Acquitted of murder, Amanda Knox returns to Italy to talk wrongful convictions

US exchange student Amanda Knox was jailed in 2007 and then later acquitted.

Amanda Knox, the US exchange student jailed for four years then acquitted for the 2007 murder of her roommate in the Italian town of Perugia, returned to Italy.

Amanda Knox, the US exchange student jailed for four years then acquitted for the 2007 murder of her roommate in the Italian town of Perugia, returned to Italy. Source: AP

Amanda Knox, the US exchange student jailed for four years then acquitted for the 2007 murder of her roommate in the Italian town of Perugia, returned to Italy on Thursday to address a conference on wrongful convictions.

The Seattle native was 20 at the time of the murder of Briton Meredeth Kercher, whose half-naked body was found on November 2, 2007, in a bedroom of the apartment she and Knox shared in Perugia.

Amanda Knox attends a cocktail for the opening of the Innocence Project conference, in Modena, Italy.
Amanda Knox attends a cocktail for the opening of the Innocence Project conference, in Modena, Italy. Source: AP


The 21-year-old had been stabbed 47 times and had her throat slashed. Police also found signs of sexual assault.

Sentenced to 26 years in jail, Knox served four years before an initial acquittal on appeal in 2011. That was overturned, but Italy's highest court ended up definitively acquitting her in 2015.

Knox, now 31, flew in to the northern city of Milan before heading to Modena, where she was seen at a cocktail party, glass in hand and smiling, on the eve of a Criminal Justice Festival.

Knox breaks down in tears as she speaks with reporters upon her arrival back in Seattle in 2011.
Knox breaks down in tears as she speaks with reporters upon her arrival back in Seattle in 2011. Source: AP


She will be a guest speaker on a panel titled "Trial by Media" on Saturday at the invitation of the Italy Innocence Project.

Knox wrote in an article for Medium.com pubished Wednesday that she was "polishing up the speech I’m about to give to a potentially hostile audience in Italy".

Italian coverage of the trial, following Knox's acquittal.
Italian coverage of the trial, following Knox's acquittal. Source: Milestone


Prosecutors described the murder as a drug-fuelled sex game gone awry involving Knox, her Italian boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito and an Ivorian drifter, Rudy Guede.



Sollecito was acquitted along with Knox, but Guede was convicted and remains in jail in Italy.

Defence lawyers argued that their clients could not get a fair trial because of the media frenzy over the murder.

Since her release, Knox has written a book about her experience - "Waiting To Be Heard: A Memoir" - has been the subject of a Netflix documentary, and has become a public advocate for inmates who have been wrongfully imprisoned.


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Source: AFP, SBS


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