Quite shocked that there's not (that I'm aware of) a thread about this.
Having followed the case closely (yes, because I fancy her) I reckon there's still a tiny bit of doubt to her innocence. The second trial was at least fairer than the joke of a first however. If she is completely innocent then the Italian police, and specifically Giuliano Mignini have got a lot to answer for. IF.
Thoughts?
Amanda Knox
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“I got lost in the mirror, wondering what could have been, I couldn’t help but kill her, but I couldn’t kill the dream.”
No data, no infos, except media flash (or even longer articles) but that's not reliable sources of facts, so no thoughts here. Even if she's not that innocent Italian Polizia and prosecutors really f**ked up this case at, and even from, the beginning- they didn't secure the evidence properly.
Guilty ()
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Don't care (x)
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Fair enough.DocSommer wrote:Guilty ()
Not guilty ()
Undecided ()
Don't care (x)
“I got lost in the mirror, wondering what could have been, I couldn’t help but kill her, but I couldn’t kill the dream.”
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Gollum's Cock wrote:Embarrisingly interesting story to follow.
I would do her though....
“I got lost in the mirror, wondering what could have been, I couldn’t help but kill her, but I couldn’t kill the dream.”
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Same here, although I think her conviction for perjury was upheld, so her time spent inside was for that offence.Being645 wrote:same here ... ...Dan wrote:Didn't follow the story closely enough to be able to judge (x)
"i'm talking about god, devil, hell, do you understand, finally?"
I guess it shows how the press manipulates you - the way I understood it was that there was a tiny bit of doubt to her guilt, so in dubio pro reo, they had to let her go.Purple Light wrote:Quite shocked that there's not (that I'm aware of) a thread about this.
Having followed the case closely (yes, because I fancy her) I reckon there's still a tiny bit of doubt to her innocence. The second trial was at least fairer than the joke of a first however. If she is completely innocent then the Italian police, and specifically Giuliano Mignini have got a lot to answer for. IF.
Thoughts?
We were obviously reading two different newspapers
Anyway, I will never understand how people in such situations can hire PR agents, write memoirs and present irrelevant "humane" details of their petty lives to the press
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Agreed.DeWinter wrote:Reminds me of the Barrymore Pool Party. I've always been sure he knew what happened but kept quiet out of self-preservation. This sounds similar to me.
*edit to add: it's all very well Knox and her family going on about how they've been put through hell, or whatever it is they said, but FFS Meredith Kercher is dead. And if Amanda Knox didn't kill her, she sure as hell knows a lot more than she's saying.
The fundamental cause of the trouble is that in the modern world the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt.
—Bertrand Russell
—Bertrand Russell
Well, didn't Knox admit to perjury anyway? By trying to implicate her boss in the murder? So she's not the most easy person to sympathise with or believe. If we're indulging in pure speculation, if she wasn't involved in the killing, she did something she's clearly unwilling to admit to. I suspect she came across her dead or dying and stole from her. By all accounts there were money rows between them.markfiend wrote: Agreed.
*edit to add: it's all very well Knox and her family going on about how they've been put through hell, or whatever it is they said, but FFS Meredith Kercher is dead. And if Amanda Knox didn't kill her, she sure as hell knows a lot more than she's saying.
In the Barrymore case reading between the lines it was a drugged-up sex party where things got too extreme for the guy who died and when he tried to get away he either fell or was shoved into the pool and drowned. The sight of Barrymore's "poor me" face for years after drove me round the twist with irritation.
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About in dubio pro reo- it's prosecutors job to prove, without any- even bit bit of shade- of doubt, that person that we- people, represented by prosecutor- are going to put in jail is guilty. And I'm sorry to hear that some of HLers proudly wearing Human Right Watch togas are for throwing people in jail just because 'it's clear'. If it's clear then why it wasn't proved on level of facts and not on level of emotions?
You've fallen in love with her have n't you...Bartek wrote:About in dubio pro reo- it's prosecutors job to prove, without any- even bit bit of shade- of doubt, that person that we- people, represented by prosecutor- are going to put in jail is guilty. And I'm sorry to hear that some of HLers proudly wearing Human Right Watch togas are for throwing people in jail just because 'it's clear'. If it's clear then why it wasn't proved on level of facts and not on level of emotions?
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This is very true. I'm sure she did something but I'm glad I wasn't on the jury.Bartek wrote:About in dubio pro reo- it's prosecutors job to prove, without any- even bit bit of shade- of doubt, that person that we- people, represented by prosecutor- are going to put in jail is guilty. And I'm sorry to hear that some of HLers proudly wearing Human Right Watch togas are for throwing people in jail just because 'it's clear'. If it's clear then why it wasn't proved on level of facts and not on level of emotions?
All in all, I think an acquittal is probably the correct verdict.
The fundamental cause of the trouble is that in the modern world the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt.
—Bertrand Russell
—Bertrand Russell