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In the dock: Knox

Moment Of Truth

Amanda Knox faces a jury. Will they believe what she has to say?

 

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Amanda Knox did not take an oath of truth on Friday morning before she sat before a Perugian jury deciding whether she murdered her former roommate Meredith Kercher. None was necessary; in Italy, defendants in criminal trials do not have to take an oath before testifying, and those judging the case have to decide if hers is the real truth. Dressed in a fresh, white short-sleeved blouse and khakis, the 21-year-old Seattle native began making her case today.

 

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She began speaking in English. After two hours, she switched to Italian, the language in the country where she now lives. Throughout her six-hour testimony, she was confident and collected. She did not cry when she discussed Meredith's death and she passed up what would have been a perfect opportunity to apologize to Patrick Lumumba, the man who spent two weeks in prison after she falsely accused him of Kercher's murder. "Did you ever apologize to Patrick?" asked Lumumba's lawyer, Carlo Pacelli. "No," said Knox. When asked why she named him, she blamed the police. She said she had accompanied Raffaele Sollecito, her then boyfriend who had been called to the police station at 10:30 p.m. on Nov. 5, 2007, for questioning about the murder.

When police also called her in for questioning, things started to go bad. She was questioned, without a lawyer but with the services of an interpreter, until 5:45 a.m., when she finally signed a statement declaring that Lumumba killed Kercher and that she was in the house at the time. According to Knox, they were not nice to her until she made that declaration. She said that the police hit her on the back of the head twice, and that they intimidated her with threats. "They called me a stupid liar," she said. "They made suggestions to me about what might have happened. It was a complicated situation."

But the next day, Knox, from her jail cell, asked for paper to write an account of what happened. She wrote, "I stand by my statements that I made last night about events that could have taken place in my home with Patrick." When asked by Pacelli if she was under pressure when she wrote that statement the next day, she said, "No. I wrote this because I was confused. I wanted to explain to the police that I was confused. I did not understand what was in my imagination and what was the reality."

In February, the same police who questioned her said they offered her breakfast and were not abusive. Officers testified that they did not hit Knox and that, while they were tough on her, they were not excessively mean. But Knox disagreed and was not afraid to tell the court, even though many of the police she accused were sitting in the courtroom. "They kept asking me, 'Who could I imagine would be the person who killed Meredith?'" she told the court. "I said I didn't know and they said I would go to prison for lying to protect someone."

The Lumumba questions are vital in this case because Knox faces criminal charges for accusing him of a crime that is punishable by life in prison. Even if she is acquitted of Kercher's murder, she could still serve prison time for the false-accusation charge. "In my confusion I started to imagine that maybe I was there," she told the court. "Under this pressure I imagined lots of different things."

Knox's testimony was delayed by a quintessential two-hour moment of Italian chaos. The judge offered the media a rare opportunity to film the proceedings but, to keep noise to a minimum, he said only five TV cameras could stay and the media would have to decide who they would be and how the footage would be shared. No consensus was reached and the crews were relegated to the press room to film the monitor instead. Despite the delay, by the time she took the stand, she had regained her cool.

But today was the easy part. On Saturday she will be questioned again, this time by Kercher's lawyer and by the prosecutor. "All the things that have been said about me are not true," she said during testimony. "That's not who I am."

© 2009

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: quenby @ 09/30/2009 1:14:51 PM

    So true. I am no fan of the American judicial system after what I have been researching in the past 2 years. In one study it was found that 68% of death row inmates had questionable legal proceedings during their trials, but I am in a court case in Spain and the corruption, nepotism, illegalities and stupidity of everyone (particularly the judge) has amazed me. And, I am not some naive 22 year old. I am 46, travelled around the world almost all of my life, several times with nothing more than a suitcase and "pocket change," seen an enormous amount of corruption and back-stabbing, lived amongst Spaniards for 20 years, and never in my life did I think that a judicial system could get away with so many illegalities.

    And, excuse me where did you get the impression that this girls mother is rich. It is my understanding her parents have borrowed against everything they have to pay for their daughters defense.

  • Posted By: quenby @ 09/30/2009 1:05:24 PM

    Here, Here!!! Again and again. I have gone through a witch-hunt similar to Amanda Knox's within the Spanish judicial system, and believe me the corruption, nepotism, incompetence and plain stupidity, not to mention discrimination against Americans is so rampant in Southern European countries that their judicial systems are a huge joke. Remember how they tried to stick Madeleine McKay's mother with a murder wrap, and eventually ran the parents out of Portugal for not submissively "shutting up."

    In my own case, the Spanish judicial system has embezzled apx. $1 million of my assets, handed over all of the family debt to me, illegally abducted my children and handed them over to their violent, psychopathic father and thrown me out onto the streets with nothing. All of this in retaliation for having filed a complaint against my ex-husband's continual threats to kill me if I ever left him. My ex is even in the process of initiating trumped up criminal proceedings against me in Spain so that if I ever step foot on Spanish soil I will be thrown in jail to rot; exactly as he has been promising to do for the past 2 years if I ever tried to leave him.

    This is the reality of the Southern European judicial system.

    And, the American government?!?! The US State Departments response to me has basically been, "If it is the custom in Spain to kill ones wife if she tries to leave him, then so be it!!! Let him kill you!!!!

    The Obama administration is proposing asylum in the USA for foreign victims of domestic abuse living under oppressive, corrupt govts. and judicial systems, but for Americans living under oppressive govts. they basically hang them out ot dry!!!

    Then, to add insult to injury they create a post (Melanne Verveer as Ambassador at Large on Global Womens Issues) which pretends to address violence against women issues around the world?!?! I have written a letter to this office asking what their policy is towards Americans living abroad and victims of domestic abuse, but to date have no response.

  • Posted By: Indigo7 @ 07/05/2009 12:32:46 PM

    Oh get real. Look at her behavior before the murder. Being a fresh doe eyed piece of ass does not affirm her innocence.

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