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SaSunday, December 6, 2009
"Foxy Knoxy Trial" "Foxy Supporters
Impugn Italy and Italian Judicial System
"Foxy
Knoxy" Supporters from her home State of Washington, root for Amanda Knox,
like they do the Mariners or the Sea Hawks, and completely ignore the evidence,
and surrender to their bias, and in an effort to support her, Denigrate
the Italian Judicial System.
Xenophobic Americans also deplore
the verdict, convinced that Americans can do No Wrong, OR Right or Wrong,
they are Right.!!
Further, Senator Maria Cantwell of
Washington,[obviously in an attempt to "pander" to her constituents] wondered
whether Anti-Americanism tainted this trial [ignoring that Italy is the
Most Pro American of the entire EU, and that the Victim was British, and
Knox's Co Defendant is from a prominent Italian family].
Cantwell also said, "I have serious
questions about the Italian justice system" and "The prosecution did not
present enough evidence for an impartial jury to conclude beyond a reasonable
doubt that Ms. Knox was guilty.", although she has NO Legal Training, and
had NO response to "Foxy's" THREE Contradictory and False Alibis. her Bizarre
Conduct at the Police station, including doing Cartwheels, Accusing her
Boss of the Murder, who was tried and ruled Not Guilty.AND that a Fourth
Party was Convicted of Murder (on Fast Track), but admits while he was
there, it was the other two, Foxy and Sollecito, had actually committed
the murder. Sollecito had been searching the Internet "Removing Blood Stains"
Oh yes, Washington State Just this
past week Released a Convicted Killer, who then Killed FOUR COPS, Execution
Style.
The State of Washington best look
at it's own Judicial System FIRST, before pointing Fingers !!!!!
Verdict in Italy, but American’s Murder
Case Isn’t Over
The New York Times; By Rachel Donadio;
December 6, 2009
PERUGIA, Italy — Tensions and cultural
misunderstandings ran high on Saturday after an American college student
was found guilty here of murdering her British housemate.
Rather than clarifying the saga of
what prosecutors said was a sex game gone fatally awry, the conviction
on Saturday of Amanda Knox, 22, a Seattle college student, for killing
her roommate, Meredith Kercher, 21, seemed only to heighten the conflicting
public opinions voiced in two years of fierce international news coverage.
As the yearlong trial unfolded in
the media as much as in the courts, Ms. Knox was often depicted in the
United States as an innocent abroad, a fresh-faced young woman caught in
the vagaries of the Italian justice system.
Yet in the Italian press, she was
a blithe, dope-smoking party girl who had accused a former boss, Patrick
Lumumba, of the crime before changing her story. (She later said the police
had pressed her to accuse him.) On Saturday, she was also found guilty
of defaming Mr. Lumumba, whose lawyer called her a “little she-devil” in
closing arguments last week.
The trial also tapped into longstanding
town-and-gown tensions in Perugia, where residents blame foreign students
like Ms. Knox for helping transform the picturesque city into a pub crawl.
The Knox family insisted Saturday
that this cultural clash and the concern with the gossipy details of Amanda’s
personal life obscured the focus on what really happened on Nov. 2, 2007.
“It appears clear to us that the attacks
on Amanda’s character in much of the media and by the prosecution had a
significant impact on the judges and jurors and apparently overshadowed
the lack of evidence in the prosecution’s case against her,” the family
said in a statement.
The family vowed to continue its campaign
to free Ms. Knox. Asked if they would appeal, her father, Curt Knox, replied,
with tears in his eyes, “Hell, yes.”
Ms. Knox was sentenced to 26 years
in prison, and her Italian former boyfriend, 25-year-old Raffaele Sollecito,
to 25 years. A third defendant, Rudy Guede, 22, is appealing a 30-year
sentence for sexual assault and murder. He has admitted that he was at
the house the night of the murder, and his DNA was found on Ms. Kercher’s
body.
For many in Britain and the United
States, what was on trial here was Italian justice.
In a statement after the verdict was
delivered early Saturday, Senator Maria Cantwell, Democrat of Washington,
said, “I have serious questions about the Italian justice system and whether
anti-Americanism tainted this trial.” She added, “The prosecution did not
present enough evidence for an impartial jury to conclude beyond a reasonable
doubt that Ms. Knox was guilty.”
Ms. Kercher’s family saw it differently.
Relatives, who held a rare and sober news conference here on Saturday,
expressed satisfaction with the verdicts.
“Ultimately we are pleased with the
decision, pleased that we’ve got a decision, but it’s not a time for celebration,
it’s not a moment of triumph,” said Lyle Kercher, the victim’s brother.
Another brother, John Kercher Jr.,
added, “Her presence is missed every time we meet up as a family.”
Asked if they were convinced by the
verdict, Ms. Kercher’s mother, Arline, said, “You have to go on the evidence,
because there is nothing else.”
Prosecutors used both forensic and
circumstantial evidence against Ms. Knox and Mr. Sollecito, whose defense
lawyers failed to persuade the jury.
Beyond the atmospherics, Italian legal
experts said, the case appeared to have been deliberated on the merits.
“It’s true that the longer the trial, the longer the pain, but it also
means that there can be an in-depth analysis of the facts,” said Michele
Ainis, an expert in Italian constitutional law. “I hope that happened.”
“Our justice system is certainly in
rough shape,” he added, “but it has a lot of self-correcting mechanisms.”
In the Italian system, the end of
this yearlong trial closes only the first chapter. Unlike in the American
system, in which appeals center on issues of law, not fact, in the Italian
system, appeals are automatic and defendants can ask to retry the entire
case in a first round of appeals.
From there, the case can go to Italy’s
highest court, which is required to hear every appeal.
It may be years before a definitive
sentence is reached.
The ANNOTICO Reports Can be
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Italy at St Louis]
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