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Amanda Knox: murder in Perugia, drama, and acquittal

Mappe Åbnet: JUNE 6, 2025 AT 10:00 AM
A figure resembling Amanda Knox walks through a crowd of reporters, cameras flashing, as she leaves an Italian courtroom, her expression a mixture of relief and disbelief
BEVIS

Kercher's murder in 2007: Knox and Sollecito in focus

A brutal [Internal Link Placeholder] case shook the idyllic university town of [Internal Link Placeholder], [Internal Link Placeholder], on a cold November day in 2007. Twenty-one-year-old British exchange student Meredith Susanna Cara Kercher was found murdered in her apartment at Via della Pergola 7, semi-naked with her throat slit. Her American roommate, 20-year-old Amanda Marie Knox from Seattle, [Internal Link Placeholder], and her Italian boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, soon became central figures in a lengthy [Internal Link Placeholder] that captivated the world's attention for years.

Kercher found: Knox's call and the crime scene

On November 2, 2007, at 12:35 PM, Amanda Knox alerted the police. She had found the door to Meredith Kercher's room locked and [Internal Link Placeholder] in the bathroom. Shortly thereafter, a friend forced the door open, revealing a gruesome [Internal Link Placeholder]: Meredith lay on the floor under a duvet, the victim of numerous stab wounds and signs of sexual assault. A subsequent autopsy confirmed the brutality of the [Internal Link Placeholder], including a fatal slit to the throat. The medical examiner concluded she had been [Internal Link Placeholder] during a sexual assault, indicating [Internal Link Placeholder].

Chaotic probe: Knox's grilling and Lumumba accusations

The subsequent investigation was marked by chaos. The [Internal Link Placeholder] police quickly focused on Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito, allegedly due to their behavior at the police station. During a lengthy interrogation, which Amanda Knox later described as coerced and without access to a lawyer or interpreter, she mentioned bar owner Patrick Lumumba as the [Internal Link Placeholder] in a kind of "dream-like state." This led to Lumumba's arrest, which later proved to be wrongful. Knox was subsequently convicted of slander for this statement.

2009 conviction: Knox and Sollecito guilty of murder

At the first [Internal Link Placeholder] in 2009, both Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito were sentenced to long prison terms for [Internal Link Placeholder]. The verdict was based, among other things, on Knox's changing statements and a kitchen knife found in Sollecito's apartment. The prosecution claimed to have found Meredith Kercher's DNA on this knife. Prosecutors also pointed to a phone call from Amanda Knox to her mother, made shortly before the body was officially discovered, as a sign of guilty knowledge of the [Internal Link Placeholder].

2011 appeal: Tainted DNA frees Knox and Sollecito

However, the case took a dramatic turn during an appeal in 2011. Independent DNA experts concluded that the presented [Internal Link Placeholder] was heavily contaminated. Specifically, the DNA allegedly linking Raffaele Sollecito to Meredith Kercher's bra clasp could have been contaminated during the initial, messy [Internal Link Placeholder] investigation. Based on this new assessment of the DNA [Internal Link Placeholder], the court in [Internal Link Placeholder] acquitted both Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito, a decision that triggered strong reactions.

Legal chaos 2013-2015: Court clears Knox and Sollecito

But the legal saga was far from over. [Internal Link Placeholder] Supreme Court overturned the acquittals in 2013 and ordered a new [Internal Link Placeholder]. In 2014, Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito were again found guilty by a court in Florence. However, this legal odyssey reached its final conclusion in 2015 when the Supreme Court definitively upheld the acquittal of the two. The court emphasized that there was simply "no objective [Internal Link Placeholder]" to connect either Amanda Knox or Raffaele Sollecito to the [Internal Link Placeholder] of Meredith Kercher, leaving their part of the case as a potentially unsolved matter for many.

Rudy Guede: Sole conviction with DNA at the crime scene

Throughout this protracted legal process, Ivorian citizen Rudy Guede has been the only person whose DNA was definitively found in Meredith Kercher's bodily fluids and on her belongings at the [Internal Link Placeholder], from which [Internal Link Placeholder] and credit cards were also stolen. Rudy Guede admitted to being in the apartment at Via della Pergola 7 on the fateful night but maintained that Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito forced him to participate in the [Internal Link Placeholder]. He was convicted in a separate [Internal Link Placeholder] and is serving a 16-year prison sentence for his role in Meredith Kercher's murder.

Media frenzy: Press impact and Knox’s struggle in jail

The case of Meredith Kercher's [Internal Link Placeholder] quickly devolved into a global [Internal Link Placeholder] circus, making it a high-profile affair. Journalistic coverage and media portrayals were intense. Amanda Knox was often depicted as a cold and calculating figure, caricatured with the nickname “Foxy Knoxy.” In contrast, Meredith Kercher was often described as the innocent, perfect student – a stark dichotomy that heavily shaped public opinion. Amanda Knox has since described these media portrayals as deeply distorted and harmful. Behind the sensational headlines, she struggled with isolation during her many years in an Italian prison, where literature became a refuge to maintain her mental health. The years-long legal battle and intense public scrutiny left deep scars on everyone involved in this complex murder [Internal Link Placeholder], one of the most talked-about murder cases in recent times, where ultimately only Rudy Guede was convicted for the [Internal Link Placeholder] and murder.

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Susanne Sperling

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