JKR/Oprah interview
dumbledore11214
dumbledore11214 at yahoo.com
Sun Oct 10 20:43:14 UTC 2010
No: HPFGUIDX 189652
> Pippin wrote:
> <big snip>
>
> > As for Dumbledore, if you recall what Sirius says, Crouch sent a lot of people to Azkaban, many of them less obviously guilty than Sirius Black, trial or no trial. If Dumbledore was trying to free anybody, it would be them. There wasn't a reason on earth for him to think that Sirius was innocent before the night of the Shrieking Shack. He wasn't the sort to have eternal faith in the goodness of his friends, not after what happened with Grindelwald.
> <snip>
Alla:
No reason at all, except Sirius being a part of Order of Phoenix, part of his supposedly trusted and handpicked fighters. I do agree though that Dumbledore apparently wasn't the sort to have faith in the goodness of his friends. Poor Lily and James probably sensed it from him and no wonder to me that they could not trust him in turn.
And while Crouch certainly sent lots of people to Azkaban, I wonder if any of them was less obviously guilty than Sirius Black. In fact, I am not sure what does less obviously guilty means, since as we know Sirius was completely innocent, so I think it will be quite hard for many people to be less guilty than completely innocent person.
Oh and as another speculation, freeing any innocent from jail so does not lie with me as something within Dumbledore's character, since the only example canon gives us is to not lay a finger to help the innocent person.
JMO,
Alla
>
> Carol responds:
> Exactly. He knew that the Potters had been betrayed by their Secret Keeper, and he had every reason to believe that the Secret Keeper was James's best friend, Sirius Black, since James had told him that was his intention. He "knew" from the massive evidence of the blown-up street, the testimony of the unfortunately mind-wiped Muggles, and the finger that was (apparently) all that was left of Peter Pettigrew, that Sirius had "murdered" Pettigrew (whom everyone "knew" could not outwit or outfight Sirius Black). Had Dumbledore known that Pettigrew was an Animagus, he might have smelled a rat. But he didn't. Unlike the cases of Hokey and Morfin Gaunt, he saw no reason to investigate.
>
> Carol, noting that most of the characters, including Harry, trust the evidence of their senses at some point only to be proven wrong later
>
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