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Amanda Knox Verdict Overturned
Knox & Sollecito found guilty but Knox is in the US so how does that
change anything!
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.they do, from 1983, this has some interesting points
http:// www.tel egraph. co.uk/n ews/wor ldnews/ northam erica/u sa/1060 7883/Wh at-next -for-Am anda-Kn ox.html
http://
I stand corrected, emmie. The piece i read a couple of weeks back said that any extradition would be null because of the double jeopardy rule. Though having read your link, i doubt whether she will ever be returned to Italy. I suspect that the whole thing will get bogged down in legal mumbo jumbo, with both sides merely going through the motions, until such a time when Miss Cox is drawing her pension and beyond.
i believe he is still there
http:// www.the guardia n.com/w orld/20 14/jan/ 30/aman da-knox -raffae le-soll ecito-l ose-mer edith-k ercher- murder- appeal
http://
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Either Ms Knox is guilty - in which case she is a criminal evading justice, or she is innocent, in which she is being wrongly pilloried and demonised.
Which ever it is, as an adult involved in a serious crominal investigation, I think the gravity of the situation, plus common manners, means that she should be referred to in the media as 'Amanda Knox', or 'Ms. Knox', but not the apparently self-added soubriet of 'Foxy Knoxy' - which the Daily Mail (not seen any other front pages yet today) used as its headline today.
Trivialising either an innocent woman, or a convicted criminal is tacky and degrading, and so-called 'serious' newspapers should know better.
Which ever it is, as an adult involved in a serious crominal investigation, I think the gravity of the situation, plus common manners, means that she should be referred to in the media as 'Amanda Knox', or 'Ms. Knox', but not the apparently self-added soubriet of 'Foxy Knoxy' - which the Daily Mail (not seen any other front pages yet today) used as its headline today.
Trivialising either an innocent woman, or a convicted criminal is tacky and degrading, and so-called 'serious' newspapers should know better.
The US won't send her back. They have a discretion in such matters. For one thing, to extradite, the US would have to be satisfied that the evidence was such as would make a true case under their law. Since it doesn't seem to make a case under Italian law,very generous as it is about admissibility of evidence for the prosecution, the score, even so, being 2-1 to the prosecution, I can't see extradition happening, on that ground alone. And think of the furore if she was extradited; the American public is against the very idea.