Question Author
ems ...
I did have an initial gut feeling quite quickly. But ...
The name of Prosecutor Mignini was well known to Guardian readers. He was well known as an extreme right wing Catholic with a track record of satanic sex fantasies, none of which had ever been proven correct. He had also falsely arrested and interrogated a Guardian journalist, only releasing him when he found out he worked for a national newspaper, and would expose Mignini's bizarre behaviour.
So, when the case first broke, and Prosecutor Mignini was in charge, I thought ... Oh, my God!
And then when, as usual, he announced that the murder had involved a satanic sex ritual, I thought ... Oh, no, here he goes again. Sr Sex Fantasy is back.
When he gave that first Press conference, I was confident about three things:
1. There was no evidence against the two he had arrested, otherwise Mignini would have presented the evidence, rather than dreaming up yet another sex fantasy.
2. He had therefore, almost certainly, arrested yet more innocent people.
3. Mignini would betray the Kercher family, and betray the memory of the deceased Meredith, by bending over backwards to make the facts fit his theory, rather than looking at the evidence to see what really happened.
Right to the bitter end, Mignini would not let go of the hairbrained fantasy about a satanic sex game.
What he should have said was ...
Let's carefully examine the evidence, and try to find out what happened to Meredith.
What he DID say was ...
There MUST have been a sex game. My investigations ALWAYS involve a sex game. Let's try to make the evidence fit in with my sex game fantasy. I want there to be a sex game. I want there to be a sex game, I want there to be ... etc.
Even when Mignini was convicted of fabricating false evidence on another case, and professional misconduct, and was shown to have totally imagined his various sex fantasies, he was still left in charge of the case.
Be putting Giuliano "Sex Fantasist" Mignini in charge of the case, the Italian authorities betrayed an English family whose daughter had been murdered whilst in their country. And, for that, I find it slightly hard to forgive the Italian legal system.
And one thing I will never, ever be able to do, is take the Italian legal system seriously.
Did I mention the phrase Kangaroo Court? Oh, yes, I think I've done that one.
Still, after today, the whole thing may be put to bed for ever. Or we may get another year's worth of satanic sex game fantasies from that fat, dribbling, sweaty, extremist Catholic zealot who passes for a lawyer in Italy.