Jumat, 14 Oktober 2011

Phone Hacking: Police 'Knew Milly Was Victim' - Sky News

4:52am UK, Friday October 14, 2011

Police who investigated the murder of Milly Dowler have been accused of knowing as long ago as 2002 that the schoolgirl's phone was hacked.

POLICE Milly 2 RT

Milly was abducted and murdered by ex-bouncer Levi Bellfield

The Dowler family's lawyer, Mark Lewis, told Sky News the claim, reported in The Independent, raised serious questions about the conduct of Surrey Police.

Detectives involved with the case were reportedly informed nine years ago that the News Of The World (NOTW) had accessed the missing 13-year-old's voicemails.

But it is claimed the force did not investigate or take any action.

Allegations that the murdered teenager's phone messages were hacked did not emerge publicly until early July this year.

Around three weeks later it emerged that in 2002 Surrey Police had removed a detective from the probe into her disappearance after the officer passed on details of the case to a friend.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) is currently investigating an allegation that a Surrey officer passed on information about the search for Milly to the News Of The World in 2002.

Mounting allegations about practices at the Sunday tabloid during the summer led to it being shut down after 168 years.

The Dowler family

The Dowlers have secured compensation from NOTW owner News International

Mr Lewis told Sky News: "In 2011 the Metropolitan Police started looking at phone hacking, or started looking at phone hacking properly.

"But between 2002 and 2011, obviously there's a nine-year period and you've got to ask the question why Surrey Police, they knew of some what appears to be criminal activity, and don't appear to have done anything for it."

A spokeswoman for Surrey Police said: "In 2002, Surrey Police's priority was to find Milly and then to find out what had happened to her and to bring her killer to justice.

"Clearly there was a huge amount of professional interaction between Surrey Police and the media throughout that time.

"At this time, we must respect the primacy of the Metropolitan Police Service investigation into phone hacking to which we are providing all relevant information about the Milly Dowler case.

"To prevent prejudicing this inquiry, or any prosecutions which may result from it, we are unable to put all the facts into the public domain at this stage."

Surrey Police maintained that there was no evidence to suggest the detective constable had passed on information to a journalist - instead he had been talking to a retired police officer friend.

Israeli soldier swaps raise questions - USA Today

"A state that goes to war has to show that it cares about its troops," said Martin van Creveld, an Israeli scholar who has written about defense issues.

Analysts say the policy reflects the unique relationship between the Israeli government and its citizens. In a state where nearly everyone serves in the military, the swap demonstrates that Israel will go to any length to protect its soldiers.

Israel this week said it had agreed to release more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for soldier Gilad Shalit, who is being held by Hamas, a militant organization that governs Gaza and is considered by the United States and Europe to be a terrorist group.

Talks had been going on for years over Shalit, as Egyptian officials served as mediators.

Shalit was captured in 2006 in a cross-border raid and held in Gaza. His case drew enormous public sympathy and his welfare has riveted the nation.

"Gilad Shalit is like a son to each and every one of us," Michael Oren, Israel's ambassador to the United States, told CNN.

"Our soldiers have to know that when we send them out to the field of battle to risk their lives for us, … if, God forbid, they fall captive, that the state of Israel is going to do everything in its power to try to get them back," Oren, said.

Israel has approved similar prisoner swaps in recent years. In 2008, it exchanged one of its most reviled prisoners for the bodies of two Israeli soldiers captured and killed in Hezbollah's cross-border incursion that sparked a 2006 war between Israel and the Lebanon-based militia along Israel's northern border.

Oren said Israel did not negotiate directly with Hamas in the Shalit case but worked through mediators that included Egyptians and Europeans.

The United States has a strict policy against negotiating with terrorist groups on the belief that such deals will only encourage other terrorist acts. Yet, it has established private contacts with militant groups in the past, such as in Iraq.

Israel recognizes that trades might encourage new acts of terrorism, and the swaps often trigger debates over the risks involved in releasing convicted terrorists. "They realize it has a price, and they're willing to pay it," said Daniel Byman, author of A High Price: the Triumphs & Failures of Israeli Counterterrorism. "The problem is the price keeps getting bigger."

Still, there is broad agreement in Israeli society that it is OK to negotiate even if there is often debate over the terms of the deals. "They've done this enough so the principle is accepted," Byman said.

EU Eases Visa Rules for Turks - Wall Street Journal

ISTANBUL—The European Union on Thursday eased visa procedures for Turkish citizens, just a day after Turkey again raised onerous visa requirements for its businessmen and citizens as a key source of friction in the relationship.

Under changes announced Thursday by the European Commission, EU consulates in Turkey will now have uniform lists of documents they can ask visa applicants to provide.

Turkey, which started negotiating for EU membership six years ago and has had a customs union with the bloc since the mid-1990s, has become increasingly impatient as the bloc has eased visa requirements for countries in the Balkans and elsewhere, but not Turkey.

Responding to the move in a phone interview Thursday evening, Turkey's EU minister Egemen Bagis—who had attacked Brussels over the visa issue Wednesday—welcomed the move, but said it wasn't enough.

"This is a very good first step, but the point we want to get to is for Turkish citizens to be able to travel to Europe without a visa," Mr. Bagis said in a phone interview. "Turks are the only citizens of a country negotiating for [EU] membership who need a visa to travel to the EU."

Mr. Bagis said the commission had promised him that further partial steps would follow, namely that in future Turks would be able to get multiple-entry, instead of just single-entry, visas to the EU's visa-free Schengen area, and that offices would be set up in Turkey to ease the process. EU citizens don't need a visa to visit Turkey.

Resistance to easing visa restrictions for Turks has come from EU governments rather than the European Commission, Turkish officials say. Turkey has a population of 74 million and income levels much lower than in core EU countries. Governments have worried over a potential flood of Turkish immigration that would be politically unpopular at home.

Turkey's economic success over the past decade, which has seen gross domestic product per capita triple to around $10,000, played a role in Thursday's decision, according to Mr. Bagis. "It is not enough to be right, you have to be strong and Turkey has become stronger," Mr. Bagis said.

Turkish businessmen in particular have long complained that while their exports and investments are welcome in the EU, they are not. The EU is by far Turkey's largest trading partner.

"We know cases when Turkish businessmen were prevented from coming to fairs in Europe or were given only two or three-day visas for one-week events," said Bahadir Kaleagasi, Brussels-based international coordinator for TUSIAD, Turkey's main business association. "Countries could even require for land registry documents."

An EU official said the change had been in the works for some time and was designed to address such complaints.

"Some countries could ask for marriage certificates. Military certificates could be asked from young men who were suspected of trying to escape [compulsory military service in the] Turkish army," said Erwan Marteil, Counselor in the European Commission's Ankara office.

The new rules on visa documentation entered into force immediately Thursday and will apply to all of the Schengen visa area, which covers more than 25 European countries, including several such as Iceland that aren't EU members.

How to Prepare for iOS 5 - eTaiwan News

Apple has released a major upgrade to its operating system for iPhones and iPads. Called iOS 5, the new software, which is a free download, has more than 200 improvements according to its maker.

Here's one that alone makes it worth installing: You know how when you get a new message while not using your iPhone or iPad, a blue box pops up with the message, but then the next message that comes in replaces it? Now, iOS 5 keeps a list of all your notifications that you can check when you get back to your phone or tablet.

But before you start the upgrade, please take a few steps to prevent an awkward accident that erases data from your device.

Sync your iPhone or iPad – Connect your phone or tablet to your computer. Using iTunes, press the Sync button to make sure your computer has an up-to-date copy of all the personal data on your phone. Most important, this will save your contact list in case it somehow gets lost.

Backup your iPhone or iPad – In iTunes, right-click on the name of your iPhone or iPad. Select the Back Up option. That will provide an extra level of safe recovery if your favorite gadget somehow gets broken by the update. In theory, a simple sync will do and a total data loss won't happen. But in practice, it's just a few clicks and a couple of minutes to make sure you don't lose anything.

Backup your computer – Are you going to set up iCloud, the new Apple service that stores all your music and other data on Apple's servers? If so, backup your computer first, because iCloud requires a software update to the operating system your Mac – a move that raises red flags to any tech support guy (I used to be one.) Plug in an external USB drive and use the Time Machine app to create a backup of your Mac. You probably won't need it, but you'll have peace of mind.

Pick your iCloud master device – Again, if you're going to use iCloud, it will ask you to choose one Apple device to serve as the master copy. This can be a Mac, an iPhone an iPad, or an iPod Touch. Make sure that device has all the contacts and calendar entries you want synced to your other gadgets. You could put them in later, but now seems like a good time to spend a few minutes making sure you're organized.

Go ahead and update – On Wednesday, many early adopters who tried to install iOS 5 were stopped in mid-update by what appears to have been server overload at Apple. Today, though, the barrage of complaints on Twitter had stopped as of Wednesday night. (Apple refuses to tell me what's going on, which is why I'm using Twitter to monitor the situation.) It seems safe to go ahead and update now.

In Gadhafi's Birthplace, Loyalists Find Shaky Refuge - NPR

Anti-Gadhafi fighters point their guns at a carpet depicting Moammar Gadhafi after taking the village of Abu Hadi, the deposed Libyan leader's birthplace, on Oct. 3. Regime loyalists who fled to the village find themselves grappling with the realities of a new nation.
Enlarge Bela Szandelszky/AP

Anti-Gadhafi fighters point their guns at a carpet depicting Moammar Gadhafi after taking the village of Abu Hadi, the deposed Libyan leader's birthplace, on Oct. 3. Regime loyalists who fled to the village find themselves grappling with the realities of a new nation.

Bela Szandelszky/AP

Anti-Gadhafi fighters point their guns at a carpet depicting Moammar Gadhafi after taking the village of Abu Hadi, the deposed Libyan leader's birthplace, on Oct. 3. Regime loyalists who fled to the village find themselves grappling with the realities of a new nation.

Many civilians have fled the fighting in the besieged Libyan city of Sirte in recent days and have ended up in a nearby village, which has one distinction: It's where deposed Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi was born. But Sirte residents are not the only ones finding shelter there.

Before rebel forces marched into Tripoli, the Libyan diplomat, who doesn't want his name used for fear of reprisals, had a nice life: a villa in Tripoli, another house in Sirte, very powerful friends and family. After the rebel takeover, residents in his Tripoli neighborhood targeted him because he is actually Gadhafi's cousin.

"They destroyed my house; they took all my things; they threw me out on the street with nothing. All I have is the clothes on my back," he says in Arabic. "No documents, no money, nothing."

So he and his family went to Sirte, Gadhafi's stronghold. But fighting came there, too, following them like a curse.

The diplomat's wife says a rocket hit their house, killing one of their daughters, only a few days ago. She sobs and asks where God's mercy is now.

"For 40 years, we've had peace here and now they want freedom?" she says. "Is this their freedom?"

In their latest move, the family ended up in the village of Abu Hadi, Gadhafi's birthplace. Under his rule, it became a garrison town, housing members of his Republican Guard and military officers. Most of those people fled, leaving vacant homes.

In a stunning fall from grace, this is now where the diplomat and his family find themselves, squatting in someone else's home, eking out an existence.

"I think my future black," he says in English.

'No One Wants To Help Us'

There are winners and losers in every war. Abu Hadi has become a refuge for those who can't or don't want to be a part of the "new" Libya. Some of these people may have blood on their hands. Others may not. But what happens to them will help determine whether the new Libyan government lives up to its democratic aspirations. For now, though, Abu Hadi has become a symbol of the worst excesses of the conflict here.

There are many burned houses in Abu Hadi. Anti-Gadhafi fighters swept through the village 10 days ago and torched and looted at will. Residents say the rebel fighters are out for revenge.

Resident Mohammed, who was a government worker in Sirte, says there is theft and killing everywhere. He says life in Abu Hadi is unsustainable, and looks unlikely to improve. But there is no where else to go.

"We have no electricity, no water, no hospitals no schools," he says in Arabic. "If someone gets hurts, we have nowhere to take them. It takes hours to get to the nearest store and back. And we have no gas.

"There are a lot of checkpoints and we get harassed. No one wants to help us."

Squatters

Most of the people here are in a similar position. Chased out by fighting or by vengeance, they have all converged on Abu Hadi. With the feral desperation of a population that has so little, fights are breaking out over who gets allocated what.

This afternoon, a father and his children returned to what they said is their home. But another family was already living there.

"Look these are my keys," the returning man shouted. "This is my home."

"No. It isn't," replied the other. "I live here now."

The squatter says his house was damaged beyond repair and so he moved here.

"I won't leave," he says.

An enormous villa on the edge of Abu Hadi stands incongruously vacant. The anti-Gadhafi fighters have warned that anyone who moves back there will be killed.

The house was owned by a member of Gadhafi's elite Revolutionary Guards. If this mansion is anything to go by, he did well working for the former Libyan leader.

The man's son Mohammed Dau says the rebels came and looted the property and made his father flee in fear of his life. He says even if his father did all the things he is accused of — killing people and making money from Gadhafi — it doesn't justify what is happening.

"There is law in this country and it should take its course," he says.

He knows that isn't true, though. Like the former leader he served, his father is on the run; Dau doesn't know if he'll see him again.

The News Matrix: Friday 14 October 2011 - The Independent

Tabak partied night after Yeates murder

Vincent Tabak drank champagne at a birthday party the night after killing Joanna Yeates, a court heard yesterday. The 33-year-old was "tired and disinterested" according to guests. Ms Yeates was said to have told friends she was "dreading" spending the weekend alone. MORE

Home sales soar in black pudding town

A new North-South divide has opened up in the property market and this time London and the Home Counties are coming off second best. Bury, the Lancashire town renowned for its black puddings, was yesterday given top hot spot, with sales of homes rising 44 per cent year on year. MORE

Asylum-seekers will not go to Malaysia

Australia's embattled Prime Minister Julia Gillard has dropped controversial plans to send asylum-seekers to Malaysia. The plan would have seen Australia resettling registered refugees in Kuala Lumpur, However, the government failed to secure the support for key legal changes.

Bookshop owner 'fostered extremism'

Ahmed Faraz, a bookshop owner, denies distributing extremist literature and DVDs to terrorists including the 7/7 killer Mohammad Sidique Khan, Kingston Crown Court heard yesterday. Faraz is accused of disseminating material with the aim of "priming people for terrorism".

DSK escapes sex case prosecution

Dominique Strauss-Kahn will not face prosecution for sexual assault, French prosecutors said yesterday, even though the former IMF boss has admitted sexual aggression against writer Tristane Banon. MORE

250,000 women will not have to wait

Almost 250,000 women will not have to wait two more years before they qualify for the basic state pension. Ministers dropped plans to raise the state pension age to 66 for both men and women in April 2020. This would have forced 245,000 women in their fifties to work another two years as the state pension age – 65 for men and 60 for women – is to be equalised at 65 from November 2018. MORE

Gunmen take two aid workers hostage

Gunmen captured two female aid workers at Kenya's Dadaab refugee camp yesterday. Mdecins Sans Frontires, which employed the two Spanish women, said one of their drivers was also injured. Officials suspect the kidnappers are members of the al-Shabaab group from Somalia.

Travellers warned of imminent removal

Travellers at Dale Farm have been warned by Basildon Council that they will be cleared from the site "sooner rather than later". Residents, who argued that the decision to remove them was in breach of their human rights, lost their High Court battle against eviction.

Capture of Gaddafi's son played down

Claims that rebel forces had captured Muammar Gaddafi's son Mutassim in the last loyalist stronghold of Sirte were played down by the leading members of the National Transitional Council yesterday. Mutassim Gaddafi was also the country's former national security adviser.

Ex-footballer Merson in drink-drive arrest

Former England footballer Paul Merson has been arrested on suspicion of drink driving. The Sky Sports pundit claimed to have fallen asleep at the wheel of his Mercedes when he crashed into a lorry at 3am on Monday on the M40 near Warwick.

Branson confirms plot to oust Mugabe

Sir Richard Branson has denied offering Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe a 6.5m bribe to leave office, but has confirmed, in an interview with i's sister paper, The Independent, that he was one of the leaders of a secret plot to oust the president. MORE

Harry Potter fans angry at site crash

Fans rushing to buy tickets to see the sets, props and monsters from the Harry Potter films have complained after the website crashed on launch day. Disgruntled Potter followers complained on Twitter of a two-hour wait for tickets to Leavesden's The Making Of Harry Potter attraction.

Golfers very keen to avoid the open... jaws

Golfers had better hope for a hole-in-one when playing at one course in the eastern Australian city of Brisbane – the lake is home to aggressive bull sharks. "It's daunting," said golfer Graham Casemore. "If you lose a ball you definitely don't go in chasing it."

Detectives may deter taxi drivers' detours

Curiously expensive detours with taxi drivers through Vienna may be a thing of the past thanks to a new plan to dispatch undercover detectives in the city to hunt down bad practices. The local taxi guild said it wants to bring in the detectives after two studies identified major problems.

Artist's kit in cave is 100,000 years old

Archaeologists have found a 100,000-year-old set of artist's materials in a South African cave. It included an ochre-rich mixture stored in two sea shells, perhaps used to decorate bodies and clothing. Also found were charcoal, grindstones, hammerstones and a bone, perhaps a stirrer.

Different face of technology guru

Poet, romantic, consumed by Alice in Wonderland – a Rolling Stone interview with Steve Jobs' first girlfriend shows a different side to the Apple chief.

Camouflage crook goes on the run

A burglary suspect dubbed "Moss Man" has failed to show up at trial. A warrant has been issued for the arrest of Gregory Liascos of Portland, Oregon, who earned the nickname after being arrested in full-body camouflage outside a museum. Police say he was trying to break in.

Freud's 1952 portrait could fetch 4m

Boy's Head by Lucian Freud was among contemporary paintings up for auction at Sotheby's in London last night. The 1952 work by Freud, who died in July, it was expected to go for up to 4m. Freud holds the record for the most expensive artwork by a British artist at 17.2m.

Apologies for teacher's message

The governing body of a Hull primary school has apologised to parents after a teacher posted an offensive message on Facebook. One remark, printed out and hung on the school's fence, said: "No wonder everyone is thick... inbreeding must damage brain development."

App that measures quality of sleep

A new app that aims to improve the quantity and quality of sleep uses brainwaves to track the amount of time spent in different stages of sleep. Called Sleep Manager, the app synchronises with a headset that measures brain activity, eye movement and other signals in sleep.

The strange ideas and enduring mysteries of the Kercher case - The Independent

Amanda Knox has flashed through our lives in the past week, mutating from a pretty, stressed-out jailbird to the crumpled, crying heap we saw in court at the verdict last Monday night, to a beaming face at an airport and then to blessed invisibility.

The 24-year-old co-ed from a broken but comfortable home in Seattle really got under our skin, and she's still there. Yet the vastly different interpretations of her character and actions before, during and after the brutal murder of her flatmate Meredith Kercher, bring home how hard it is really to know anybody.

To one person, a smooth, nicely proportioned, girlish face and a ready smile mean innocence and transparency; to another, those same qualities may connote cunning, calculation and depravity. How we read them depends on our personal prejudices. Prosecutor Giuliano Mignini insists he is still convinced that the pair are guilty. In contrast, Mauro Chialli, one of the jurors, said last week, "I saw the faces of these kids, and they couldn't bluff. They didn't bluff." The accusation against them didn't convince him, he said, because "it was based on so many conjectures".

What the verdict means

The appeal court's judgment read simply: "They did not commit the crime." But in interviews this week, judge Claudio Pratillo Hellmann made clear that the verdict did not mean that he knew what actually happened in the flat in Via della Pergola, Perugia, on the night of 1 November 2007, when Ms Kercher died.

"They are free because they did not commit the crime," he told La Stampa newspaper. "But this is the judicial truth, not the truth of reality, which could be different. Certainly, Rudy" – Rudy Guede, the only one of the three convicted of the murder who is still in jail, and who left many traces of his presence at the crime scene – "knows what happened and has not said it. Maybe the other two accused of the crime also know, because, I repeat, our verdict of absolution is the outcome of the truth arrived at during the trial. So perhaps they know, too, but we cannot know that."

The DNA evidence

Despite the torrent of claims and counter-claims during the appeal, the verdict hinged on a very simple fact: that the scientists appointed by the court to re-examine the forensic evidence on which Ms Knox and her former boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, had been convicted concluded that the DNA on Ms Kercher's bra clasp and the tip of Mr Sollecito's kitchen knife were too weak and ambiguous to be relied on. As Mr Hellmann pointed out, "The law makes it clear that a small doubt, as long as it is reasonable, is enough to absolve." That, and that alone, explains why Ms Knox and Mr Sollecito walked free.

The crime scene and Ms Knox

Yet, if we must accept Mr Hellmann's insistence that we cannot really know what happened, we can at least re-construct the steps by which Ms Knox and Mr Sollecito found themselves in the frame – because those steps, too, were the product of prejudice and imagination, not knowledge.

On the face of it, they were the least likely people to be suspected of involvement. It was Mr Sollecito who called the police from Ms Knox's flat when the two of them found Ms Kercher's bedroom door locked, drops of blood and a broken window; both were present when police battered the door open, and they fled outside in shock and horror. Ms Kercher's British girlfriends flew home soon after their friend's dead body was discovered; but Ms Knox, who could have flown to Berlin to stay with her uncle, insisted on staying in Perugia to help the police.

The prosecutor's obsessions

It would take a devious mind to see in these responses the minds of two guilty people – but the prosecutor on duty in Perugia on 2 November, Giuliano Mignini, was already renowned for the deviousness of his ideas.

Prosecutors in Italy enjoy a degree of power and discretion unthinkable in Britain. Mr Mignini, the father of three young girls, a portly, avuncular figure in his robes, was already well known in Perugia for his conservative Catholic faith, and the ferocity with which he descended on people he regarded as embodying decadent, godless modern behaviour.

He prosecuted an English couple because the garden of their Umbrian cottage had wild poppies growing in it – he claimed they were growing them for the opium seeds. He arrested a foreign stripper in a local club for going too far. He reopened a notorious serial murder case in Florence, not on the basis of new evidence but on the theory that the crimes were committed on behalf of deviant freemasons, a theory inspired by a spiritualist blogger in Rome who said she received information from a long-dead priest. The same blogger, Gabriella Carlizzi, now herself deceased, was the first person to float the idea that Ms Kercher may have died at the culmination of a satanic rite involving Ms Knox and Mr Sollecito.

To some people, the behaviour of Ms Knox and Mr Sollecito was that of two nicely brought-up middle-class kids who had never tangled with the law and still believed that policemen could be trusted to protect you. But Mr Mignini didn't see them like that. He saw a sexy, promiscuous, drug-taking foreign vamp, canoodling with her new Italian boyfriend, showing no conventional signs of grief, identified by Ms Kercher's friends as having had a difficult relationship with the victim, and sitting on her boyfriend's lap in the police station. When the police investigation revealed the hair of a black person in the victim's hand, and it was revealed that Ms Knox had sent a text to her part-time employer, the Congolese bar owner Patrick Lumumba, saying "see you later" – interpreted by the police as an assignation – Mr Mignini had his eureka moment. Caso chiuso, said the police chief. Case closed.

Enter Rudy Guede

It was only in the days following the arrest of Ms Knox, Mr Sollecito and Mr Lumumba that it emerged that the forensic traces in Ms Kercher's bedroom – plentiful traces – were linked not to any of the three but to a fourth person, a local drifter and drug dealer called Rudy Guede.

Now serving a reduced, 16-year sentence for his role, Guede was a sad figure, abandoned by his father, an immigrant from the Ivory Coast, and the wealthy Perugia family that had unofficially adopted him, with little education, no regular work, and no home. Homelessness, it seems, had begun to obsess him: when he had come to a party at the flat below the one shared by Ms Knox and Ms Kercher, he had left his faeces in the toilet. In the weeks before the murder he had broken into a nursery school, a lawyer's office and a flat, in each case making himself at home, turning up the heat, cooking a meal, stealing things. He was questioned by police but never arrested. The reason, the rumour goes, is because he was a police informer.

Guede, who also left his faeces in the toilet of Ms Kercher's flat and who fled to Germany after the murder, was the obvious suspect. He was a loner: there was no reason to suppose others were involved. But, by this time, Mr Mignini had convinced himself and much of the world that this was an exotic and bizarre case, not a squalid rape-murder committed by a disturbed homeless immigrant. And once it had taken root, the idea was too fascinating to be abandoned.

The 'Third Man'

Mr Hellmann's comment that Guede "knows what happened and has not said it" refers to the fact that he has changed his story several times since being named as a suspect. In his first phone conversation with a friend while still in Germany, recorded by police, he said another man was the killer and that he had tried to staunch Ms Kercher's wounds. Later, after learning Ms Knox and Mr Sollecito had been accused, he claimed that he had heard Ms Knox and Ms Kercher arguing before the latter was killed, and that an unidentified man in the house "tried to strike me". But as Ms Knox's lawyer Carlo della Vedova said, "Guede is not reliable – he is a liar." And his conflicting claims are undermined by the fact that nobody's traces but his own were found in Ms Kercher's room.

Tomorrow, Amanda Knox will mark a week of freedom. There are those who continue to paint her, if not as some Jezebel, then as an unfeeling woman anticipating the paydays ahead. It is a curious way to think of someone unjustly imprisoned for four years.