The bizarre behavior exhibited by Amanda Knox and
Raffaele Sollecito throughout this tragic nightmare has been the source of much
talk and controversy. Although it pales in comparison to other peculiar
actions exhibited by the two throughout, Raffaele Sollectio added to that when he brought his new
love to visit the home where he was convicted of brutally murdering Meredith
Kercher.
Thursday, April 24, 2014
Thursday, April 10, 2014
Curse of Amanda Knox: Realtor says “Italian Horror House Hard to sell”
The Italian cottage where Amanda Knox, Raffaelle
Sollecito, and Rudy Guede have been
convicted of butchering Meredith Kercher was put up for sale in December of
2013. Due to the infamous circumstances, said a Perugian agent for the Tecnocasa
real estate agency, which is handling the sale, “…it has not been easy to find
potential buyers who are willing to overlook the fact that a brutal murder took
place there.”
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
Raffaele Sollecito now admits having questions about Knox’s behavior following Kercher’s murder
As if the Amanda Knox case could not get any more bizarre,
Raffaele Sollecito has upped the ante. In a recent exclusive interview on an Italian
TV news broadcast, Sollecito said he has several “unanswered questions” for his
former girlfriend, Amanda Knox. This adds yet another waiver to the many different versions Sollecito
provided over the years about the same details. In the official story, the part
that remained consistent, at least, Knox and Sollecito both claimed that Knox
left his flat the morning after Kercher’s murder and returned home, where she
noticed the door left wide open and witnessed blood spots in the bathroom. Knox
claimed that she found it odd and just assumed that one of her roommates was menstruating
and left blood behind. She proceeded to take a shower and returned to Sollecito’s
flat and ate breakfast.
Labels:
Amanda Knok,
Kate Mansey,
Meredith Kercher,
Raffaele Sollecito
Tuesday, February 18, 2014
Craigslist Killer, Miranda Barbour, says she “stopped counting after 22 victims”
Miranda Barbour, 19, shocked the world on Valentine’s Day (2014) when she claimed she committed between 22 and 100 murders over a six-year time span covering five different States as part of a satanic cult. Dubbed the “Craigslist Killer,” the Pennsylvania teen is accused of killing Troy LaFerrara, 42, of Port Trevorton after she met him on Craigslist. Miranda said she met LaFerrara on Craigslist and agreed to have sex with him for $100 in November (2013). They met in the parking lot of the Susquehanna Valley Mall in Hummels Wharf, and drove nearly six miles to Sunbury. She said she planned to let LaFerrara out of her Honda CRV but “he said the wrong things.” Barbour said she told LaFerrara that she had just turned sixteen-years-old. “He told me that ‘it was OK.’ If he would have said no, that he wasn’t going to go through with the arrangement, I would have let him go.” Laferrara was killed on November 11, 2013, and his body was found in the backyard of a home in Sunbury on November 12th.
Sunday, February 16, 2014
Ten Top TV Trials of the Modern Era in America
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The OJ Simpson Murder Trial |
Dubbed the case that changed modern
courtroom coverage, over a 100 million people tuned in on October 3, 1995, to
watch Simpson receive an acquittal verdict for the murders of Nicole Brown
Simpson and Ronald Goldman. It was the trial that Lawyer Jonnie Cochran coined
the phrase, “If the glove don’t fit, you must acquit.”
Saturday, February 1, 2014
Amanda Knox’s Conviction is Upheld
After a long wait the Italian Supreme Court’s verdict
in the Amanda Knox, Raffaele Sollecito case was finally revealed on Thursday:
guilty. The judges in Florence overruled her
previous acquittal and sentence her to 28 years and 6 months in prison, while Knox’s
ex-boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, was also found guilty and given 25 years in
jail. But their lawyers vowed to appeal to Italy’s highest court—a process that
will take at least a year and drag out this legal saga even further.
Monday, January 20, 2014
Determining Postmortem Interval: Forensic Entomology
Investigating murders incorporates a host of
different forensic professionals, all scientifically collaborating in an effort
to corroborate their findings. Forensic entomology combines the study of
insects and other arthropods with criminal investigations. In the case of a
forensic entomologist; their job, when investigating a homicide, is to help
determine the postmortem interval (or time elapsed since death; PMI) of a
corpse based on the age of the insects present in the body. To do so, they must
first identify the species of the insect. Each species of insect may have
vastly different habits, behaviors, and growth rates.
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