Tanya Mosley
๐ค SpeakerVoice Profile Active
This person's voice can be automatically recognized across podcast episodes using AI voice matching.
Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
To refresh people's memories, you were a 20-year-old college student studying abroad in Perugia, Italy, when you and your then-boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, whom you'd known for a week before Meredith Kircher's murder. You both were accused and later tried and convicted, and the both of you all spent four years together. in an Italian prison before being acquitted on appeal in 2011.
And then two years later, both of you were retried and then definitively acquitted in 2015. And right now, you're still fighting a slander case, which we'll get to a little bit later. But you wanted to reach out to the prosecutor in this case. You all became pen pals, more or less, and ultimately met
And then two years later, both of you were retried and then definitively acquitted in 2015. And right now, you're still fighting a slander case, which we'll get to a little bit later. But you wanted to reach out to the prosecutor in this case. You all became pen pals, more or less, and ultimately met
And then two years later, both of you were retried and then definitively acquitted in 2015. And right now, you're still fighting a slander case, which we'll get to a little bit later. But you wanted to reach out to the prosecutor in this case. You all became pen pals, more or less, and ultimately met
This man was instrumental in spreading the false narrative about you and was ultimately instrumental in your conviction. How did it come to be and why was it important for you to connect with him, to convince him of your innocence?
This man was instrumental in spreading the false narrative about you and was ultimately instrumental in your conviction. How did it come to be and why was it important for you to connect with him, to convince him of your innocence?
This man was instrumental in spreading the false narrative about you and was ultimately instrumental in your conviction. How did it come to be and why was it important for you to connect with him, to convince him of your innocence?
Like, I did have that... Amanda, what kinds of things did you write to him to try to show and prove your humanity?
Like, I did have that... Amanda, what kinds of things did you write to him to try to show and prove your humanity?
Like, I did have that... Amanda, what kinds of things did you write to him to try to show and prove your humanity?
Has he ever said he was sorry?
Has he ever said he was sorry?
Has he ever said he was sorry?
Amanda, you have learned, as you've been talking about over the years, through your criminal justice reform work, a lot of things about the system, but also just how common your interrogation experience is and was. You spent more than 50 hours in a room, questioned in Italian.
Amanda, you have learned, as you've been talking about over the years, through your criminal justice reform work, a lot of things about the system, but also just how common your interrogation experience is and was. You spent more than 50 hours in a room, questioned in Italian.
Amanda, you have learned, as you've been talking about over the years, through your criminal justice reform work, a lot of things about the system, but also just how common your interrogation experience is and was. You spent more than 50 hours in a room, questioned in Italian.
Those who have never experienced interrogation, I mean, will likely never quite understand it, how one can actually say things that they Absolutely. First of all, it was the worst experience of my life, worse than being convicted, was being in that interrogation room.
Those who have never experienced interrogation, I mean, will likely never quite understand it, how one can actually say things that they Absolutely. First of all, it was the worst experience of my life, worse than being convicted, was being in that interrogation room.
Those who have never experienced interrogation, I mean, will likely never quite understand it, how one can actually say things that they Absolutely. First of all, it was the worst experience of my life, worse than being convicted, was being in that interrogation room.
And was this all in Italian? Were you all speaking? All in Italian. And how good would you describe your Italian at that time?