Knox: 'I Am Innocent, I Will Be Free'
 

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gwen PostPosted: Sat Feb 02, 2008 2:08 am

Knox: 'I Am Innocent, I Will Be Free'

Murder in Italy: Knox's Parents and Sister Share Their Story With 20/20



By NIKKI BATTISTE, RICHARD GERDAU, LISA TOMASELLI, JON MEYERSOHN and MIGUEL SANCHO
Feb. 1, 2008

Of all the fears parents face when a child goes out into the world, Amanda Knox's mother and father could never have imagined that just six weeks after their daughter arrived in the quaint, medieval town of Perugia in Italy's Umbrian countryside, she would be in prison.

The 20-year-old is a suspect in the brutal murder of her British roommate, Meredith Kercher, and her family is caught in a nightmare 6,000 miles from their hometown of Seattle.

Curt Knox and Edda Mellas only can see their daughter for an hour twice a week in an Italian prison.

"20/20" traveled to Perugia to investigate the side of story people haven't heard, and Knox's parents and 19-year-old sister, Deanna Knox, are speaking publicly for the first time in an exclusive interview with "20/20" co-anchor Elizabeth Vargas.

In her prison diary, Knox writes, "I know I am innocent. This is light enough. I may be in prison for a crime I didn't commit, but the truth is out there, and I wait day by day, for it to be discovered. … I am innocent and so I will be free. I will have freedom."

A Dream Becomes a Nightmare
Knox's parents divorced when she was a toddler, but they raised their two daughters together. They shared the pride when Knox made the Dean's List at the University of Washington, and the financial concerns when she yearned to spend her junior year abroad.


"We basically told her that, you know, here's how much we have available, and she said, 'Well, I can make up the rest,'" said Curt Knox.

According to Deanna Knox, her sister "never went out. She stayed home, studied and worked, and that's all she did, just so she could afford to go [abroad]." Two years, countless jobs and $7,000 later, Knox had made her dream a reality.

Perugia is an ancient city two hours north of Rome, known mostly today for its chocolates and its universities, which attracts 40,000 student each year from all over the world.

In August 2007, Deanna Knox accompanied her sister on her first visit to Perugia to find a place to live. They settled on a cottage overlooking the Umbrian valley that Knox would eventually share with two Italian women and Kercher, who also came to Perugia from England to fulfill her dream of studying abroad.

Knox's parents say that their daughter and her roommate got along well.


"Everything seemed to be meshing just fine," said Curt Knox. "I got to hear about [how] her and Meredith spent a bunch of time at this big chocolate festival. And she said, 'Yeah, we had the best time.'"

"They got along great," said Mellas.

Some of Kercher's friends say that Knox got too involved in Perugia's lively social scene, that Kercher complained that her roommate partied too much and brought home too many boys. But Deanna Knox says that doesn't sound like her sister.

"I've seen a lot of people at college just lift a lid and just, I'm free, and go nuts. But Amanda definitely didn't do that. … She did not go crazy with men in Italy at any time. I mean, she's a normal girl and she found a guy there, but she did not go crazy."

The guy was Rafaele Sollecito, an Italian engineering student Knox met at a classical music concert.

For Kercher, the experience abroad would take a horrific turn.

On the night of Nov. 1, Kercher went to a friend's house for dinner and then walked home alone. Some time later that night, Kercher was murdered in a brutal assault in her bedroom — her throat was slit, she choked on her blood and she was left partially clothed, covered with a duvet.

Police launched an investigation to find the person responsible for the gruesome murder.

Kercher's family said no one would ever want to kill her. "She was one of the most beautiful, intelligent, witty and caring people that you could wish to meet," said her sister Stephanie Kercher.

An intense investigation ensued, and police theorized that Kercher was killed as an unwilling participant in an extreme drug-fueled sex game.

They quickly focused on Knox and Sollecito. Knox says she returned to her cottage from Sollecito's apartment the next morning to take a shower, but found the front door of the cottage ajar and became suspicious. Concerned, she asked Sollecito to come over and Knox called her mother.

"And she said, 'Well, I was at Rafaele's last night, and I've come home now and I think somebody's been in my house,'" Mellas recalled.

"And she told me, 'We can't find Meredith. We can't get a hold of Meredith. And her room is locked.' And I said, "Hang up and call the police.'"


Police soon arrived at the cottage to return Kercher's cell phones, which were found in a neighbor's yard. After breaking down the door to Kercher's room, police found her dead — her throat slit after an apparent sexual assault.

Police say Knox first told them that she was at Sollecito's apartment the night of the murder. Four days later, she went with Sollecito to police to answer questions and found herself in an overnight interrogation, during which she said she had a vision where she may have been in her apartment when the deadly attack occurred, covering her ears when she may have heard screams. She also thought her employer — bar owner Patrick Lumumba — may have been in Kercher's room that night.

Knox later made a final account that matches her original statement, saying that she slept at Sollecito's apartment that fatal night.

"Her story and her version of what happened that night has totally stayed consistent, absolutely consistent," said Mellas. "If you take out that [overnight] interrogation without a lawyer, without an interpreter, other than that time when she was … like she says, the most scared that she's ever been in her entire life, her story has not changed one iota."

Police felt Knox and Sollecito's changing accounts of the night were enough to arrest them, along with Lumumba, Nov. 6. Just six weeks after arriving to study in Italy, Knox found herself in an Italian jail where suspects can be held for a year without being charged.

Unraveling the Mystery
Immediately after their arrest, the young couple and their behavior during the days after the murder came under fire. The day Kercher's body was discovered, they were videotaped kissing at the crime scene. The following day, they were observed buying what the tabloids described as "lingerie for a night of wild sex."

Police said damning evidence seemed to mount against Knox and Sollecito, including a knife from Sollecito's kitchen that had Knox's DNA on the handle and Kercher's DNA on the blade.

Instantly, Knox was thrown into the center of an international media frenzy.

"This was a horrible crime, but I couldn't understand why immediately Amanda was painted in this horrible light, where she was unrecognizable," said Mellas.

"Amanda is the kindest person I know," Deanna Knox said. "She will do anything to make people happy, and she cares about everyone else before herself."

"20/20" brought in Joe Tacopina, a high-profile New York criminal defense attorney who also has law offices in Italy, to analyze the case, which has been plagued by speculation.

"This case, like many high-profile cases that garner a lot of media attention, is larded with nontruths and rumors that sort of take on a life of their own," he said.

"The prosecution argued that it was a sex game gone wrong, and Patrick Lumumba was involved and Amanda and Raffaele and they all took turns holding her down, while they violated her sexually," he said.

Tacopina was given exclusive access to Italy's top crime lab along with the case files from the prosecution and defense to unravel this mystery.

With three suspects in custody, the prosecutor Giuliano Mignini believed he had found his assailants. But within weeks, Lumumba was released after several people came forward to confirm his alibi and no evidence of him was found at the crime scene.


Police found strong new DNA evidence of another person, Rudy Guede, that didn't match any of their original suspects. However, the prosecutor remained firm in his belief that Knox and Sollecito were involved in Kercher's death, despite their denials of any involvement. He argued that the forensic evidence against the two was still very strong.


Bombshell for the Defense?
Tacopina uncovered records that could be a bombshell for the defense. Records show the DNA match on the knife has less than a 20 percent chance of being connected to Kercher and it is not blood, but rather just a human trace.

"That's not the murder weapon, because if you use that knife as a murder weapon, and as bloody as that crime scene was, you're not going to be able to clean off all the blood, yet leave some other transferable DNA," he said.

Tacopina also says that he learned that additional crime scene photos taken two weeks after the murder showed that "the apartment was rearranged," when compared to the initial crime scene photos.

"The evidence was moved. The bed was leaning up against the wall. … For a crime scene to be worth anything, forensically, it has to be pure and it can't be trampled on, it can't be moved."

Tacopina says this is a "huge blow" to the prosecution's case.

"[There are] countless cases, high profile cases, where the lack of the sanctity of the crime scene has blown the case for the prosecution, starting with O.J. Simpson."

After Lumumba was freed for lack of evidence, prosecutors turned their attention to Guede, who hung out at the basketball court near Kercher and Knox's house. Italy's top forensic lab meticulously matched Guede's palm print to a bloody print on a pillowcase under Kercher's body and identified his DNA inside her.

Guede says he had consensual sexual relations with Kercher the night of her murder. He states that he went to the bathroom and returned to the bedroom to find Kercher alive on the floor with her throat slashed and saw an intruder fleeing the scene. Guede says he put a washcloth on her throat in an attempt to save her, but then left the cottage, fearing for his own life.

"You sort of hear that story and you laugh because it's just so incredible," said Tacopina. "And if true, he is the unluckiest man in the world."

Guede also stated that Knox and Sollecito were not in the cottage that night.

For now, Knox's family waits as investigators slowly sift through the evidence. Mignini insists he has enough to hold the suspects and is sticking with his group sex attack theory.

"You are perceived as guilty if you are put in jail," said Judy Bachrach, a contributing editor for Vanity Fair who has been covering the case from the beginning. "And you are gonna be in jail if you're considered a suspect. And you're gonna be considered a suspect if the prosecutor says you are. Never mind the evidence."

Curiously, Mignini was charged in January, in a separate case, with abusing his office and obstruction of justice, in what an Italian official called a "crusade … to further his own vindictive interest." He has denied the charges.

Myths and Misconceptions
Knox's family won't discuss the case directly, but it has appealed to Italy's supreme court for Knox's release. The hearing is in April.

For now, her parents simply want to clear up what they believe to be myths and misconceptions about their daughter. They countered the criticism of the video shot at the crime scene of Knox and Sollecito kissing.

"She looked like she was in shock," said her father. "I almost saw them as kind of clinging to each other for support, " added her mother.

In response to the caught-on-tape "lingerie moment," Curt Knox points out that "her house is now a crime scene" and Mellas explained that underwear "was one of the first things she needed." Knox's family was also aware of her relationship with Sollecito.

"He looked like Harry Potter, and that's what she liked about him," said Deanna Knox.

They say Knox's MySpace nickname "Foxy Knoxy" was misconstrued in headlines around the world, indicating the fresh-faced college student was a seductress. In reality, Knox got her nickname in soccer when she was 8 years old. Curt Knox said, "She crouches like a fox. She was a defender, and she would set herself, prepare herself to take on the person coming down the field."


From the start, Knox's family has displayed unwavering support and proclaimed her innocence. But public opinion in Italy immediately turned against Knox, who was painted as a sex-crazed, party girl gone wild. Curt Knox says this portrayal is "180 degrees opposite of anything we have ever known her to be."

Twice a week for the last three months, at least one of Knox's parents has visited her in prison.

"Being a young kid, she just doesn't understand — why am I here when I didn't do anything," Curt Knox said.

When they are in the United States, they receive a steady stream of letters from their daughter. Mellas shared one letter: "Dear Mom, it's always so good to see you, amazing, I would say. You are my angel throughout all of this … and you are also most importantly the one person who gives me the most hope."

"It's hard when after so much time the police still think I am involved, it's really hard not being believed, but, you know, I think about you struggling to be OK as well … "

Knox's parents still cling to the belief that eventually their world will make sense again.

"It's one in which you have to believe in the system" said Curt Knox. "And that they wouldn't put an innocent 20-year-old girl in jail for something she didn't do," said Mellas. "You just have to believe that."

For now, all they can do is wait.

ABC's Ann Wise and Carla Rumor contributed to this report.

http://abcnews.go.com/2020/Story?id=4223134&page=1
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Isanah PostPosted: Wed Feb 13, 2008 4:04 am

TY, Gwen! I watched the show, and it was very interesting. Ironically, do I dare say, her family did a great job in establishing Amanda's character. The show gave a real glimpse of what Amanda is really all about. I was left truly feeling that Amanda and her boyfriend may have been railroaded. It seems that their words and actions may have been taken out of context, and exploited.

As most murders I suppose, you are left wondering what kind of person would do such a thing. It seems that the man in the bathroom that returned to a dead Meredith would be the main suspect, not a young woman like Amanda. To think that Amanda may be in jail for a year before any charges are even brought. Her parents are phenomenal in their support of her. They reported that one of them is in Perugia at all times just to visit with her a hour twice a week.

It's is difficult for me to believe that Amanda engaged in some kind of rape of her roommate. I just can not wrap my mind around her doing such a thing. If Amanda wanted to violate her roommate, it seems she would have used a date rape drug. What motive would she have to kill Meredith? The one they are insinuating just doesn't ring true to me. Now the guy in the bathroom with a footprint in Meredith's spilled blood, he seems like the likely culprit!




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iquitos PostPosted: Wed Feb 13, 2008 8:50 am

read my post in press clips

to see another perspective on the case and the nutjob prosecutor.
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yankee-in-france PostPosted: Wed Feb 13, 2008 9:01 am

Isanah wrote:
TY, Gwen! I watched the show, and it was very interesting. Ironically, do I dare say, her family did a great job in establishing Amanda's character. The show gave a real glimpse of what Amanda is really all about. I was left truly feeling that Amanda and her boyfriend may have been railroaded. It seems that their words and actions may have been taken out of context, and exploited.

As most murders I suppose, you are left wondering what kind of person would do such a thing. It seems that the man in the bathroom that returned to a dead Meredith would be the main suspect, not a young woman like Amanda. To think that Amanda may be in jail for a year before any charges are even brought. Her parents are phenomenal in their support of her. They reported that one of them is in Perugia at all times just to visit with her a hour twice a week.

It's is difficult for me to believe that Amanda engaged in some kind of rape of her roommate. I just can not wrap my mind around her doing such a thing. If Amanda wanted to violate her roommate, it seems she would have used a date rape drug. What motive would she have to kill Meredith? The one they are insinuating just doesn't ring true to me. Now the guy in the bathroom with a footprint in Meredith's spilled blood, he seems like the likely culprit!


There may not be a shred of evidence against J2K, but there is forensic evidence against Amanda. She is not quite the lovely young woman portrayed by her parents, but I do understand that parents may not truly be aware of who their children really are. Isanah, this murder is likewise a tragic story. Meredith did not deserve to die much less the way she did but I wouldn't assume that Foxy Knoxy has been railroaded by anyone.
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DocTar PostPosted: Sat Apr 12, 2008 10:06 pm

Forensic evidence??? Some kind of DNA on a kitchen knife that has both Amanda's and Meredith's DNA on it? Blood from both in a shared bathroom?




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yankee-in-france PostPosted: Sun Apr 13, 2008 3:50 am

In a forensic science report leaked to Italian newspapers, police experts said the find showed that "if Amanda Knox did not take part in the murder, she was at least present at the scene of the crime." They added: "It cannot be excluded that the American girl's hands were stained with the victim's blood during the struggle and that she went to wash them in the basin."

http://blog.seattlepi.nwsource.com/thebigblog/archives/128200.asp

Yes, my opinion is that Amanda is involved in some form in this tragic murder. This is the person who also implicated her boss as the murderer who is the only one of those arrested to be released. I don't think that her 'I was under the influence of drugs' defense will hold up in an Italian court and set her free.
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LISA PostPosted: Wed Jun 25, 2008 1:20 am

American Suspect in Coed Slay: I'm a Target Because I'm Attractive

Tuesday , June 24, 2008
THE TIMES

Amanda Knox, the American student accused of involvement in the murder of her British roommate, Meredith Kercher, in Perugia, Italy, last November, wrote in her diary that she was only a target in the case because she is attractive.

In hundreds of pages of notes, diary entries, poems, and letters written in her prison cell, released to try to clear her name, Knox protests her innocence over the killing of the South London student.

Knox, her Italian boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, and Rudy Guede, an Ivory Coast immigrant with joint Italian nationality, are being held on suspicion of sexually assaulting Kercher and stabbing her in the throat after she refused to take part in a “sexual game.”

Knox — who was accused of acting in a strangely cold and unfeeling manner after the discovery of Kercher's corpse — says she is distressed and angry about the killing, of which she is innocent.

In her diary and prison extracts, published in Corriere della Sera and written in Italian and English, she refers to her own looks, suggesting she has been singled out for world attention because she is attractive. "If I had been ugly, would they have acted in the same way? I don't think so."

The prison cell dossier also includes love letters to Knox from admirers, with 35 men writing to her in the first two weeks of her incarceration. Some proposed marriage. One man wrote “I love you, marry me. Write to me, because I want to finally know 'the girl with the face of an angel.’” Other letters urge her to “have faith in God.” In a diary note Knox says she will reply to all letters, “but only when I am out of here.”

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,370841,00.html




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gwen PostPosted: Wed Jun 25, 2008 1:48 am

Hmmmm...not sure if this will help her case or not...
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Schmerty PostPosted: Wed Jun 25, 2008 2:02 am

She is involved up to her neck!!You can't manipulate human beings for your own peculiar thrills.
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gwen PostPosted: Sat Jun 28, 2008 11:03 am

College Student Murder Suspect Amanda Knox Boasts In Jailhouse Diary of Fan Mail From Men
Saturday, June 28, 2008

College student-turned-murder suspect Amanda Knox boasts in her jailhouse diary that she has received dozens of fan letters from men since she's been in prison for allegedly participating in the gruesome sexual assault and killing of her roommate in Italy.

Knox, 20, of Seattle, has been penning the journal behind bars in Italy. Excerpts were released this week in which the fresh-faced young woman attributes the intense interest in her case to the fact that she's pretty.

"I received 23 fan letters today — that makes the count up to 35 letters," London's Daily Mail quotes Knox as writing. "All of them reassure me that they believe me — the majority comment on how beautiful I am.

"I've received blatant love letters, a marriage proposal and others wanting to get to know 'the girl with the angel face.'"

Knox is behind bars for her alleged role in the grisly November sexual assault and murder of 21-year-old Meredith Kercher, the British woman she shared a house with while studying abroad.

Detectives in Italy believe Kercher died fending off a drug-fueled sex-based attack the day after Halloween by Knox, Knox's 24-year-old Italian boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito and an Ivory Coast man Rudy Guede rumored to be the couple's drug dealer. Sollecito and Guede also are in jail.

The British student was stabbed to death three times in the throat. Police think she was attacked after refusing to take part in a "sexual game." Kercher was discovered naked from the waist down in a pool of blood in the house she shared with Knox in the Italian university town of Perugia.

This week, Knox released hundreds of pages of journal entries, notes, poems and letters — all written from her jail cell — in an effort to clear her name and prove her innocence.

"I'm writing this because I want to remember," she says. "I want to remember because this is an experience not many people will ever have. I am not saying I am glad everything that has happened has happened. If it were up to me, my friend would never have been killed."

Also this week, Italian police say they have a new witness who claims to have seen Knox and two others leaving her house moments after Kercher was thought to have been murdered, according to The Seattle Post-Intelligencer.

The University of Washington student — who has been dubbed "Foxy Knoxy" by the British tabloids — says that she is upset and distraught about Kercher's murder but is innocent of any involvement. She has been criticized in the press for acting cold and emotionless after her roommate was found stabbed to death.

Knox and Sollecito have given conflicting stories and changed their accounts of what happened the night Kercher was killed. They blame their confusion on the marijuana they were smoking that night. The pair have broken up since they've been behind bars.

DNA tests show Kercher had sex with Guede the night she was killed.

In some diary passages, Knox claims one of her prison guards is obsessed with her and asks her inappropriate questions about her sex life, and she marvels at the Web sites set up rating how attractive she is, according to the Mail.

"Apparently someone out there saw me on TV and thought I was 'hot,' so they set up a Web site where people comment on how pretty I am," Knox writes. "Weird. Flattered but that really isn't important right now."

The diary entries are erratic in tone, according to the Mail, which reported that Knox swings from sounding desperate and self-pitying to narcissistic and arrogant. The newspaper obtained a copy of the 80-page journal in its entirety.

"If I were ugly, would they be writing me wishing me encouragement? I don't think so," Knox writes. "Jeez, I'm not even that good looking. People are acting like I'm the prettiest thing since Helen of Troy."





http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,373264,00.html
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pax PostPosted: Sat Jun 28, 2008 12:09 pm

gwen wrote:
Hmmmm...not sure if this will help her case or not...


It probably won't affect it one way or the other. It sure is a strange case.




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gwen PostPosted: Sat Jun 28, 2008 12:53 pm

pax wrote:


It probably won't affect it one way or the other. It sure is a strange case.


Probably not. I agree...very strange case.
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gwen PostPosted: Fri Jul 11, 2008 7:31 pm

Italian Prosecutors Seek Murder Charges Against Knox
American Student Faces Murder Indictment in Roommate's Italy Death

By NIKKI BATTISTE
July 11, 2008

Prosecutors in Perugia, Italy, today requested murder indictments for American college student Amanda Knox and two others in the gruesome slaying of Knox's British roommate, Meredith Kercher.

Knox, a 21-year-old University of Washington student, has been held for the past eight months in a maximum security Italian prison after the bloody November 2007 death of Kercher in the home the two girls shared while studying in Italy.

Prosecutors also requested murder indictments against Knox's Italian former boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, and Ivory Coast citizen Rudy Hermann Guede.

Now that the indictments have been requested, a preliminary hearing date will be set and is expected to be held in mid-September. The hearing will be held in front of judge Paolo Micheli, who will decide whether adequate evidence exists to have the suspects stand trial. Micheli is the fourth judge to rule on this case.

If the case goes to trial, it will likely begin before the end of the year.

All three suspects have denied having a hand in Kercher's death.


Birthday Behind Bars
Today's news ends a week in which Knox celebrated her milestone 21st birthday Wednesday behind bars in the Italian prison.

Sollecito and Guede have also been detained as suspects. Under Italian law, suspects can be held for one year before being charged with a crime.

Sollecito's lawyer, Luca Maori, told ABC News that Sollecito sent Knox flowers on her birthday — nine yellow anthuriums — along with a note that read: "Happy Birthday. I hope that justice prevails soon."

Knox's mother, Edda Mellas, told ABC News this week that her daughter told her that she received Sollecito's note, but did not mention flowers.

Sollecito and Knox have not been permitted to speak since their November arrests and are currently held in separate prisons. They have written to each other previously, according to Maori.

Mellas and Curt Knox, Amanda's father, alternate stays in Italy for their twice-weekly, one-hour visits with Amanda on Tuesdays and Fridays. Mellas, who is currently in Italy, said she did not see Amanda on her birthday or on Thursday, when Mellas celebrated her own birthday.

"We sang 'Happy Birthday' to each other, hugged, held hands and cried," Mellas said in a sad tone of her Tuesday visit with her daughter. "It was an emotional day — celebrating our birthdays stuck in places we don't want to be, not really celebrating."

Knox told her mother this was not the birthday she envisioned, but she had resigned herself to the fact that she would turn 21 in prison, Mellas said.

"Here we are, the two of us, spending birthdays in Italy a few miles apart. It's not really a birthday." Mellas said.


Missing a Milestone
Ten thousand miles away in Seattle, Curt Knox, Amanda's sister Deanna, 19, and half-sisters, Ashley, 13, and Delaney, 9, also sent birthday cards. Curt expected a 10-minute phone call from Amanda on Thursday, which she is permitted once per week to approved family members.

"For me, it's not her birthday," Curt Knox told ABC News. "I had hoped to have her go out and buy me a cocktail, a privilege she should have earned today at home [in Seattle]. There are certain milestones we hit at certain ages in life — and this is one she missed."

"This is not what I would call a happy birthday, he added. "We will celebrate the happy portion when she is cleared of everything and can come home."

When, or if, Knox might be able to celebrate with her family in Seattle is a huge question that the Italian legal system will ultimately decide. Today, Amanda's birthday wish would probably be freedom.


Brutal Murder Leaves Question Marks
Kercher, a 22-year-old British student, was found stabbed to death last November in a cottage she shared with Knox and two other girls. Kercher and Knox were studying in Italy and had recently arrived in Perugia.

Within days of the killing, Knox and Sollecito were taken into custody. Guede had fled to Germany, but was tracked by police and extradited to Italy.

Guede has admitted to being intimate with Kercher the night of her murder, but he says he was in the bathroom listening to his iPod while Kercher was allegedly stabbed by an Italian man he saw fleeing when he returned to the bedroom. After Guede allegedly tried to unsuccessfully save Kercher, he fled to Germany and did not call police.

Initially, Guede told police Knox and Sollecito were not at the house the night of the murder. He later changed his story and said they were.

Knox and Sollecito say they were together at Sollecito's house that night. But during an initial interrogation, Knox briefly changed her story and said she had a vision that she was in the kitchen and heard Kercher's screams, but covered her ears. Italy's Supreme Court ruled that the statement could not be used against her because there was no lawyer present when she made it.

Murder, Sexual Assault Charges Possible
Prosecutor Guiliano Mignini ended his investigation and deposited evidence on June 19. Included in his deposit were 10,000 pages of autopsy reports, interrogations, evidence and phone taps.

Mignini claims that Kercher was raped, strangled and stabbed in the neck, but forensic experts appointed by the court concluded that sexual assault could not be proven.

Mignini accuses the three suspects of voluntary homicide and sexual assault, and Knox and Sollecito are also accused of simulation of a crime for allegedly faking a break-in.

Mignini also accuses all three of stealing Kercher's money and credit cards. Kercher's purse was found near her body, missing 300 euros and two credit cards.

Lawyers for the three defendants had until this week to go over the prosecutor's documents and submit additional evidence or requests.


Murder suspect Amanda Knox is celebrating her 21st birthday in a maximum security prison in Italy.
(ABCNEWS.com)

http://abcnews.go.com/International/story?id=5340854&page=1
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pax PostPosted: Fri Jul 11, 2008 9:57 pm

Wow. Thanks gwen. This case fascinates me. It'll be interesting to follow it and learn a bit about Italian criminal law.




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gwen PostPosted: Fri Jul 11, 2008 10:21 pm

pax wrote:
Wow. Thanks gwen. This case fascinates me. It'll be interesting to follow it and learn a bit about Italian criminal law.


I agree. I enjoyed learning about Aruban law and this will be interesting to learn also.

Geeez..can't imagine spending my 21st birthday in jail. I feel for her parents.
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pax PostPosted: Fri Jul 11, 2008 10:30 pm

gwen wrote:


I agree. I enjoyed learning about Aruban law and this will be interesting to learn also.

Geeez..can't imagine spending my 21st birthday in jail. I feel for her parents.


What's Aruban law? (j/k)

I wonder how Italian criminal procedure handles things like rules of evidence, burden of proof, witness testimony, etc.

Most articles articles have interviews with Knox' family, but very little on Italian law.




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olympic PostPosted: Thu Jul 17, 2008 3:53 am

Foxy Knoxy sure she’ll be released soon

By AIDAN RADNEDGE - Wednesday, July 16, 2008

The alleged killer of British student Meredith Kercher is confident she will soon be released from prison.

Speaking from her jail cell, Amanda Knox said she would like to return to the US when 'everything is finished'.

'I don't want to stay there for a long time. I hope to live all over the world,' the 21-year-old added.

Knox, who refers to herself as Foxy Knoxy on her MySpace page, also denied she fought all the time with her dead British flatmate.

'We were often together. When I was playing guitar she was reading mystery books,' she said.

Knox is being held at Capanne jail in Perugia, Italy.

Her lover, Raffaele Sollecito, and Rudy Guede are also accused of murdering Kercher, 21, on November 3.

They all say they are innocent. Speaking about the night of the Leeds University student's murder, Knox said only: 'We ate fish and I had sex with Raffaele.'

She shares a cell with an Italian and a Bulgarian and is studying Italian, German, French, Russian and Chinese.

She also denies she broke up with Raffaele.

'We were separated and Raffaele's father tried to keep me away from his son but we never broke up,' she said.




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