General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Amanda Knox will again go before an Italian court [View all]DanTex
(20,709 posts)The testimony of the homeless guy was that he saw her near the house the night before he saw a bunch of police collecting evidence. He got the number of the day wrong, but for me at least, I can much more easily remember "the day before XYZ event" than some calendar date from a long time ago. The thing is, what matters is not what you and I think, it's what the jury thinks, and so, no, this testimony does not go away.
It also doesn't give Amanda an alibi. The defense knows this, and that's why they want to challenge the witness. It puts Amanda near the crime scene, and contradicts her alibi that she was over at her boyfriends. It means she is lying (again).
As far as the Italian judicial system, my understanding is that the appeals court verdict is not final until it is upheld by the supreme court. Which means she was not found innocent. At least she hasn't been yet.
Next, the supreme court didn't only object to the appeals court's disregarding Guede's comments, they objected to a whole lot of things. So it's not like the basis for the trial is just that. And even as far as Guede is concerned, by understanding is that it's not Guede's testimony, but other non-legal communications that Guede made that are at issue -- a letter and a Skype call, things like that. Correct me if I'm wrong here, which I may be.
Also, I seem to have googled up a transcript of Guede being questioned by defense attorneys.
http://themurderofmeredithkercher.com/Rudy_Guede%27s_Testimony_(Hellmann)_(English)
I don't have answers to everything. For example, I don't know about the DNA evidence and who was allowed to examine it. I don't know how the dual criminal/civil trial thing works. I was under the impression that the confession came before Amanda was a suspect, so it was actually disallowed.
But in general, whenever I look up on claims that I find in the US media about what a farce the whole thing is, it's always a lot more complicated.