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Amanda Knox: No double jeopardy in Italy, she has been convicted

of murder for a second time. Now, however, she may be out of reach

of Italian justice, as she has no plans to return to Italy.

 

 

Amanda Knox, Italian Justice, and 'Conviction at All Costs' (La Stampa, Italy)

 

"Convicted, then acquitted, and then convicted again. And at every stage of appeal, the evidence becomes ever more slender, clinging to a small trace of Amanda's DNA on a kitchen knife that she may have used to slit her friend's throat or chop an onion. ... No one wants to engage in an act of humility and confess that the truth at times slip away. ... We will have to read the court's reasoning to see if a trace of DNA suffices for the handing down such a heavy sentence, but the impression that there must be a conviction at all costs is strong indeed."

 

By Alessandro Perissinotto

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Translated by Kate Townsend

 

February 5, 2014

 

Italy - La Stampa - Original Article (Italian)

Raffaele Sollecito, Amanda Knox' former boyfriend and co-defendent in the murder of British student Meredith Kercher. Fair or not, Sollecito, who is an Italian citizen, will have to face the full measure of Italian justice, while Knox, who is American and back in Seattle, is for the moment at least, beyond the reach of Italian authorities.

 

SKY NEWS, U.K.: Murder victim Meredith Kercher's brother says Knox must be extradited To Italy, Feb. 4, 00:07:50 RealVideo

There was a time when one could be acquitted due to a lack of evidence. It was a stain one carried for the rest of your life - worse than a conviction.

 

To be convicted was the prelude to redemption - punishment after a crime. A lack of evidence was a suspicion you could never shake off. If some considered a lack of evidence a defeat for the justice system, for others it represented the highest moment in which justice itself accepted its limits, admitted it is unable to go beyond reasonable doubt. This was justice free of the delusion of omnipotence. Today, although Article 530 of the Code of Criminal Procedure still refers to insufficient evidence, it seems no one is willing to acknowledge a boundary that cannot be crossed. This is demonstrated by the trial of Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito.

 

Convicted, then acquitted, and then convicted again. And at every stage of appeal, the evidence becomes ever more slender, clinging to a small trace of Amanda's DNA on a kitchen knife that she may have used to chop an onion - or slit her friend's throat. Nevertheless, those three letters, DNA, seem to form the magic word that invariably unlocks the treasure chest of truth. We worship scientific data as if it alone is capable of explaining everything. We forget that the data has to be interpreted. We even go so far as to consider motives secondary. Throughout the stages of this trial, the murder in Perugia has been depicted as the result of an erotic party gone wrong - as sexual violence, or in Prosecutor Alessandro Crini's closing remarks,  the culmination of a fight over house chores.

Posted By Worldmeets.US

 

Under these conditions, it is hard to believe that justice really knew where it was headed. No matter, though - only a fragment of DNA is required to save the dignity of the prosecution. In March 2009, the house where the murder occurred on Via dell Pergola was visited by thieves who stole the mattress on which Meredith was murdered, which was possible because the Perugia prosecutor forbade the windows from being barred so as not to alter the crime scene!

 

Thanks to media pressure, and citing an elusive molecule, things moved forward all the same. No one wants to engage in an act of humility and confess that the truth at times slips away. We have put in place a genuine media industry around crime: there is not a single television network that doesn't have its own "reality crime" program. Crime news has become a spectacle, entertainment, a morbid exhibition of grief. Real investigators must withstand comparisons with fictional ones who are never wrong and resolve everything. Who would ever want to admit that they cannot measure up? And so things move forward.

 

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SEE ALSO ON THIS:

Corriere della Sera, Italy: Grounds for Reinstating the Kercher Murder Verdict

AKI, Italy: Justice Minister Orders Inspectors to Investigate Knox Re-Trial Judge

Guardian, U.K.: Amanda Knox Vows to Fight Murder Conviction 'to End'

The Mirror, U.K.: Knox Ex-Boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito, Arrested Again - in Austria

Guardian, U.K.: Judge in Amanda Knox Case in Hot Water Over Remarks

 

[News host] Enza Tortora once said that in Italy, broadcasts of Perry Mason should be prohibited, because by watching television, Italians were getting the wrong idea about justice. Tortora never imagined that things could get even worse. Of course, we will have to read the court's reasoning to see if a trace of DNA suffices for the handing down such a heavy sentence, but the impression that there must be a conviction at all costs is strong indeed.

 

To add to the bitterness, there is another, more subtle disappointment: Raffaele Sollecito has had his passport taken away, while according to the court, there are no restrictive measures necessary for Amanda. She is already in Seattle. So whether you are suspected of murdering a girl in Perugia, or of having cut down a cable car in Cavalese, or of having killed an Italian official in Iraq, the fact that you are an American citizen always provides a certain peace of mind. The reverse situation, that of a foreigner accused in the United States, is much more uncomfortable. We might recall the more than controversial case of Chico Forti, who was convicted for a homicide in Miami, despite the fact that the jury itself acknowledged that there was a lack of evidence. 

 

 

CLICK HERE FOR ITALIAN VERSION

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Posted By Worldmeets.US Feb. 4, 2014, 9:59pm