As yet another trial comes to a close in Italy, Amanda Knox’s former boyfriend describes the nightmare that destroyed their lives after the murder of Meredith Kercher.
On the final day of evidence in the
latest Amanda Knox court case in Italy, her former boyfriend described
the “nightmare” that had crushed their “fairy tale” romance more than
five years ago. Still the Italian judiciary is wrestling with the same
disputed facts that were first aired in 2007, was this knife a kitchen
utensil or a murder weapon?
Knox
and Sollecito were convicted of murdering Meredith Kercher in 2009. But
that verdict was overturned by an appellate court two years later,
before another dramatic twist saw their acquittals reversed by Italy’s
high court in March this year.
Sollecito,
who was attending the new appeal for the first time, made an emotional
17-minute plea, telling the court that his life had been ruined by the
case. “I do not wish this experience on anyone,” he said. “It has been
a nightmare.”
Rudy
Guede, an Ivory Coast native, was convicted in a separate fast-track
trial for his role in the murder before the first trial for Knox and
Sollecito began. His conviction has been upheld by Italy’s high court.
The
latest appeal has focused on only a few choice pieces of evidence,
including testimony from a cross-dressing mafia turncoat who says his
brother was Kercher’s real killer. On Wednesday, the court also heard
from a police expert about a spot of DNA on the blade of a knife that
had previously not been tested. The knife, which was considered the
murder weapon by the court that convicted Knox and Solllecito, had a
small sample of DNA in a tiny groove on the blade that had been
attributed to Kercher. But because the sample was too small to double
test and had to be amplified beyond the standard forensic protocols, the
appellate court essentially discounted it as the murder weapon.
The
appeal judge allowed for the examination of a spot high on the blade
near the handle that had never been definitively attributed to anyone in
either of the previous trials. The expert told the court that tests
ruled out Guede, Sollecito and Kercher, but matched Knox. At one point
the judge reprimanded Carlo Dalla Vedova, Knox’s lead attorney, for
leading the witness. “Do not put words in the mouth of one expert that
were spoken by other experts,” the judge said, threatening to hold him
in contempt.
The
court then heard from Sollecito who sat at the witness stand to address
the judge and lay judges hearing the case. Tanned from his new life in
the Dominican Republic, he explained how the various court proceedings
had “ruined his life.” He asked the court to consider him “a good
person who grew up in a good family, an Italian” not as the “assassin
the media has painted him to be.” He also complained to the court that
even on vacation he must defend himself. He pleaded that he had
difficulty in job interviews. Most importantly, he told the court twice
that he had never met Guede.
“It
is absurd that a person in their twenties who has always had a tranquil
life, who has never lost his head, who didn’t party, who didn’t drink,
could be condemned,” he said. “Ok, so I smoked a few joints, but it
didn’t change my personality.” He said “Everyone is wrong about me,
about that period of my life, it is not reasonable to accuse me of a
crime like this without foundation.”
He
also explained how when he first came to Perugia he was a quiet student
and that he met Knox “my first love” and how they wanted to keep their
“love nest” sacred and private. "Amanda was carefree. She and I wanted
to be isolated in our nest of desire in a little fairy tale," he said.
“Not have our relationship subject to media scrutiny.”
He only mentioned Kercher’s name once, to say he barely knew her.
The
new appeal, which began in September, has not garnered the same media
attention as the previous two trials primary because Knox, the star
attraction, is sitting out this appeal safely in Seattle. Under Italian
law, neither she nor Sollecito are required to attend the new appeal
although she could be the subject of extradition proceedings if Italy’s
high court confirms a subsequent conviction for the murder. The new
appeal reconvenes November 25 to begin closing arguments. Lawyers for
Knox and Sollecito will present their arguments in mid December. A
verdict is expected January 10, 2014.
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