1. The police read his diary and it is an excuse to explain away the evidence. Of course he knew they would read it. It was meant for them. The rejection of DNA on the knife has been declared invalid and is part of the evidence.
What you're doing is interpreting his diary entry under the premise that he is guilty. It doesn't change my point that Wendy is factually wrong in fabricating a courtroom scenario involving the diary entry. The diary is so unimportant it wasn't even mentioned in the motivations report.
2. Bathroom near Merediths room:
On the drain of the bidet
On the Q-tip box located at the ledge of the sink
On the edge of the sink
Elsewhere in the apartment:
In a luminol-enhanced bare footprint in the hallway outside Kerchers room
In a luminol-enhanced spot found in Filomena Romanellis room
http://www.truejustice.org/ee/index..._know_about_the_mixed_blood_evidence_samples/
Yes, in three spots of blood in the bathroom like I said. If they'd done control samples, we'd know just how prevalent her DNA was in any other random location of the house she lived in.
I understand you are trying to say that floating DNA just so happened to land inside the Luminol spots that was actually fruit pulp. It is not probable and that is not what was concluded in the first trial.
Again, control samples would prove how probable this is. You seem to think that DNA only falls on the floor if someone has just murdered someone and is walking down the hall, but not if they're just walking down the hall.
3. Phone and computer records showed that they weren't doing what they said they were doing during the time of the murder. Her boyfriend did make incriminating statements about Knox being out from about 9pm to 1am.
The phone and computer records don't prove that she wasn't at Raf's apartment. That is Wendy's claim. Getting specific times you did something at someone's house doesn't break your alibi, but phone records showing you were at a restaurant when you said you were home would, for example. Wendy's claim is false.
4. She knew that Meredith made such a horrific scream that she put her fingers in her ear. An horrific scream was later reported by several witnesses. Knox knew before anybody else that Meredith was sexually assaulted. Knox knew that Meredith was killed in front of the wardrobe without seeing in the room when the door was opened. She tries to cover this up in her book by saying she heard 'someone' else say it.
She knew that someone screamed while being stabbed? Things that can simply be guessed about any murder don't count as inside information. There's a reason Wendy didn't list the actual thing Amanda "knew", because when you say she knew something only the murderer would know it implies knowledge of the crime only discovered by investigators later on. For example, if she somehow knew about the mushroom/apple Meredith had eaten when she got home from her friends.
The problem with knowledge of the crime scene is so many people saw into the room when the body was found. You're tiptoeing around the fact that Luca testified to telling Amanda on the ride to the police station the details of Meredith's condition, and the fact that she incorrectly heard that "A foot was found in the wardrobe", not that she was "killed in front of the wardrobe". Which, by the way, if she had said the body was in front of the desk or bed those would be true since she was in the middle of a small bedroom. She said absolutely nothing that everyone else didn't already know, and some of it was even wrong.
Racism is unfortunately a part of this case. Not in the least because Knox accused her boss of rape and murder. She has been convicted for this and this conviction has been confirmed by the SC of Italy. Why is this hardly reported in the US media? Instead we hear how awe-full it was that they called her a devil. She doesn't explain who did that and why. It was her boss's lawyer who called her a 'she-devil' because she falsely accused him of rape and murder.
You're stretching to make the racism angle fit.
The reason her callunia conviction isn't being endlessly reported on is because most people knows the case stinks and the right guy is in prison.