Do you believe that anything anyone says under circumstances of torture should be a basis of conviction in court?
This has been gone through numerous times already.
The first confessions occurred before the 'torture'.
The brother, as far as I know, was not tortured.
Can you cite that he was ?
Personally, I think it very likely that fellow prisoners beat her up, whilst the PJ present,looked the other way. I will have to find the links to the case, I believe one of those is on the Morais cite, where prisoners families claimed fellow prisoners beat her up, though the statements were not used in court.
It is a fact that L. Cipriano committed perjury in court.
Angelo, the other day provided a back drop of proven points in court as regards her and her brother.
I do not approve of torture (I have said that repeatedly), but I am not naive enough to believe it won't happen again.
Again playing devil's advocate, as I did the other day, what would you do if you had a terrorist subject or say a kidnapper, who refused to divulge information, and no other means worked, to get them to divulge the plan, or in a kidnapper's case the whereabouts of the victim, and subsequently deaths occurred, what would you say to the victim's families ?