Is Amanda Knox guilty?
#42
Posted 2014-July-23, 00:40
blackshoe, on 2014-July-22, 22:38, said:
Why are we wasting our time discussing a game with 52 coloured cards and bidding boxes? I personally find this case fascinating but I know that it is very unlikely to have any effect on me (I am unlikely to meet AK or RC and they are unlikely to kill or hurt me even if we do meet, whether or not they are guilty).
George Carlin
#43
Posted 2014-July-23, 01:08
Fluffy, on 2014-July-22, 13:45, said:
Tbf he quoted the defence argument that it must have been the cat that operated the phone while they were asleep
But I agree with Csaba. This story is fascinating
#44
Posted 2014-July-23, 07:11
helene_t, on 2014-July-23, 01:08, said:
But I agree with Csaba. This story is fascinating
No! No! No! I refuse to be dragged into this!
She needs a spiffy name. Hurricane has already been used. How about Amanda "Tornado" Knox?
Oh, I am being sucked in! Help!
#45
Posted 2014-July-23, 08:54
George Carlin
#46
Posted 2014-July-23, 11:07
#47
Posted 2014-July-23, 12:02
mike777, on 2014-July-23, 11:07, said:
We have the same problems many places in the US. Seems like a stretch to indict "the entire Italian system of Justice."
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#48
Posted 2014-July-23, 14:07
#49
Posted 2014-July-23, 14:32
"Italy does not try anybody by a jury of peers"
"...an Italian trial, including the preliminary investigations, preliminary hearing, trial and appeals, can last several years. To keep a citizen — who continues to work..."
http://en.wikipedia....minal_Procedure
One reason, if accurate, may be:
"The legal system grinds very slowly and it takes years for a case to come to court; the average time between indictment and a court judgement is ten years, and eight out of ten convictions involving prison terms never take effect"
#50
Posted 2014-July-23, 23:46
In other words, in my view attempts to analyze the result of a police investigation and subsequent trial ought not to be done without full access to the record and without training in how the system works.
So my vote, were I to have one, is that I suspect that she is guilty but am not so convinced that I would vote to convict in the very improbable scenario where I was called upon to vote, based on what was made available here.
#51
Posted 2014-July-24, 00:36
that in our lifetimes Italy may break up into smaller city/states. The discussion that this may be a positive.
Losing faith in the justice institution is just one factor. Losing faith in the Italy version of the IRS is another. Losing faith that the executive and legislature can succeed.
to focus on a light fixture means you lose focus on the big picture.
#52
Posted 2014-July-24, 08:08
gwnn, on 2014-July-23, 08:54, said:
I have thought a bit about this. My thoughts:
I don't know anything at all about the Italian legal system. I don't know much about the American system but from the little experience I have had with it, it is clearly best to avoid it. I had to look up who Amanda Knox was. Of course I don't think it's funny that someone got her throat slit, I don't think any of the many violent deaths that occur every day are funny, Somehow this has captured people's interest, it hasn't captured mine, I find it bizarre that people are voting on whether or not she is guilty, This thread is not for me, it is for others, and I am happy to withdraw any comment that I have made, no offense was intended, and I will just stay out of it. Of all the comments so far, those of mikeh come closest to my views.