I don’t know about the UK TV but it was all over everywhere, here, last night.
The aquittal of murder of Knox and Sollecito. I could talk about how it was the right decision, given the atrocious evidence or the wrong decision, given that Amanda admitted being there and then changed her mind.
But I won’t since it is being written about ad infinitum.
And, in any case, I only get to know about the evidence that the papers wish to tell me about. And, so, I can’t really make a judgement on that.
I will say, though, that Rudi did a runner, whereas Knox and Sollecito did not. Rudi makes more sense than the other two. Especially Knox for, if I had done it, I would have been on a plane to the States before the body had even been found.
And, perhaps there was a really good reason why the mobile phones that were discarded had no DNA. And, anyway, what Italian leaves their mobile phones at home when they go away or, even, out to the supermarket?
No, it’s all very strange and impossible for me to say if the verdict was right or not but that is not the point of this post.
The Daily Mail Online, of course, wanted (as they all did, I’m sure) to be first with the reactions and quotations after the verdict. So, as with obituaries, they must have written it in advance and, since they didn’t know the verdict in advance, one has to write two versions – 1 for guilty and 1 for aquittal.
Fair enough. At the end of it, you have to do this and just fill in the odd blank at the time.
The Daily Mail said, in their online version that when Amanda realised what the judge had said she “sank into her chair sobbing uncontrollably”.
Apparently they quoted the prosecutors as saying that ‘justice had been done’ (as an actual quote).
Both Knox and Sollecito said they would appeal.
Confused? Well, yes, that’s understandable.
There’s a picture on the page explaining how Knox’s parents were ‘distraught after the verdict was read out in court’.
Apparently, according to the Daily Mail, ‘both [Knox and Sollecito] will be put on suicide watch’ and that this was ‘normal practice’.
Of course, the whole thing was a terrible mistake. The headline read: Guilty: Amanda Knox looks stunned as appeal against murder conviction is rejected.
Whoops! Someone may get fired over this. You had, even without any thinking, a 50/50 chance of getting it right but it seems the wrong one was put up.
OK, so everyone can make a mistake and the idea that most of the article wouldn’t have been written before the verdict is laughable – of course they wrote two and I don’t have a problem with that.
However, what I DO have a problem with is the direct quotations littering the article. Some even inside inverted commas – which means they are supposed to be the actual words said. This was, quite obviously, not true. It was impossible. The prosecutors were NOT happy and DID NOT say that ‘justice had been done’.
And this, I have a problem with. Not that I ever thought the Daily Mail told the truth but, to have quoted someone without them ever saying the words leads me to wonder if any of the quotations they use are factual and have actually been said. Or if any of their stories are other than complete fairytales.
In fact, perhaps it is better to preface each Daily Mail story with:
Once upon a time, according to the Daily Mail ………..
uhm, I am very confused about it.
All I can say is that I don’t like them at all which, of course, doesn’t mean that they are guilty.
Perhaps we (read: the Italian media) made up a rethoric and simplistic narrative (she is the “monster” even if she looks angelic etc. they used drugs therefore they could have killed someone and so forth) and lots of people blindly believed in it.
I don’t know.
Yes, the Italian media have not portrayed them as very nice people. F thinks the same. Of course, I read different press and, therefore have a different view.
I don’t know whether they were guilty or not. I think the investigation was not done very well. I think Knox is stupid – either because if she did it, she should have left the country or, if she didn’t, she should not have admitted she was there. I think she was about 18 or 19 and suspect a bit of an airhead. Therefore she said things that would, in her mind, get her out of there.
All newspapers make up this stuff. The Daily Mail is terrible for it. Recently, there was a nurse suspected of poisoning some patients. The DM did a real hatchet job on her – saying she was always partying, drunk, etc. A couple of weeks later she was released as the police realised it wasn’t her. The DM then did a piece saying how terrible it was that she had been portrayed so badly. The newspaper is not so different from any others – just that little more over the top. the headline that Knox was guilty – even if it was only ‘up’ for a few minutes, laced as it was with quotes that couldn’t possibly have taken place, was just unbelievable.
We shall see what happens. Maybe they’ll find some more evidence in the Kercher case?