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Monday 3 October 2011

Amanda Knox : Amanda Knox pleads for her freedom as murder appeal ends


Nearly four years after she was arrested on suspicion of having killed her roommate in this picturesque Italian university town, Amanda Knox pleaded with a jury Monday to overturn her conviction for murder.
"I am not what they say I am. I did not kill. I did not rape. I did not steal," Amanda Knox said, her voice trembling with emotion. She was making perhaps the most important speech of her life, and it showed.
She got out only a few words before her voice choked off, she stopped, and said under her breath: "OK."
Then she launched into the crux of her plea:

"People always ask 'who is Amanda Knox?' I am the same person I was four years ago. But I have lost a friend. I have lost my faith in Italian police. I am paying with my life for something I have not done. Four years ago I didn't know what suffering was," she said, speaking fluent, flawless Italian.
Knox and co-defendant Raffaele Sollecito are fighting to be acquitted of the murder of British exchange student Meredith Kercher. Prosecutors have called for the pair's sentences -- of 26 and 25 years, respectively -- to be increased to life.
Before Knox spoke, Sollecito made a dramatic appeal to the court to free them, removing a white plastic bracelet from his wrist and fingering it nervously as his closing statement came to an end.
"It says 'Free Amanda and Raffaele,'" he told the court. "I have never taken it off. I think the time has come to take it off."
His voice fading almost to inaudibility, he concluded, "I hope this is part of history and that Amanda and I have a future."
"I have never hurt anybody," he said.
Knox did not look at Sollecito as he addressed the court, though he detailed for the judges and jurors the night of Kercher's murder. The couple have maintained they were together at Sollecito's residence the night Kercher was killed.
He described the night as a happy, almost idyllic one for him: "I was about to hand in my thesis. I had just met Amanda, a beautiful, sunny girl."
The case is now in the hands of two judges and six jurors, who retired together within minutes of Knox's statement to consider their ruling.
Knox and Sollecito were convicted of murder, sexual assault and related crimes in December 2009. Their appeal has focused largely on DNA evidence found on a knife and on a bra clasp belonging to the victim.
Knox's words capped a dramatic week of closing arguments by the host of lawyers battling over the outcome, from the lawyer for a man falsely accused of the crime, who called Knox "Lucifer-like, demonic, Satanic," to the Sollecito defense counsel Giulia Bongiorno, who insisted that like the buxom cartoon temptress Jessica Rabbit in the movie "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?" Knox is not bad, just "drawn that way."
Knox told the court she always wanted justice for Kercher, her roommate at the university.
"I am innocent. Raffaele is innocent," she said.
At the conclusion of her statement, Knox put her hands on her face and wept, burying her face in the shoulder of defense lawyer Carlo dalla Vedova, who put a comforting arm around her and offered her a handkerchief.
Knox was 20 and Kercher was 21 years old, studying at Perugia's university for foreign students, when Kercher's semi-naked body was found in the house they shared. Her throat had been slashed.
Sollecito, 23 at the time, was Knox's boyfriend, studying computer science at another university in Perugia.
Prosecutors and police say Kercher's genetic material was on the knife blade and Knox's was on the handle, and that a Kercher bra clasp found at the crime scene had Sollecito's DNA.
Defense lawyers and independent experts argued strenuously during the appeal that the DNA testing process was badly flawed and the results should be inadmissible.
As Knox defense lawyer Luciano Ghirga made his final statements to the court before Knox and Sollecito spoke Monday, he reminded the jury that the standard is "beyond a reasonable doubt."
"We ask you to give complete freedom to Amanda Knox," he said.
Knox has addressed this jury at least twice before, telling them in June she was "shocked" at the testimony of the third person convicted of the crime, Rudy Guede, a drifter originally from the Ivory Coast.
Guede admitted having sexual relations with Kercher but denied killing her.
Guede was sentenced separately to 30 years behind bars for the murder, a sentence that was reduced to 16 on appeal.
In June, he refused to tell the court hearing Knox and Sollecito's appeal that they had not been involved.
A prosecutor then read a letter Guede had written to a newspaper from prison, saying he thought they had killed Kercher.
"The only time Rudy Guede, Raffaele Sollecito and I were in one room together was in a courtroom," Knox told the court in June.
Her defense dismissed Guede's letter as based on "a feeling," not facts or events he witnessed.
Before the hearing began Monday, Knox's stepfather told CNN he was optimistic about the outcome of the appeal. He made his way into the court through a throng of reporters, ignoring shouted questions from journalists.
Either side can appeal this court's ruling to Italy's High Court, but such an appeal would be on narrow technical grounds only.

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