Monday, 3 October 2011

Amanda Knox says she is innocent of Kercher murder

Amanda Knox has made a courtroom appeal against her conviction for the murder of UK student Meredith Kercher, saying she was "paying with her life".
The US student told a jury in Perugia: "I did not kill, I did not rape, I did not steal. I was not there."
Her ex-boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito earlier denied accusing Knox of the murder and said he was in a "nightmare" he had never woken up from.
A verdict on the appeals is not expected until Monday evening.
Knox, 24, who was sentenced to 26 years in jail in 2009, said she had been betrayed and manipulated.
Tearful, and speaking in fluent Italian, she said: "I am not who they say I am. The perversion, the violence, the lack of respect for life - I did not do the things they are saying I did.
'Untidy and careless' "I did not kill, I did not rape, I did not steal. I was not there."
Knox has been working on her speech for three months, her father said.

How Perugia's Court of Appeal works

  • Appeal decided by a jury of eight, made up of main judge - in this case Claudio Pratillo Hellmann - another judge and six jurors from the general public
  • Judges take part and vote as part of the jury, but guide rather than instruct others how to vote
  • Jury can overturn or uphold the convictions of Knox and Sollecito, and keep their sentences the same, raise them to life, or cut them
  • Jury must stay in chambers until a verdict is reached
  • If verdicts are upheld, Knox and Sollecito have one more chance to appeal - in Italy's highest appeals court
Raffaele Sollecito, 27, who was given a 25-year term, told the jury he had never harmed anyone in his life and the claims against him were "totally untrue".
"I've heard that I have accused Amanda, this in not true, this is totally untrue," he said.
His lawyer Giulia Bongiorno told reporters his client was "very emotional" but "strong" and sure of his innocence.
"We do say there have been an awful lot of mistakes, mainly not asking for an expert opinion," she said.
"The way things were personalised was something I didn't particularly like."
The pair have since been taken back to jail while the jury considers its verdict.
Prosecutors have said they will appeal if the verdict is overturned.
Much of the case has centred on a review of DNA evidence on a knife, thought to be the murder weapon, which indicated that the evidence could be flawed.
The defence team has also challenged witness sightings of Knox and Sollecito near the murder scene.
But prosecutors have called for the sentences to be increased to life terms, saying there was also considerable circumstantial evidence putting the ex-lovers at the scene of the killing.
Raffaele Sollecito: "I've never woken up from this nightmare"
Knox told the jury: "I had good relationships with everybody who was living in my flat. I was untidy, careless, but we did have good relationships.
"I shared my life, particularly with Meredith. She was always very kind towards me. Meredith was killed and I have always wanted justice for her. I do not run away from the truth and I've never run away from it."
She added: "I want to go back home. I want to go back to my life. I don't want to be punished. I don't want my life and my future to be taken away for something I didn't do because I am innocent."
Francesco Maresca, the Kercher family lawyer, said it was a tense, emotional time for them as the verdict neared.
He said the Kerchers have followed the appeal closely, and think the legal process had been "thorough".
"The Kerchers are fully satisfied with what has been done by the judges," he said.
The trial has heard some colourful phrases used to describe Knox, with one lawyer comparing the American to Who Framed Roger Rabbit cartoon character Jessica Rabbit, and another to a witch.
Carlo Pacelli, who represents Diya "Patrick" Lumumba - the man Knox originally accused of the murder - said she had a split personality.
One side was "angelic, good, compassionate, and in some ways even saintly", but the other side was "Lucifer-like, demonic, satanic, diabolic" and "longs to live out borderline extreme behaviour", he said.
Meredith Kercher  
Meredith Kercher was murdered in her bedroom in November 2007
Knox's family have said they will take her back to Seattle immediately if her conviction is overturned, despite prosecutors vowing to appeal.
Andrea Vogt, a freelance journalist for the Seattle Post, said a big party was already under way in Knox's home city.
People had gathered to hold a vigil and erupted in applause after Knox's speech to the appeals court, she added.
If freed, the reception to Knox's return would be "overwhelmingly positive" in Seattle. But if her conviction was upheld, there would be "an outcry from the US", she added.
'Completely forgotten' Miss Kercher, from Coulsdon, south London, had been sharing a cottage in Perugia with Knox during an year abroad from Leeds University.
Prosecutors say she was killed in a brutal sex game which went wrong. Her throat had been slit and she had been sexually assaulted.
Miss Kercher's family, who will be in court for the verdict, have said they feel the true victim has been "completely forgotten", with the media's focus on Knox.
In a recent interview on Italian television, her sister Stephanie said: "In these four years, Meredith has been completely forgotten. But we need to find justice for her, we need to find the truth for her."
Daniel Sandford, who is in Perugia, said there had been some suggestion the Kercher family would hold a press conference ahead of the court's decision.
A third person - Rudy Guede, 21 - was also convicted of Miss Kercher's murder in a separate trial and was sentenced to 30 years in prison.
His conviction was upheld on appeal but his sentence reduced to 16 years.

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