3. Main Demonizations In Knox’s Book #31 To #60
Demonization #31
[Chapter 17, Page 203] “˜’ ... The knife was a game changer for my lawyers, who now feared that the prosecution was mishandling evidence and building an unsubstantiated case against me. Carlo and Luciano went from saying that the lack of evidence would prove my innocence to warning me that the prosecution was out to get me, and steeling me for a fight. “There’s no counting on them anymore,” Carlo said. “We’re up against a witch hunt. But it’s going to be okay.”
AK and allegedly her lawyers accuse the prosecution of engaging in a witch hunt, of trying to frame her.
Demonization #32
[Chapter 17, Page 203] “˜’ ... I was choked with fear. The knife was my first inkling that the investigation was not going as I’d expected. I didn’t accept the possibility that the police were biased against me. I believed that the prosecution would eventually figure out that it wasn’t the murder weapon and that I wasn’t the murderer. In retrospect I understand that the police were determined to make the evidence fit their theory of the crime, rather than the other way around, and that theory hinged on my involvement. But something in me refused to see this then”¦’
AK accuses the prosecution of misconduct by trying to shape the evidence to fit pre-conceived notions.
Demonization #33
[Chapter 18, Page 207] “˜’ ... Overnight my old nickname became my new persona. I was now known to the world as Foxy Knoxy or, in Italian, Volpe Cattiva””literally, “Wicked Fox.” “Foxy Knoxy” was necessary to the prosecution’s case. A regular, friendly, quirky schoolgirl couldn’t have committed these crimes. A wicked fox would be easier to convict.
They were convinced that Meredith had been raped””they’d found her lying on the floor half undressed, a pillow beneath her hips””and that the sexual violence had escalated to homicidal violence.
They theorized that the break-in was faked. To make me someone whom a jury would see as capable of orchestrating the rape and murder of my friend, they had to portray me as a sexually deviant, volatile, hate-filled, amoral, psychopathic killer. So they called me Foxy Knoxy. That innocent nickname summed up all their ideas about me”¦’”˜
AK accuses the prosecution of engaging in a smear campaign. Did they hire Marriott-Gogerty?
Demonization #34
[Chapter 18, Page 208] “˜’ ... My supposedly obsessive promiscuity generated countless articles in three countries, much of it based on information the police fed to the press. It seemed that the prosecutor’s office released whatever they could to bolster their theory of a sex game gone wrong. They provided descriptions of Raffaele’s and my public displays of affection at the questura and witness statements that portrayed me as a girl who brought home strange men. Whatever the sources, the details made for a juicy story: attractive college students, sex, violence, mystery”¦’”˜
AK still accusing the prosecution of doing a smear job. Pot, meet Kettle.
Demonization #35
[Chapter 18, Page 213] “˜’ ... Argirò was standing a foot behind me when I got the news. “Maybe you should have thought about that before you slept with lots of people,” he chided. I spun around. “I didn’t have sex with anyone who had AIDS,” I snapped, though it was possible that one of the men I’d hooked up with, or even Raffaele, was HIV-positive.
“You should think about who you slept with and who you got it from.” Maybe he was trying to comfort me or to make a joke, or maybe he saw an opening he thought he could use to his advantage. Whatever the reason, as we were walking back upstairs to my cell, Argirò said, “Don’t worry. I’d still have sex with you right now.
Promise me you’ll have sex with me.” But sometimes I was just angry”¦.’”˜
AK again accuses this prison guard of sexual harassment, and possibly coercion. Again, it goes unreported.
Demonization #36
[Chapter 18, Page 217] “˜’ ... A few months after that, they released my prison journal to the media, where instead of reporting that I’d had seven lovers altogether, some newspapers wrote that Foxy Knoxy had slept with seven men in her six weeks in Perugia”¦.”
AK accuses the prison medical staff of violation patient confidentiality.
Demonization #37
[Chapter 19, Page 224] “˜’ .... Seeing how the prosecution treated Patrick in the two weeks since his arrest should have given me insight into how they worked. My lawyers told me it had been widely reported the week before that Patrick had cash register receipts and multiple witnesses vouching for his whereabouts on the night of November 1. A Swiss professor had testified that he’d been at Le Chic with Patrick that night from 8 P.M. to 10 P.M. But even though Patrick had an ironclad alibi and there was no evidence to prove that he’d been at the villa, much less in Meredith’s bedroom at the time of the murder, the police couldn’t bear to admit they were wrong”¦.’”˜
AK accuses the police of mistreating Lumumba, and trying to cover up incompetence.
Demonization #38
[Chapter 19, Page 224] “˜’ ... Patrick went free the day Guede was arrested. Timing his release to coincide with Guede’s arrest, the prosecution diverted attention from their mistake. They let him go only when they had Guede to take his place”¦’”˜
AK accuses the police of knowingly keeping an innocent person in prison.
Demonization #39
[Chapter 19, Page 226] “˜’ ... The prosecution could have redeemed themselves. Instead, they held on to Raffaele and me as their trophies.
I learned that when he signed the warrant for Patrick’s release, Giuliano Mignini said that I’d named Patrick to cover up for Guede. It was his way of saying that the police had been justified in their arrest of three people and that any confusion over which three people was my fault. I was made out to be a psychotic killer capable of manipulating the police until my lies, and the law, had caught up with me”¦.’”˜
AK accuses the prosecution of trying to cover up their mistakes.
Demonization #40
[Chapter 19, Page 227] “˜’ ... Any communication with Patrick would be publicized and scrutinized and played to my disadvantage, especially if I explained why I’d said his name during my interrogation. I’d have to go into how the police had pressured me, which would only complicate my already poor standing with the prosecution. If I said I’d imagined things during the interrogation, I’d be called crazy. If I said I’d been abused, it would be seen as further proof that I was a liar”¦.’
Once again, there was no pressure, except RS pulling her alibi.
Demonization #41
[Chapter 20, Page 230] “˜’ ... “It’s risky,” Carlo said. “Mignini will try to pin things on you.” “He already has,” I told them. The first time I met Mignini at the questura, I hadn’t understood who he was, what was going on, what was wrong, why people were yelling at me, why I couldn’t remember anything. I thought he was someone who could help me (the mayor), not the person who would sign my arrest warrant and put me behind bars”¦’”˜
According to Dalla Vedova, Mignini typically tries to frame people. Did CDV ever report any of these incidents?
Demonization #42
[Chapter 20, Page 231] “˜’ ... I hadn’t considered that the prosecution would twist my words. I didn’t think they would be capable of taking anything I said and turning it into something incriminating, because everything I said was about my innocence and how I wanted to go home. I was saying the same thing again and again”¦’”˜
AK accuses the prosecution of trying to distort her words, which at a minimum would be professional misconduct.
Demonization #43
[Chapter 21, Page 252] “˜’ ... One morning, when I was walking into the bathroom to put something away, I bumped into Cera, and she kissed me on the lips. I just stood there staring at her, too surprised to know what to say. “Your face is telling me that was not okay,” she said quickly. “I’m really sorry.” She never made physical advances after that, but she did once ask if I was curious what it was like to have sex with a woman, like her. My stock answer””an emphatic no “”made her feel bad”¦’”˜
AK accuses an inmate of making advances on her.
Demonization #44
[Chapter 21, Page 254] “˜’ ... “Amanda, the investigators are in a conundrum,” Carlo said. “They found so much of Guede’s DNA in Meredith’s room and on and inside her body. But the only forensic evidence they have of you is outside her bedroom. Raffaele’s DNA evidence is only on the bra hook. If you and Raffaele participated in the murder, as the prosecution believes, your DNA should be as easy to find as Guede’s.” “But Carlo, no evidence doesn’t mean we cleaned up. It means we weren’t there!” “I know,” Carlo said, sighing. “But they’ve already decided that you and Raffaele faked a break-in to nail Guede. I know it doesn’t make sense. They’re just adding another link to the story. It’s the only way the prosecution can involve you and Raffaele when the evidence points to a break-in and murder by Guede.”
Again, CDV seems to think the prosecution is framing AK and RS. This claim was never reported.
Demonization #45
[Chapter 22, Page 261] “˜’ ... Oh my God. I’ve been formally charged with murder. I wanted to scream, “This is not who I am! You’ve made a huge mistake! You’ve got me all wrong!” I was now fluent enough in Italian to see how ludicrous the charges were. Along with murder, I was charged with illegally carrying around Raffaele’s kitchen knife. It was galling. Real crimes had been committed against Meredith; the police owed her a real investigation. Instead, they were spinning stories to avoid admitting they’d arrested the wrong people”¦’”˜
AK accusing the police of attempting a cover-up of their own incompetence.
Demonization #46
[Chapter 23, Page 273] “˜’ ... The first day of the pretrial was mostly procedural. Almost immediately Guede’s lawyers requested an abbreviated trial. I had no idea the Italian justice system offered this option. Carlo later told me that it saves the government money. With an abbreviated trial, the judge’s decision is based solely on evidence; no witnesses are called. The defendant benefits from this fast-track process because, if found guilty, he has his sentence cut by a third”¦’”˜
AK accuses CDV and Ghirga of incompetence and malpractice. She has been in custody a year, and they are only ‘‘now’’ just telling her about this?!
Demonization #47
[Chapter 23, Page 274] “˜’ ... Guede’s lawyers must have realized that he was better off in a separate trial, since the prosecution was intent on pinning the murder on us. The evidence gathered during the investigation pointed toward his guilt. His DNA was all over Meredith’s room and her body, on her intimate clothing and her purse. He had left his handprint in her blood on her pillowcase. He had fled the country. The prosecution called Guede’s story of how he “happened” to be at the villa and yet had not participated in the murder “absurd”””though they readily believed his claims against Raffaele and me. One of the big hopes for us was that with so much evidence against Guede, the prosecution would have to realize Raffaele and I hadn’t been involved”¦.’”˜
AK again accuses prosecutors of trying to frame her. In reality, Guede feared an alliance between AK and RS to pin it all on him.
Demonization #48
[Chapter 23, Page 276] “˜’ ... The pretrial judge, Paolo Micheli, allowed testimony from two witnesses. The first was DNA analyst Patrizia Stefanoni for the Polizia Scientifica. Starting right after we were indicted, Raffaele’s and my lawyers had requested the raw data for all Stefanoni’s forensic tests. How were the samples collected? How many cotton pads had her team used to swab the bathroom sink and the bidet? How often had they changed gloves? What tests had they done - and when? Which machines had they used, at what times, and on which days? What were the original unedited results of the DNA tests?
Her response was “No. We can’t give you these documents you continue to ask for, because the ones you have will have to suffice.”’”˜
Demonization #49
[Chapter 23, Page 277] “˜’ ... The other testimony came from a witness named Hekuran Kokomani, an Albanian man the prosecution called to prove that Raffaele and I both knew Rudy Guede. Our lawyers argued that Raffaele had never met Guede. I’d said “Hi” to him once when we hung out at the apartment downstairs. My other encounter with him was taking his drink order at Le Chic.
Kokomani said he’d seen the three of us together on Halloween, the day before the murder.A massive lie.Kokomani’s testimony made the pretrial seem like a farce. According to him, after dinner on Halloween, driving along Viale Sant’Antonio, the busy thoroughfare just above our house, he came
upon a black garbage bag in the middle of the road. When he got out of his car, he realized the “bag” was two people: Raffaele and me. He told the court that Raffaele punched him, and I pulled out a huge knife the length of a saber, lifting it high over my head. “Raffaele said, ‘Don’t worry about her. She’s a girl,”’ Kokomani testified. “Then I threw olives at her face.”“¦.’”˜
AK accuses Judge Micheli of misconduct in how he handled the pre-trial, and Guede’s short form trial.
Demonization #50
[Chapter 24, Page 287] “˜’ ... We held onto the belief that the law would be on my side when my trial started. I was innocent. No matter how the prosecution misconstrued things, there would never be evidence enough to convict me. And I had the great consolation of knowing that prison wasn’t my world. In time, I’d be set free. I could survive this as long as it took. But I never thought it would take years”¦.’”˜
Once again, AK accuses the prosecution of trying to frame her.
Demonization #51
[Chapter 24, Page 287] “˜’ ... We held onto the belief that the law would be on my side when my trial started. I was innocent. No matter how the prosecution misconstrued things, there would never be evidence enough to convict me. And I had the great consolation of knowing that prison wasn’t my world. In time, I’d be set free. I could survive this as long as it took. But I never thought it would take years”¦.’”˜
Once again, AK accuses the prosecution of trying to frame her.
Demonization #52
[Chapter 25, Page 296] “˜’ ... Smoking pot was one of the ways we socialized together. But when Raffaele’s lawyer Luca Maori cross-examined her about her drug use, Filomena rewrote our shared history. “To tell you the truth, I sinned once,” she said, looking down at her lap. “I sinned.”
AK returns to making accusations about drug use against Filomena.
Demonization #53
[Chapter 25, Page 296] “˜’ ... During her testimony a week later, Laura also avoided eye contact””and it was every bit as hurtful. But I was pleased that, at least under questioning, she didn’t make it seem that my behavior had been out of step with the rest of the house. When Mignini brought up names of guys who’d come over, Laura replied, “Those are my friends.” When he asked if anyone in the villa smoked marijuana, she said, “Everyone.”
And similar accusations against Laura and the others.
Demonization #54
[Chapter 25, Page 303] Everything she did and said””her choice of words, the content, and the emphasis””was to impress the judges and jury with her professionalism. She defended the shoddy work of her investigators. She was repellent. She was in control of herself, sitting in a court of law and lying without a second’s hesitation. When she answered Prosecutor Mignini’s questions, she was clear, straightforward, and self-serving. She was smarter than her fellow officers. She knew the court was looking for police slipups. “We did our jobs perfectly, all the time,” she testified. “We didn’t hit Amanda.” “We’re the good guys.”
AK accuses Monica Napoleoni of trying to cover up assault and police misconduct.
Demonization #55
[Chapter 25, Page 304] “˜’ ... When the defense questioned her, Napoleoni’s manner switched from professional “”albeit dishonest””to exasperated, incredulous, and condescending. For instance, when Raffaele’s lawyer Giulia Bongiorno asked if the gloves police used at the crime scene were sterilized or one-use gloves, Napoleoni took a snarky tone, saying, “It’s the same thing.”
AK accuses Monica Napoleoni of perjury.
Demonization #56
[Chapter 25, Page 308] “˜’ ... On the stand, my chief interrogator, Rita Ficarra, seemed much smaller than she had at the police station. Middle-aged, with dull, shoulder-length brown hair, she came across as reasonable. Who would believe that she’d been ruthless, questioning me for hours, refusing to believe that I didn’t know who’d murdered Meredith? I wondered how this woman, who now struck me as average in every way, had instilled such fear in me. Like Napoleoni, Ficarra insisted, “No one hit her.” She was serene and straight-faced as she testified. Ficarra elaborated. “Everyone treated her nicely. We gave her tea. I myself brought her down to get something to eat in the morning,” she said, as if she were the host at a B&B. Then she added, “She was the one who came in and started acting weird, accusing people.”
There was no formal ‘‘interrogation’‘, but AK still accuses Rita Ficarra of perjury.
Demonization #57
[Chapter 25, Page 310] “˜’ ... Judge Massei asked Ficarra if I spoke to her in English or Italian.
“In Italian,” Ficarra answered. “I repeat that she speaks Italian. She spoke only Italian with me. I don’t understand a word of English.”
I remembered my interrogation, when they yelled that if I didn’t stop lying and tell them who had killed Meredith they would lock me up for thirty years. That was still their goal. I was terrified now that I was the only one who saw through them”¦.’
AK accuses Ficarra of trying to cover up abuse and assault.
Demonization #58
[Chapter 26,Page 317] “˜’ ... Instead they glossed over these facts and used Capezzali’s testimony to determine what time Meredith had died. Based on the scream, they decided that she died at 11:30 P.M. Even though Meredith’s digestion indicated an earlier time of death, they were fixated on that scream. Meredith had been murdered by 10 P.M., based on her stomach contents, but the prosecutors invented a scenario in which Meredith was home alone between 9:30 P.M. and 11:30 P.M. According to their argument, the sphincter between the stomach and the small intestine tightens at the moment of trauma, and digestion temporarily stops. Left unanswered was what trauma in that two-hour space interrupted her digestion””the same two hours when the prosecution said she was relaxing on her bed with her shoes off, writing an essay due the next morning. They were ignoring basic human physiology and hanging Meredith’s time of death on an older woman’s urination habits”¦.’”˜
AK accuses the prosecution of trying to gloss over exculpatory evidence.
Demonization #59
[Chapter 26, Page 321] “˜’ ... At first my lawyers said letting me testify was a risk. I could be provoked. They worried the prosecution would push me to unwittingly say something incriminating. I’d fallen for Mignini’s word-twisting when he interrogated me in December of 2007. I’d dissolved into tears at my pretrial.
But I was adamant. “I’m the only one who knows what I went through during the interrogation,” I told Luciano and Carlo. “Having you defend me isn’t the same as defending myself. I need to show the court what kind of person I am.”
AK accuses Mignini of deliberately distorting what she said in the December 2007 interview.
Demonization #60
[Chapter 26, Page 323] “... The first person to question me was Carlo Pacelli, Patrick’s lawyer. Lawyers technically aren’t allowed to add their own commentary at this point, only to ask questions. But he made his opinions known through pointed questions like “Did you or did you not accuse Patrick Lumumba of a murder he didn’t commit?” and “Didn’t the police officers treat you well during your interrogation? The lawyer looked disgusted with me. I sat as straight as I could in my chair and pushed my shoulders back””my I-will-not-be-bullied stance.
Within a few minutes I realized that the interpreter hired to translate my English into Italian - the same useless woman I was assigned earlier in the trial - wasn’t saying precisely what I was saying.”
AK accuses her court-funded translator of mis-translating what she says.
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OT, but today’s Daily Mail online (April 6, 2016) has story headlined: Former Boyfriend of Amanda Knox, Raffaele Sollecito, is hired as a murder ‘expert’ on Italian crime show, 12 months after being cleared of killing British student Meredith Kercher
It seems Raf made his first appearance on the unsolved crime TV show ‘Mystery of the Week’ during its Saturday broadcast on Italy’s Tgcom24 channel.
Daily Mail quotes Raf as saying, “I have been a victim of a miscarriage of justice. I know the faults of the justice system…” and also, “The usual experts on these shows have seen things through a window—I have lived them.”
His photo shows Raf in a dark gray cold weather jacket and a white lined hood, wearing a pin stripe button down men’s shirt and with his hair pulled back from his face in a ponytail. He has a rather self-satisfied half smile and slight glimmer of light in his eyes. He wears no glasses. His health seems to have rebounded, if his face in this photo is anything to judge by.
It is shocking to think this liar with his Devilman tattoo on his shoulder is now an ‘expert’ on the failings of a criminal justice system. More like the recipient of grace and favor and benefit of the doubt, from a system kind to defendants.
He seems to be getting his TV stardom a bit later than Knox, who is no doubt missing the New York City TV studios. Edda is probably missing them, too. She has probably been searching for her own niche in Hollywood or on air. Fame is addictive. Even Curt Knox seemed comfortable with a microphone stuck in his face for comment at the height of the circus.
Raffaele will eventually say something that will hang him.
Hi Hopeful
Muchos sarcasm in Italy! In the comment in the right column below yours I linked to an Italian satire we’ll post when the translation comes in. Here is the original again.
She observes a slow-moving trainwreck with some glee - as do you! Very interesting what you say about eh Knox-Mellases lamenting their probable last-ever 15 minutes of fame.
Not only has the media tired of being pro-Knox but objections to things she claims pop up more and more. The Loyola Law School talk by Knox against which the protests were strong could be her last one.
In Italy because of the very different free-speech laws there is more restraint but in Commments sections RS is given a hard time in threads that go on and on.
Holy crap, I’m assuming that the show Sollecito has landed a job on is a low rent, public broadcast channel type thing similar to that awful Crime Time drivel that Steve Moore and his equally dumb sidekick Jim Clemente appeared on in the US? I see the G Man is now opining on the Steven Avery case on his website. Insightful it isn’t!
I look forward to the translation Pete but I’d imagine the kind of audience Sollecito’s new vehicle appeals to is of the less bright variety hence the public perception of him amongst the sentient in Italy will remain as low as ever.
What a bawheided little bawbag Sollecito truly is. This is a Scottish expression for an intellectually challenged fellow with poor social skills to match his IQ.
I wonder why he is on the show in the first place.
Dear Deathfish. Because the media likes anything that has a controversial or salacious bent to it. That’s Sollecito of course. ie Did he or didn’t he? Little drug addict knife boy will fade into obscurity, at least as far as TV is concerned. later they will both hit the news because people do not like being taken for a ride and being fooled as to innocence. Governments don’t either
On another note Knox and her pedophile supporters refuse to read this site, and that’s fine because when the shit finally hits the fan it will be too late. Surprise!!!
The more I read the book the more I can’t believe so many people believe her.
It’s so one sided. And she comes across as (unsurprisingly) totally self centred.
Her negative portrayal of the Italian police is so obviously exaggerated.
And as Chimera says, she didn’t log any complaints at the time.
If you can bear it, Poxy Knoxy has her latest two West Seattle Herald offerings up on her blog.
The penultimate piece is a whiny “poor me” bit of rubbish about the anniversary of the supreme court’s perverse ruling in her favour. Not a mention or hint of Meredith anywhere in sight. Her hatred clearly still burns incandescent.
The most recent piece is a meandering, metaphor strewn pile of manure which suggests to me that she’s a single lady again. And if she isn’t, she’s certainly letting the latest dupe know that he’s as nothing compared to her first love.
She doesn’t seem at all happy. Which is nice.
Of course she write this drivel in the safety of her own apartment which she seldom leaves, and then only to drive around. She writes this stuff, which is just a rehash of what she has written before anyway, since she has no concept of originality at all. Face the facts here, Amanda Knox is a failure as a human being. After she has regurgitated the slop which she believes is relevant she simply emails it over rather than risk going out. She is scared to be out on the street especially after dark because she knows that there are people gunning for her. One way or the other it’s only a matter of time before she hits the headlines in the obituary column anyway. It’s called the ‘worm of guilt’ that eats away at the internal organs of an individual. This starts with simple depression which becomes paranoia. There is no escape for Knox. Her old defense of poor little me won’t work because as time goes by more and more people will know she is guilty and as a result she will be dismissed vilified and shunned even more. Happiness is something she will never experience and I for one celebrate this fact.
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