Some of the glass did "go left" along with the rock. There are two pieces of glass in the following photo.
http://www.injusticeinperugia.org/PhotoGallery3.html
Maybe police took one look at the direction of the glass and another look at the direction of the rock and knew right there and then that it was staged.
If the rock was thrown from outside the window, the glass hit the shutter first, and supposedly was propelled into the room towards the door. The rock hit the shutter second and turned left.
Please explain that, as it makes no sense to me. If the glass was strong enough to open the shutter and propel into the room, surely the much stronger rock would have followed the same trajectory.
And have they explained the freshly damaged inner shutter? The same shutter that has a piece of glass inbedded in it? Perhaps if the police had investigated further, like dusted for prints on the window sill, they would have known that the killer (RG) entered there.
MOO
And have they explained the freshly damaged inner shutter? The same shutter that has a piece of glass inbedded in it? Perhaps if the police had investigated further, like dusted for prints on the window sill, they would have known that the killer (RG) entered there.
MOO
Yes, I will be the first to admit I am almost dyslexic with figuring out puzzles and physical and logistical things. I hear what you're saying, but cannot visualize it.
Well, darn. That kind of 3D visualization actually is my area of expertise. I have no problem "seeing" it but apparently some trouble explaining it. :facepalm:
Maybe it would be helpful to do a diagram.
I'd want everything to be to scale, and I don't have that information.
Have you ever played pool? If you imagine the cue ball as the thrown rock and a colored ball as the shutter, the cue ball's trajectory will change when it knocks into the colored ball. If the colored ball gets knocked to the right, the cue ball trajectory will move to the left.
That information is available. What do you need?
Pool balls are equal in weight. They have spin, are round, and depending on what part of one ball hits one part of another ball, the balls will go in various directions.
In this case, we have a wooden shutter. A rock hits the glass, which hits the shutter and the glass is then propelled into the bedroom towards the door. That is, the glass continues traveling in the same direction as the original direction of the rock. This tells us that the shutter is now open. Why would the rock then change direction by 90 degrees when hitting the shutter that is already open? Wait, it can't be open based on the damage to the shutter. So how did the glass travel into the room if the shutter wasn't open until after the rock hit the shutter? Why wouldn't the glass travel in the same direction as the rock, or the rock travel in the same direction as the glass?
I'm on my phone so I can't attach the photo now, but Hendry (I think) points out some small marks on the outside of the glass that look like someone hit the glass after the rock was thrown to make a larger opening to be able to unlatch the window. Those shards would not follow the trajectory of the rock; they would likely travel straight into the room because the inside shutter would be pushed aside.
If Guede was going to hit the glass with something after throwing the rock, why didn't he just break the window once after he scaled the wall? Why a rock and a second tool, while he's perched on the window ledge, to break the window again? That's starting to sound like quite an elaborate plan.
Page 46
The witnesses Paolo Brocchi and Matteo Palazzoli, lawyers, testified on the subject of the burglary of their legal office, located in via del Roscetto 3, Perugia, on the night between Saturday October 13 and Sunday October 14, 2007.
The lawyer Palazzoli, who testified at the same hearing, and who was a colleague in the same law firm as Brocchi, declared that the broken window was "a French window opening onto a small balcony overlooking the inner courtyard of the building; beneath it, corresponding precisely to our window, there is a door equipped with a metal grille..." (p. 41, hearing of June 26, 2009).
Cont. @ link:Andrea Vogt
Amanda Knoxs fugitive fears:
shes right to be worried
More than six years after Meredith Kerchers death, Amanda Knox is about to discover her fate
Column LAST UPDATED AT 12:35 ON Thu 16 Jan 2014
FLORENCE Is the writing on the wall for Amanda Knox? Apparently even she thinks so. The 26-year-old American currently appealing her conviction for the 2007 murder of Meredith Kercher recently told an Italian journalist half-jokingly that she was prepared to become a fugitive if there's a conviction on 30 January.
Sources close to defence lawyers confide that they, too, fear it may not go their way.
It didnt help that Knox ignored her lawyers pleas to travel from Seattle and attend court in Florence - she sent an email instead - nor that she repeatedly requested to meet the Kerchers, only to be sternly rebutted by their lawyer, who suggested she act more like a defendant.
Then she started a new blog and began blithely responding to comments most recently posting an admission that she had once faked a break-in as an April Fools prank before she left for Italy (a staged burglary is a key part of the case against her).
Have the wheels come off Knoxs public relations machine now that shes safe in Seattle? She may need them again soon, because this appeal differs radically from the first one in 2011 which resulted in her acquittal, but which was harshly criticised and eventually annulled by Italys Supreme Court earlier this year.
There are three good reasons why this trial is different and why Knox has reason to be nervous:
There are some interesting tidbits in the following article. For instance, I was not aware that the law offices Guede broke into were only a couple of blocks from where Meredith was killed. Moreover, the article states that Knox had a hickey but no other cuts and bruises were documented. Rudy, according to the article, also had no cuts or bruises when arrested 9 days later.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2009/06/27/at-knox-trial-the-killer-speaks.html
From Massei:
I googled the address for the lawyer's office and went to street view. The address plaque has the number 3 (red arrow) on it:
![]()
http://goo.gl/maps/3HF9O
It looks very different from the photo I have seen online:
link![]()
Does the inner courtyard emerge from that side street where the motorcycles are? I was wondering if the balcony the lawyer referred to in testimony could be the one the blue arrow points to.
I suppose I could have done it incorrectly but when hovering over the image on the google map, the street name shows up and it is the same as the one in Massei.
I guess Andrea Vogt really is still publishing articles in magazines, this is her latest:
Cont. @ link:
http://www.theweek.co.uk/europe/ama...ve-fears-she-s-right-be-worried#ixzz2qZfRK0KM