Amanda Knox will be appealing.
Amanda Knox's family appeal for funds to help her defence in Meredith Kercher murder trial
The family of Amanda Knox, the American student accused of killing her British flatmate Meredith Kercher, has launched an online appeal for funds to pay for her legal costs as she prepares to face trial for murder.
Lawyers' fees and the cost of travelling back and forth between their home in Seattle, in the Pacific north-west, and Perugia, the Umbrian hill town where Miss Knox is alleged to have stabbed to death the Briton a year ago, have put a heavy financial strain on her parents.
Curt Knox and Edda Mellas, who are separated but remain on good terms, have also had to foot the bill of staying in hotels and a farmhouse near Perugia so that they can regularly visit their daughter behind bars.
"She's our daughter and we'll do everything possible to help her, no matter the cost," Mrs Mellas said in an interview with an Italian magazine, Oggi ('Today').
"But if things go on for too long, we don't know what we'll do. We're not well-off people." They have hired a highly respected, Rome-based lawyer to fight the charges against their daughter and have had to pay for the services of one of Italy's top forensic experts.
The website, carries pictures of Amanda on her seventh birthday, posing in pigtails in a soccer kit and playing a guitar to a toddler.
It carries numerous testimonials from her family and friends, including one from her grandmother, who condemns "the ugly lies about Amanda and her tragic and unjust persecution in Italy." Her aunt, Janet Huff, writes: "I have always thought of her as one of the most genuinely caring and sensitive young people I know.
"The things that have been written about her in the tabloids are the polar opposite of who she really is." The family are appealing for support "while Amanda deals with this very scary time in her life," she adds. "This special place was created to share who the "real" Amanda Knox is and allow you to help support her," a message on the site says.
Miss Knox has been in prison since being arrested by Italian police a year ago on suspicion of having murdered the Leeds University student, with whom she shared a white-washed cottage just outside Perugia's medieval walls.
Prosecutors allege that Miss Kercher, 21, had her throat cut when a sex game involving Miss Knox, 21, her Italian boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito, 24, and an unemployed drifter, Rudy Guede, turned violent.
Guede, 21, who was born in Ivory Coast but emigrated to Italy as a child, was last month found guilty of murder and sexual assault by a Perugia court and sentenced to 30 years in jail.
Miss Knox and her former lover go on trial in Perugia on Dec 4.
Miss Knox's mother described her daughter as loving, loyal and intelligent and says she earned her nickname "Foxy" because she was cunning on the soccer pitch.
She said Miss Knox finds prison life extremely hard but writes and reads a lot, studies Italian, French, German and Russian and hopes to become a translator once she is released.
Her portrayal in the Italian press as sexually precocious was wrong, her parents said.
"She was never a man-eater," her father told the magazine. "She had her first sexual encounter when she was in her final year of high school, whereas these days kids start at 13 or 14 years old. It's true she smoked marijuana from time to time, but she certainly wasn't a drug addict."
On the day that Miss Kercher was found dead, Miss Knox phoned home, telling her mother: "Something strange has happened, Mum. I don't really understand, I'm fine but something odd has happened."
"That was the beginning of our nightmare," Mrs Mellas said. "We'd like to say to the investigators in the case they should get to know our daughter and spend a bit of time with her. Then they would have no doubt about her innocence."
They have yet to be in touch with the Kercher family, of Coulsdon, Surrey.
"We're waiting for Amanda to be released and exonerated of all the charges, so she can then go to the family and express her sorrow. That day will come," Mrs Mellas said.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...defence-in-Meredith-Kercher-murder-trial.html
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I'm not sure if it was mentioned in the article above or if I read it elsewhere, (coffee hasn't kicked in) but her family said Amanda Knox was convicted because she was tried in the media and they convicted, "Foxy Knoxy", which wasn't a true portrayal of their daughter.
She was a student there and I'm not sure how much she knew but the moment she was arrested there was only one phrase she needed to know:
"I will not answer any questions until I speak with a representative from the U.S. consulate".
Italy is a signor of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations. The U.S. Passport instructs all citizens to avoid violating foreign laws and if arrested demand to see a U.S. consul.
It seems like the interrogation was very different from what goes on in the U.S., at least according to Amanda Knox. She said she was beaten, sleep deprived, etc.. If that is true, the phrase (shortened), "I will not speak without legal representation.", wouldn't have helped her, I imagine.
I have mixed thoughts and feelings about the Amanda Knox case. I do feel sorry for her and her family. The case is not clear and it's the not knowing if she was a part of the murder that makes the verdict and sentencing sad. What if she is innocent? That's a long sentence for being in the wrong place at the wrong time. Then again there are the strange antics and conflicting accounts she gave. Just hard to say.
Of course I feel very sorry for Meredith Kercher. Her last moments must have been pure terror. I feel sorry for her family as well.