A Long Way From Home
48 Hours Investigates The U.S. Student Jailed In Italy For Her Roommate's Murder
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Play CBS Video Video Van Sant's Reporter's Notebook Peter Van Sant talks about his upcoming report on Amanda Knox, an American student who is jailed in Italy for her roommate's murder. Van Sant's report airs Saturday, April 12, at 10 p.m. ET/PT.
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Video Is Amanda Knox Innocent? American student Amanda Knox is being held in Italy for the murder of her roommate. A private investigator calls it a "railroad job from hell." He and "48 Hours'" Peter Van Sant speak with Julie Chen.
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Amanda Knox (AP Photo/Stefano Medici)
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Amanda and her Italian boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito. (AP (file))
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Meredith Kercher (AP Photo/Stefano Medici)
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Rudy Guede (AP Photo/Italian Police)
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Because Amanda and Meredith had been roommates, Amanda quickly became a key witness. "She said they had a lot of questions for her because she was the first one that had come back to the house. And she wanted to help," Edda says.
Four days after the murder, there were still no arrests. The students of Perugia organized a memorial service for Meredith. Noticeably absent were Amanda and Raffaele: they had been summoned to police headquarters.
"When the two them went down there they separated them into different interrogation rooms. And began a questioning process that lasted for a very long time over night," Amanda's father Curt says.
Police were questioning the two because they suspected they were hiding something.
After 14 hours of intense police interrogation, with no sleep, no food, and no lawyer, Amanda dramatically changed her story. "She says that she thinks she was here, that she hears Meredith scream," Sfriso says.
When she signed a statement, Amanda was no longer a witness - she was under arrest.
Four days after Meredith's murder, Amanda was paraded in front of the press on her way to jail. Police believe Amanda took part in the murder of her roommate.
Raffaele was also arrested, and surprisingly Amanda's employer, Patrick Lumumba, was also picked up after she named him as Meredith's murderer.
The arrests came after Amanda dramatically changed her story. 48 Hours obtained Amanda’s stunning statement. "I met Patrick at the basketball courts and we went to my apartment…Patrick had sex with Meredith…I confusedly remember that he killed her."
Amanda’s statement came after that all-night, 14-hour interrogation.
Next, Italian police developed a theory: that Meredith was murdered after refusing to join Amanda, Raffaele and Patrick in kinky four-way sex.
Like the Italian police, journalist Nick Pisa began searching the Internet to learn about the suspects. "They had entries on Facebook…and we were getting an unimaginable amount of information about these people," he says.
Like most college students these days, Amanda and Raffaele shared their lives through the Web; Amanda boasted about alcohol use and casual sex.
"She even posted pictures of herself outside a dope shop in Amsterdam. We discovered how she'd been on a train and she'd admitted having sex with a guy she'd met on the train. We discovered that she'd written some very bizarre essays on her Web site which talked about rape," Pisa says.
"They jumped on that. They saw the word rape and they are like, 'Yeah, that’s a great headline,'" says Madison, a friend of Amanda's from Seattle.
On Raffaele's pages, they learned he collected knives.
"His expression of admiration for a serial killer," Van Sant remarks.
"Exactly. And then we have him with the meat cleaver. Then, we have Amanda behind the machine gun as well," Pisa says, describing pictures of Raffaele posing with a cleaver and Amanda posing behind a machine gun. "It was all just grist for the mill. It was more information than you can ever imagine on a story."
And the "mill" was the Italian and British press corps that was all over the story.
Perhaps what damned Amanda most was the name she gave herself on her MySpace account: "Foxy Knoxy." Some of the headlines in the British press included "The Twisted World of Foxy Knoxy," "The Dark Angel of Seattle," "Orgy Of Death," and "Amanda Was A Drugged-Up Tart."
"You know, I have not read the British press just because I knew that was out there," Edda reacts, crying. "And that's not my daughter. And that's not, I mean in…they never met her."
Produced by Joe Halderman, Douglas Longhini, and Chris Young
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.



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See all 57 CommentsIts actually frightening how ignorant people can be and how easily they can be manipulated into thinking someone is guilty or innocent. Remember the proof that prosecutors claimed to have and the confession by a recent Jon Benet suspect? There was a blizzard of media coverage and claims of evidence and people screaming he was guilty.
Why doesnt the US intervene? The US or any country generally doesnt unless its a high profile case in which a large group in the US makes a fuss. Maybe with this report there will be fuss though shes not a hip trendy defendant pretending to be a revolutionary.
This is a complete sham, anyone with a brain can see that.
lettersforamanda@gmail.com
Her friends will mail it to her if it is not hate-mail.
lettersforamanda@gmail.com
Her friends will mail it to her if it is not hate-mail.
lettersforamanda@gmail.com
Her friends will mail it to her if it is not hate-mail.
Now, I believe that Americans are hated by other Countries and it seems no different here from the Italians.
Amanda''s DNA is on the knife and also on the victim''s bra. But, weren''t they roommates? Don''t roommates share things? Plus, the boyfriend''s shoe print was stepped in blood, but it isn''t from his actual shoe. Where''s the real evidence?
The second man arrested didn''t even know the accused couple. Then the investigators changed their story from Rape to Robbery after they charged the wrong black man. The girl is being railroaded by the British and Italian press. They formed an opinion, like when they went to buy her underwear and she was supposedly going to have freak *** with her boyfriend because the murder turned her on! Puuuuhhhllleeeez!
If Amanda didn''t confess. This wouldn''t be a Mystery.
Almost as sad as the murder is this self-serving program and the blindness of Ms. Knox''s parents and those who believe that an innocent little American girl is caught up in some third world police state.
Fingerprints? Blood? DNA? How can science dare to challenge our twice-dean''s listed premiere soccer player elite Jesuit school educated darling? Our little darling''s past of drugs and *** on the train? How mean! She is taking the fall for being American! Of course, whenever there is a murder in Italy they round up Americans! Raffaele isn''t American. Millions of Americans visit Italy and don''t leave their blood at a murder scene.
Has anyone stopped to wonder ... Amanda said she found the door open, and saw blood in bathroom...and then she went and took a shower? (the story doesn''t point out that she admitted seeing blood before getting in the shower). Maybe she hasn''t seen Psycho.
"If you could throw someone in prison for what they put on My Space we would all be sitting there"? 1) She is there because of physical evidence and lying, and 2) speak for yourself!
Yes, when you leave the USA, you are subject to the laws of the country you are visiting. I don''t think we''d like it much if an Italian were in jail in the USA accused of murder and the Italian government swooped in and overrode our laws.
Even after 14 hours I would accuse an innocent person of murder.
Most parents think their child is so pure and innocent. It is a real wake up to discover their child is active and wild.
Why are there so many pages wasted on this sorry storey. why do you believe she would be innocent? because she is an American? Ever hear of Americans going wild when they are away from home? Many GI''s have gotten charged with serious assault-one guy stabbed his girlfriend 20 times-and murder.
graphic(mental viz) nothing shown
www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=
/news/2007/11/12/wkercher412.xml
This mentions the clothes she was wearing in the CCTV,
www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=
/news/2007/11/12/wkercher312.xml
This one has some interesting facts on cell phone whereabouts and other facts,
www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/eur
ope/article2852819.ece
Here is a liberal site, and American, for the "source mongers" :)
www.newsweek.com/id/70610
Here are a few excerpts from the same, Newsweek.com. site, written by Barbie Nadeau, Nov 15th 2007.
" A 19-page report, released by investigating judge Claudia Matteini, tells a squalid tale of dangerous *** games and a disturbing tale about Knox, the blond, blue-eyed student from Seattle who adopted the online name "Foxy Knoxy."
In Perugia, the judge''s report records a pattern of inconsistent statements by Knox and Sollecito, who had been dating less than a month. (Sollecito''s Facebook page included a photo of himself wrapped in bandages and brandishing a meat cleaver; his Oct. 19 blog post expressed a desire for "extreme ***" to break up the monotony of a regular relationship.
But it is not just Knox''s inconsistencies and fingerprints that Italian authorities are using to build the case against her. The judge''s report includes cell phone records indicating that Knox sent a message to Lumumba earlier that evening, telling him her roommate was home and "see you later."
Therefore everything he says must be considered in that light.
In other words if he does not get Amanda Knox of the hook, Paul Ciolino does not get a big payout.
Therefore, what would you expect him to say regarding Amanda Knox?
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22332240/page/5/
Clint Van Zandt: The significance was going to be she alleged that she had spent the night at her boyfriend''s house. And if you think about a drop of blood is normally going to dry from the outside in.
Dennis Murphy: So blood from two days ago would look different than--
Clint Van Zandt: Entirely different. That refutes Amanda%u2019s story that she wasn''t there that night.
Dennis Murphy: They seem to think it was a pretty good piece of evidence.
Clint Van Zandt: They do. They think that''s a very good piece of evidence. We have fingerprints. We have footprints. We have basically fresh blood. We have DNA evidence, all of that places two and probably three people in the apartment, in the murder room with the victim at the time it happened. This is someone who was a victim from the get go and all the way through.
And Clint thinks Amanda, with the forensic evidence, her shifting stories -- yes I was there, no I wasn''t -- coupled with her false accusation of Lumumba has put her in a perilous situation.
In other words, has his experience with the law affected the way he perceives prosecutors and police officer?
Would it be possible that he may have diminished differentiation and thus simply categorically discounts any assertions made by police and/or prosecutors?
Hence, might it be necessary to consider Ciolino''s statements with judicious caution?
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"12. On information and belief Rimland and Ciolino had a close personal and professional relationship which included Rimland representing Ciolino on a criminal charge of Assault filed in case #00-5-005307 in the Fifth District Circuit Court of Cook County."
Interesting, "Ciolino on a criminal charge of Assault" it says.
This is bothersome... According to Guede''s account, Knox was not in the house, though in at least one of her many confused and contradictory statements she has admitted that she was. Police say mobile phone records show that Guede and Knox talked to each other "several times" before the murder and after it.
Interesting.
http://blogs.chicagotribune.com/news_columnists_ezorn/2006/01/simon_says.html
%u201C12. On information and belief Rimland and Ciolino had a close personal and professional relationship which included Rimland representing Ciolino on a criminal charge of Assault filed in case #00-5-005307 in the Fifth District Circuit Court of Cook County.%u201D
Interesting, %u201CCiolino on a criminal charge of Assault%u201D it says
%u201C14. In 1999 Jack Rimland was the President of the Illinois Attorneys for Criminal Justice. On May 7, 1999, while purporting to be representing Alstory Simon, he presented awards to David Protess, Paul Ciolino and five (5) students for their actions in freeing Anthony Porter and developing evidence against his client. Rimland, in presenting these awards stated: %u201CDavid Protess and his students utilized their talents as investigative journalists and successfully uncovered crucial evidence resulting in the freeing of Anthony Porter%u201D. (See May 21, 1999 Inside Medill News attached as Exhibit 43).%u201D
Interesting, it says %u201CDavid Protess and his students utilized their talents as investigative journalists and successfully uncovered crucial evidence resulting in the freeing of Anthony Porter%u201D.
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