Posted on 10/08/2011 8:28:54 AM PDT by IbJensen
Video at link.
SEATTLE Amanda Knox hasn't slept much since arriving back in Seattle after four years in an Italian prison, her father said on Thursday.
"I think she's literally running on adrenaline right now, because she hasn't slept very much hardly at all. I think she's so joyful to be around her family and kind of reconnect with everybody," Curt Knox to KOMO Radio.
She's taking things one day at a time.
"It is going to take some time before we figure out what that new normal will be," he said.
The 24-year-old former University of Washington student and her family left Italy immediately after an appeals court threw out her conviction in the slaying of her British roommate Meredith Kercher in Perugia, where both were studying abroad.
Amanda Knox occasionally slips back into speaking Italian, Curt Knox told "Good Morning America" earlier Thursday.
"It has become really almost her first language since she's been in prison so long, but she seems to be moving to English," he said. Advertise | AdChoices
She was overwhelmed by her release from prison and the large number of reporters who awaited her arrival at Sea-Tac Airport on Tuesday. The family has not yet decided on whether to seek counseling for her.
(Excerpt) Read more at msnbc.msn.com ...
I’ll Stick with Johnny Winter instead, thank-you very much!
Perhaps Mandy will meet up and befriend Casey Anthony.
(Hard to tell who will stick a knife in whom.)
You are likely assessing facial expressions and fidgeting body movements; you are likely to be close to 100% correct that your student is confused.
My classroom perceptions are far different than discerning if a criminal defendant is guilty based on courtroom observations.
I don't accept that premise. In what ways are your classroom perceptions so different from perceptions made in a criminal case? You're watching facial expressions and body language in class now.
I submit the talent it takes to assess facial expressions and body language in a criminal case is quite similar to the talent it takes to determine whether a student seeking relief from penalty due to an extenuating circumstance (e.g., "the dog ate my homework," or "my work is late because of 'X'"). Particularly as a teacher, I submit you're doing it whether you consciously acknowledge it or not.
I do not know about any research supporting your assertion that the jurors can reliably infer guilt or innocence based on courtroom perceptions.
Bill O'Reilly routinely features the "body language" segment on his show. Israeli flight passenger screeners are masters of assessing body language, facial expressions, and interview testimony of passengers on a daily basis. What sort of formal research must be accomplished to prove something which by so many measures and examples is so obvious to so many?
Research indicates that law enforcement cannot reliably discern if suspects are lying so I do not have much confidence that jurors can determine guilt based on courtroom behavior.
You keep throwing around this "research" term. What "research" could you possibly be referring to? Tell that to Israeli flight screeners and criminal profilers and I am certain that having seen both in action and the Israelis up close and personal, they would likely disagree with what ever "research" you can produce on the subject of determining innocence or guilt using facial expressions and body language.
FReegards!
I think the evidence pretty much showed that Amanda Knox was not there. Apparently neither was her boyfriend. The drifter did it.
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