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Well, it would depend on who you believe. Why do you think Vinci is on the prosecution's side?
The court in Perugia has previously heard that a clasp on the bra carried only traces of DNA belonging to Mr Sollecito.
His lawyers argued on Friday that the presence of the DNA was the result of laboratory contamination and not evidence that their client was involved in the brutal attack on Miss Kercher.
Last week they sketched out a scenario in which an intruder murdered Miss Kercher after being disturbed while trying to rob the house she shared with other students in the Umbrian university town.
Mr Sollecito's lawyers allege that Miss Knox's DNA has also been found on the torn bra. They will argue that the DNA evidence is so complex and confused that it cannot be used to incriminate their client. [ . . . ]Defence lawyers have called the entire scenario a fantasy based on the the fevered imagination of prosecutors and deeply flawed evidence.
OR.............................
"The analysis of the profile [found on the bra] in our opinion shows clearly the presence of at least three individuals," according to forensic expert Francesco Vinci, retained by Mr Sollecito's legal team.
There was a "mix" of DNA with the strongest trace from Miss Kercher but also traces from other individuals, both male and female, making it "impossible or nearly impossible" to draw any firm conclusions from the evidence, said Professor Vinci.
Prosecutors allege that during a kinky sex game, Miss Kercher, on all fours, was held down by Mr Sollecito and Mr Guede, who allegedly tried to rape her.http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/italy/3268373/Meredith-Kerchers-bra-had-DNA-from-all-three-suspects.html
Vinci declared that DNA on the clasp matched all three suspects, and then tried to eliminate that evidence by suggesting it was a result of contamination. Seems to me that it's a very odd approach for introducing the contamination argument, but I suppose Raffaele's experts were desperate to explain his DNA on the clasp.