daveOS
Jedi
Female Psychopath: Knox gets 26 years for sex murder of student
I don’t know, maybe Amanda Knox is a psychopath but there do appear to be a lot of holes in the sex game story. It’s on the record that Knox was put under questioning for 30 hours without legal counsel that reportedly was a non-stop torment. It’s from this abusive inquisition that the prosecutor Giuliano Mignini came up with the sex game theory that DNA doesn’t completely support and knife wounds are inconsistent with. Given the abuse of office charges PM Mignini has recently been facing in Italy I wonder if he’s not the real psychopath driving this international drama.
This blog review of the book “The Monster of Florence” explains ‘The Mignini technique’ of interviewing suspects that the book’s author experienced first-hand himself :
1. An hour of genteel questioning
2. Abrupt shift into a dark, accusatory tone
3. Loud interruptions. Angry speeches
4. Repeating questions over and over, phrased in different ways and different forms.
5. Frequent reading back of previous answers. You said THIS. Now you say THAT.
6. Sudden introduction of a wiretapped phone call.
7. Constant replaying of that conversation. A demand to explain every single word.
8. Sudden accusations of guilt.
Meredith Kercher case: Insights from “The Monster of Florence”
http://blog.seattlepi.com/dempsey/archives/140460.asp
I don’t know, maybe Amanda Knox is a psychopath but there do appear to be a lot of holes in the sex game story. It’s on the record that Knox was put under questioning for 30 hours without legal counsel that reportedly was a non-stop torment. It’s from this abusive inquisition that the prosecutor Giuliano Mignini came up with the sex game theory that DNA doesn’t completely support and knife wounds are inconsistent with. Given the abuse of office charges PM Mignini has recently been facing in Italy I wonder if he’s not the real psychopath driving this international drama.
This blog review of the book “The Monster of Florence” explains ‘The Mignini technique’ of interviewing suspects that the book’s author experienced first-hand himself :
1. An hour of genteel questioning
2. Abrupt shift into a dark, accusatory tone
3. Loud interruptions. Angry speeches
4. Repeating questions over and over, phrased in different ways and different forms.
5. Frequent reading back of previous answers. You said THIS. Now you say THAT.
6. Sudden introduction of a wiretapped phone call.
7. Constant replaying of that conversation. A demand to explain every single word.
8. Sudden accusations of guilt.
Meredith Kercher case: Insights from “The Monster of Florence”
http://blog.seattlepi.com/dempsey/archives/140460.asp