Wednesday 26 October 2011

'Amanda Knox: The Untold Story' - a review of the Channel 5 TV show


Beware of any TV show with the title 'Untold Story'. For those who have been following the case, there was nothing new revealed in the Channel 5 show. I suppose the title draws in the viewers. One day Trading Standards will catch up with TV Executives and they will change the title to 'Amanda Knox: nothing new but quite slickly edited, go on, give it a look'.

Here's a quick summary of the case for the uninitiated. British student, Meredith Kercher, was murdered in Perugia in 2007. Her flatmate, Amanda Knox, and her boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito were accused. Under interrogation, Knox accused a bar owner. He had an alibi. DNA and fingerprints pointed to a man called Rudy Guede. The police and prosecution decided Rudy, Amanda and Raffaele were all in on it. All three were convicted of murder. Amanda and Raffaele were released on appeal.

There was an expert in DNA and a criminologist on hand to give their views, interviews with Knox's family and reconstructions. The Channel 5 show was slickly edited. No interview clip was allowed to stay on screen for more than five seconds at a time. If Jason Bourne had jumped through a window at one point, I would not have been surprised.

I've always fancied myself as a soothsayer. And I predict that they will still be making shows about this case for years. Because that's what happens when police, the forensics team and the prosecution botch a case so badly that any view on what happened is valid.

Let's start with the forensics team. The important thing about collecting DNA is to maintain the purity of the samples. The team in Perugia made fundamental errors. They didn't change gloves or instruments between collecting different samples, which can lead to contamination of the evidence. The DNA expert was quite clear about this. He had white hair, so he must be a wise man. And I've heard this before too.

The prosecution team were as bad. They concocted a story that the murder was the result of a sex game gone wrong. As all the participants in this case are attractive, it was an appealing idea to the public imagination, and especially to some of the more salacious newspapers. There's no physical evidence to support this. It's just a rattling good yarn.

What the show touched upon, but never fully explored, is the real problem with this case - Amanda Knox herself. How do I put this? Well, to put it kindly, the girl doesn't help herself.

I can accept that her accusing of an innocent man was a result of an over-zealous lawyer-free interrogation. But her behaviour afterwards: getting steamy shopping for underwear the next day, supposedly performing gymnastics at the police station; was bizarre. Her sister called her 'quirky'. There are other names - 'insensitive', 'stupid', 'immature'.

But that doesn't mean she's a murderer. If they filled the prisons with people like this there would be more in than out.

I feel like doing a Kevin Costner impression at this point: 'Let's stick to the evidence, people.'

'Amanda Knox: The Untold Story' was settling on the idea that the court of appeal got it right until the programme makers realised that this was not a very dramatic ending for a show called 'The Untold Story'. So, to end it, they dragged back that criminologist who averred that Rudy Guede was not a lone killer. There was a third person involved. Who, what or why was left hanging. If they had more evidence, they weren't telling.

Of course the real untold story is the commercial exploitation of this story yet to come. Knox is about to become a multi-millionaire.

Fine, I say. Sue the authorities for wrongful arrest. Take them to the cleaners.

But if the money comes via the glamour and glitz of Hollywood, or a rehearsed, full make-up, soft soaped interview on a glossy network magazine show, many will consider that a 'crime' in itself, irredeemably tarnishing the memory of her friend, Meredith Kercher.

4 comments:

  1. Actually there has already been a great deal of money made out of the Kercher murder, by the press in the UK and Italy which have used the myth of Foxy Knoxy to pump their trash, making themselves much more money in the process than Knox might in these imagined movie and book deals which as yet have not happened.

    And the paper in English to make the most money off of this is Mr Kercher's employer the Daily Mail. He has seemed willing to make some money out of the murder over the past 4 years.

    Even as UK public opinion on this woman has been disproved again and again bias about her seem beyond the ability of residents of this small island to escape.

    And now without any evidence that this is the case it seems everyone in the UK thinks this woman is out to get a pay day. So far she has let the window of best opportunity pass. If she was going to cash in quick these last few weeks were a God sent. Already her case is being forgotten and the Channel 5 documentary softly tried to tell the UK population that they had been biased twats in as gentle a manner as possible. In English voices which time and time again comforted them for their mistakes and brutal prejudices. Though Knox was shown to be certainly innocent, she was still the only person made to look in the wrong. Channel 5 was unable to raise a voice of rebuke to its own UK viewers for their own mob idiocy in this case.

    But hopefully by so proving beyond a remote doubt Knox is innocent they will force the Kercher family to give up persecuting one of the victims of this tragedy.

    Most disturbing about the Channel 5 program was the fact that bias continues to close doors and possible explanations for the crime. The show assumed Kercher could not have allowed Rudy Guede in the house, so he must have had a partner, maybe in side the house.

    What is the basis of this? Certainly no one can trust the finding of Italian courts on this?

    No the basis is this: Kercher just had a new boyfriend and never brought men to her room (how they knew this is not clear) therefore someone else must have been involved.

    Okay, perhaps Kercher let him in thinking it was someone else at the door, perhaps she wanted to buy some drugs, perhaps he owed her some money, perhaps she had a romantic interest in him. Good investigation must take all these factors in to concern, no matter how much they may offend Victorian sentiments held over from the Empire. The program seemed to imply that an English girl would never let a man in her room or cheat on a boyfriend.

    The most rational explanation is that somehow Guede talked his way in, as happens all the time, or found the door unlocked, raped her and then in rage killed her. He left his sperm in her body and blood in his finger prints all over the room and fled the country the next morning, then admitted to the police being there but that someone stranger killed her.

    It is an extremely tragically common crime, the most reasonable conclusion to the case, and the one conclusion all the real evidence points to. But inability to accept such a common line of events and the mountain of evidence behind it is preventing closure.

    The real tragedy is the obvious killer has been able to game the Italian obsession with more than one person to get his sentence for murder reduced to 16 years, the true miscarriage of justice.

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  2. Nice review BUT, I see the old stories still go on...
    Buying Lingerie right after the murder??
    Reality: Locked out of your house which is now an official crime scene... no change of clothes or underwear ALL clothing and possessions out of bounds. Visit nearby variety shop which has a small selection of underwear... you buy underwear, you are accompanied by your boyfriend.. there is loud music playing in the shop and the shop assistant who speaks no English. Later tells an embroidered story to a reporter to go with a surveillance video which shows 2 people talking while one selects ordinary underwear.... the story is that they speak of having hot sex that night while getting all steamed up... actually, no chance anyway they were called in for more interviews that night but at least she got to have clean underwear...

    Cartwheels at the interrogation?
    Reality: Another prosecution-fed meme aimed at questioning her sanity.
    After sitting for a while in a police waiting room late in the evening days later doing homework (not the day the victim was found) and doing some Yoga Stretching exercises (something she did every day) led to a request by a policeman from Rome who was also there - asking if she was a gymnast and asking her to show what else she could do. So she performed a couple more Yoga poses. End of story. In popular imagination fed by cryptic media word bites she was doing cartwheels around the police station as soon as she arrived there for the first time... an image that seems imprinted in the minds of millions.

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  3. I agree with imaginaryality. Questions about Amanda's demeanor and behavior should be looked at with grain of salt. These questions were raised by suspicious cops and prosecutors (who got everything else wrong too, by the way) and perpetuated by the salacious media.

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  4. imaginatyality is exactly right.

    The Italians are past masters at using "half-truth" to tell a lie, I believe they even have a special phrase for it ( which I have forgotten ).

    There seem to be no rules in Italy to stop the media printing prejudicial stories that could influence a jury when the case comes to court. Thankfully in the UK we have strict contempt laws.

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