As many of you probably know, in an Italian court early last weekend, two young students, Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito, were convicted of killing another young student, Meredith Kercher, in a horrific way in November of 2007. (A third person, Rudy Guede, was convicted earlier.)
If you aren't familiar with the case, don't go reading about it just yet. Hang on for just a moment.
If you are familiar, that's fine too. This post is addressed to readers of all levels of acquaintance with the story.
What everyone should know right away is that the verdict has been extremely controversial. Strong feelings have emerged, even involving national tensions (Knox is American, Sollecito Italian, and Kercher British, and the crime and trial took place in Italy). The circumstances of the crime involve sex. In short, the potential for serious rationality failures in coming to an opinion on a case like this is enormous.
Now, as it happens, I myself have an opinion. A rather strong one, in fact. Strong enough that I caught myself thinking that this case -- given all the controversy surrounding it -- might serve as a decent litmus test in judging the rationality skills of other people. Like religion, or evolution -- except less clichéd (and cached) and more down-and-dirty.
Of course, thoughts like that can be dangerous, as I quickly recognized. The danger of in-group affective spirals looms large. So before writing up that Less Wrong post adding my-opinion-on-the-guilt-or-innocence-of-Amanda-Knox-and-Raffaele-Sollecito to the List of Things Every Rational Person Must Believe, I decided it might be useful to find out what conclusion(s) other aspiring rationalists would (or have) come to (without knowing my opinion).
So that's what this post is: a survey/experiment, with fairly specific yet flexible instructions (which differ slightly depending on how much you know about the case already).
For those whose familiarity with the case is low:
I'm going to give you two websites advocating a position, one strongly in favor of the verdict, the other strongly opposed. Your job will be to browse around these sites to learn info about the case, as much as you need to in order to arrive at a judgment. The order, manner, and quantity of browsing will be left up to you -- though I would of course like to know how much you read in your response.
1. Site arguing defendants are guilty.
2. Site arguing defendants are innocent.
I've chosen these particular sites because they seemed to contain the best combination of fierceness of advocacy and quantity of information on their respective sides that I could find.
If you find better summaries, or think that these choices reflect a bias or betray my own opinion, by all means let me know. I'm specifically avoiding referring you to media reports, however, for a couple of reasons. First, I've noticed that reports often contain factual inaccuracies (necessarily, because they contradict each other). Secondly, journalists don't usually have much of a stake, and I'd like to see how folks respond to passionate advocacy by people who care about the outcome, as in an actual trial, rather than attempts at neutral summarizing. Of course, it's fine if you want to read media reports linked to by the above sites.
(One potential problem is that the first site is organized like a blog or forum, and thus it is hard to find a quick summary of the case there. [EDIT: Be sure to look at the category links on the right side of the page to find the arguments.] If you think it necessary, refer to the ever-changing Wikipedia article, which at the moment of writing seems a bit more favorable to the prosecution. [EDIT: I'm no longer sure that's true.] [EDIT: Now I think it's true again, the article having apparently changed some more. So there's really no telling. Be warned.])
After you do this reading, I'd like to know:
1. Your probability estimate that Amanda Knox is guilty.
2. Your probability estimate that Raffaele Sollecito is guilty.
3. Your probability estimate that Rudy Guede is guilty.
4. How much you think your opinion will turn out to coincide with mine.
Feel free to elaborate on your reasoning to whatever degree you like.
One request: don't look at others' comments until you've done the experiment yourself!
For those whose familiarity with the case is moderate or high:
I'd like to know, as of right now:
1. Your probability estimate that Amanda Knox is guilty.
2. Your probability estimate that Raffaele Sollecito is guilty.
3. Your probability estimate that Rudy Guede is guilty.
4. How much you think your opinion will turn out to coincide with mine.
5. From what sources you've gotten the info you've used to arrive at these estimates.
Then, if possible, do the experiment described above for those with little familiarity, and report any shifts in your estimates.
Again, everyone should avoid looking at others' responses before giving their own feedback. Also, don't forget to identify your prior level of familiarity!
If the level of participation warrants it, I'll post my own thoughts (and reaction to the feedback here) in a later post. (Edit: That post can be found here.)
I don't remember hearing about this case before reading this post. This is not strong evidence that I hadn't; it's the kind of news item I'd be likely to classify as "contains no valuable or interesting information" (no disrespect to the victim, her friends or her relatives is intended; but the global death rate is such that you just can't keep up with all the individual instances, and therefore you necessarily have to be extremely selective about which individual deaths receive any specific attention from you) and discard immediately from memory. In any case I don't have any significant prior case-specific knowledge.
I've consulted the Wikipedia article, one of the news articles used as a primary source by said article, read most of entries from the TJ Prosecution's Case category, as well as the FOA pages. Altogether I spent a few hours on this research.
I accidentally looked at one response (IIRC it was this one) before I read the post itself, and learned that that had been a bad move. I'll do my best to filter that knowledge out of my answer. Since there's accusations of Anti-US bias flying around, I should probably also mention that I'm a citizen of (and live in) Germany. I don't think I'm biased against US citizens, but such self-assessment is always tricky.
Given all of that, here's my answers:
Reasoning:
1 and 2: Suspects' behavior as documented by their phone and computer use doesn't match their preferred stories. AK correctly mentioning MK screaming is some evidence that she was at the scene of the crime. FOA attacks the DNA test performed on the knife, but the experts responsible appear to think that this kind of testing is reliable under the circumstances, and they should be in a good position to judge. The jury in the case had better access to the evidence available (apparently presenting all of it took on the order of 200 hours; this suggests there's quite a lot of the stuff), and much more cputime to process it than I do; in absence of strong evidence that their reasoning was fundamentally flawed, their judgement is strong empirical evidence for the guilt of the defendants.
3: Pretty good evidence there; lots of DNA material, and RG's story sounds rather unlikely. And again, there's an existing judgement by someone who had better access to information and more time to think about the issue.
General comments:
This is quite a mess. Both of the advocacy sites are contaminated with lots of data that's so weakly relevant as to be basically a distraction. So are the newspaper articles. Why exactly do we need photos of the people involved? Even hypothetically, what does this kind of information add to the discussion? The character testimonies are only marginally better; theoretically that kind of thing is evidence, in practice it's so weak as to be likely to do more harm than good. This whole case is an affect minefield. I guess this does make this a great real-life rationality stress test, but somehow I doubt that that was what the people who put those documents together had in mind.
It turns out most commentors are of a rather different opinion on 1. and 2., so ... update time!
New evidence includes reports that use of the involved drugs does significantly impair memory, a reminder that absence of evidence is evidence of absence, and fairly damning judgements about the Italien legal system. I also realized that my priors for P(group rape | rape) and P(group murder | murder) were insufficiently extreme (i.e. too high).
All of this is fairly general evidence about such cases, so the jury could well have had access to it, as well. They're ... (read more)