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February 9, 2013
Monday, October 3, 2011

Italian appeal court clears Amanda Knox of murder

US Amanda Knox (C) reacts at the announce of the verdict of her appeal trial in the Meredith Kercher'' murder.

An Italian court cleared 24-year-old US citizen Amanda Knox and her former boyfriend of murdering British student Meredith Kercher in 2007 and ordered them to be set free on Monday after nearly four years in prison for a crime they always denied committing.

Seattle native Knox and Italian computer student Raffaele Sollecito, had appealed against a 2009 verdict that found them guilty of murdering 21-year-old Kercher during what prosecutors said was a drug-fuelled sexual assault four years ago.

Looking pale and tense as the sentence was read out in a packed Perugia court room, Knox was led away in tears and close to collapse by police officers.

The court quashed the conviction against Knox, who was sentenced to 26 years in jail and against Sollecito, who was sentenced to 25 years, after independent forensic investigators sharply criticised police scientific evidence, saying it was unreliable.

Kercher's half-naked body, with more than 40 wounds and a deep gash in the throat, was found in 2007 in the apartment she shared with Knox in the Umbrian hill town of Perugia where both were studying.

Both Knox and Sollecito, 27, had consistently maintained their innocence throughout the original investigation and trial. A third man, Ivorian drug dealer Rudy Guede, was imprisoned for 16 years for his role in the murder.

The court upheld a conviction against Knox for slander, after she had falsely accused barman Patrick Lumumba of the murders. It sentenced her to three years in prison, a sentence which has now been served.

Knox's good looks and the salacious details of the murder helped make a global media sensation of the trial, which attracted hundreds of reporters from around the world to the packed Perugia courtroom.

Expectations were running high before the verdict that Knox and Sollecito would walk free after the forensic review discredited DNA evidence used to convict them.

In a tearful address to the court earlier on Monday, Knox pleaded with the panel of two professional and six lay judges to free her, saying she was paying for a crime she did not commit.

"I did not do the things they say I did. I did not kill, rape or steal. I was not there," she said in the fluent Italian she has learned in prison.

 

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Tags:  amanda knox  italy  court  meredith kercher  sollecito  murder  prison  


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