The Supreme Court of Cassation, Italy’s highest
court, met this morning in Rome at 10:00 a.m. and overturned the acquittals of
both Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito. The ruling means that the case against
Knox and Sollecito will be sent back to be reheard at an appeals court in
Florence. Italy’s highest Court ruled today on questions of procedure, not on
the merits of a case. This should make Knox’s upcoming interview on Diane Sawyer a
bit more interesting, to say the least. An extradition will only be requested once a definitive conviction is reached. At which point, the conviction would then
have to be upheld by the Court of Cassation again. We could be looking at
another year or so.
Tuesday, March 26, 2013
Sunday, March 24, 2013
Italian Supreme Court Set to Rule on Amanda Knox Verdict
The Italian Supreme Court of Cassation is scheduled
to rule on the prosecution’s appeal of the Amanda Knox appeal verdict tomorrow.
In 2011, Knox and her Italian
boyfriend at the time Raffaele Sollecito were released from an Italian prison,
on appeal, after previously being convicted of participating in the murder
of her British roommate Meredith Kercher in 2007. Based on the Galati-Costigliola Report (112-page final appeal document), the prosecution’s appeal
attacks the approach of the appeals court and their handling of trial from both
a procedural and a reasoning standpoint.
Friday, March 22, 2013
13-Month-Old Shot in Head by Teen
Not sure yet that society is eroding right before
our eyes; or that guns kill people at a much faster rate than they protect
them? For every story that the NRA can provide that actually helped save a “helpless”
single woman; I can provide 20 that take innocent life in cold blood. Just when
you think you’ve heard the most horrendous crime—Newtown shootings, Sandy Hook
shootings—another seems to pop up; each more shocking than the next; and they
are occurring more frequently these days.
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
ABC News’ Diane Sawyer Set to Interview "Amanda Knox"
She has been out of the news for some time
now; but don’t think that Amanda Knox is going anywhere anytime soon. Knox’s
book,
“Waiting to Be Heard: A
Memoir” is scheduled to be released on Tuesday, April 30, 2013 by
HarperCollins. And on that very day, Amanda Knox has an
interview scheduled with ABC’s Diane Sawyer at 10:00 p.m. The interview ahead
for Knox is one of great anticipation. It has been almost four years since she
last spoke (at her trial, June 2009, on the witness stand) about the night Meredith
Kercher was murdered, which did little to clear-up what her involvement in the
murder was, if any.
Friday, March 8, 2013
Some Law Enforcement Challenges Dealing With “Computer Crimes”
In recent years forensic computing has greatly
evolved, moving from a pseudoscience to a recognized discipline with skilled
practitioners and guiding principles relating to the conduct of their activities.
The law states that “possession is nine-tenths of the law,” and because
computer based data can be so easily and undetectably modified during its
collection, impounding, and analysis; certain new “rules of evidence” have been
enacted, evolving from more general codes of practice. These new rules deal
with a verifiable chain of custody
that must exist in regard to digital evidence. For example, according to the
U.S. House Advisory Committee on Rules, its rule 1003 (Admissibility of
Duplicates), “a counterpart serves equally as well as the original, if the
counterpart is the product of a method which insures accuracy and genuineness.”
Monday, March 4, 2013
Big Problems with Pistorius’ Version of Events
To understand the Oscar Pistorius case, it is
important to understand his version of events. What happened Oscar? Most of the
time the public doesn’t get to hear the defendant’s version until the actual
trial, which we’ve established probably won’t start for about another year. But
Oscar gave the world a gift last month. Here is what he said happened, in a
nutshell.
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