?
    If that was your intention, merely to steer it back on topic, but it didn't come off that way to me or to a few others either.
    Last edited by Ally; 10-07-2011, 09:15 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fleetwood Mac
    replied
    Originally posted by tji View Post

    Does it make her innocent, no.
    Tracy, you're missing one salient point with regard to the law (well not Italian law).

    The burden of proof lies with the accuser, not the accused.

    Underpinning the idea of a democracy and citizen's rights is this: innocent until proven guilty.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fleetwood Mac
    replied
    Originally posted by Ally View Post
    See this is the kind of thing that makes me nuts. The cartwheel did it for people. She cartwheeled, therefore she's a murderer. Never mind that one has absolutely nothing to do with another, never mind that behavior after the fact is meaningless in terms of determining anything unless it is specifically related to the crime and the victim, never mind all that.

    You cartwheel, you're a killer. The end. No physical evidence, no motive, no rationale, but SHE CARTWHEELED! We might as well go back to witch trial days and dunk them to see if they float.
    Almost.

    Yes, the whole idea that a cartwheel lends weight to a prosecution is just ludicrous.

    But, the prosecution did argue that they had forensic evidence; the defence produced their own forensic witnesses and argued otherwise.

    Because of the stupid pursuit of demonising Knox on the part if the Italians it wasn't resolved conclusively.

    But, I agree with you for the most part. She would never have been found guilty in a British court of law, and quite right too.

    Leave a comment:


  • Fleetwood Mac
    replied
    Originally posted by mariab View Post
    How do I know she was inexperienced and confused??! Does she look like a lawyer to you?
    Maria, 99.9% of people brought up to the dock are not lawyes. Yet they do not cough up an innocent man. She appears to be a bright girl, but obviously lacks common sense because there was a very good chance that the fella in question would have an alibi.

    Where are you from, Maria? I'd imagine you're not American.

    Leave a comment:

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