December 6, 2009 8:28 AM

Verdict Reached in Amanda Knox Trial

By
CBSNews
(CBS/ AP)  Last updated 5:05 p.m. Eastern

An Italian court began deliberations Friday in the yearlong trial of American student Amanda Knox, who is charged with murdering her British roommate.

After around 11 hours of deliberations, court officials said that a verdict would be announced about midnight (2300 GMT, 6 p.m. EST) Friday.

The eight members of the jury, including two judges, sequestered themselves in the courtroom of the medieval city.

Knox and her co-defendant, Raffaele Sollecito of Italy, are charged with murder and sexual assault in the 2007 slaying of Meredith Kercher. The three were all studying in Perugia and Knox and Sollecito were dating at the time.

The prosecutors are seeking a life sentence for both, including nine months of daytime solitary confinement for Knox and two months for Sollecito. Both defendants say they are innocent. Any verdict can be appealed by both parties.

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CBS News correspondent Allen Pizzey reports that, in Italy, a jury's verdict can be overruled by the judge in the case, who is also obligated to rule acquittal if the jurors fail to agree on a verdict.

Just a day before the deliberations began, Knox made an emotional appeal, trying for the last time to convince the court that she is not a murderer.

Standing up, her voice breaking as she fought back tears, the 22-year-old American told the court that she feels "vulnerable" after two years in jail.

"I have written on a piece of paper ... that I was afraid of losing myself," she said, speaking Italian.

"I am scared of being branded what I am not," she said. "I am scared of having the mask of an assassin forced onto me."

Knox's mother, Edda Mellas, told "Early Show" co-anchor Harry Smith that as a translator relayed her daughter's words to her on Thursday, "I started to cry. It was a very emotional thing she said."

"You could tell it was very emotional," Curt Knox told "The Early Show". "She closed it by thanking the prosecutor - which I would have had a very hard time doing - for trying to find justice for Meredith."

Both Knox, who is from Seattle, and Sollecito, 25, have been jailed since shortly after the slaying. They were taken to their cells as they awaited the ruling.

"They've got two 20-old kids and they are going to be determining their life," Curt Knox, the defendant's father, said of the jurors while talking to reporters at the Perugia courthouse.

Knox's mother, Edda Mellas, said she is "extremely hopeful" and "confident that the judges and the jury are going to make the right decision."

(AP)
The Kercher family (left), from Coulsdon, Surrey, in southern England, arrived in Perugia to be in the courtroom for the verdict. They refused to comment as reporters asked them what they expected from the verdict.

Italian law allows for suspects in serious crimes to be jailed even before indictment, if they are considered a flight risk among other reasons.

If convicted, Knox is likely to remain in jail, even though in Italy sentences are not served until all appeals are exhausted, a process that can take years. Under Italian law, in case of a guilty verdict, she can receive a lesser sentence than the one requested by the prosecutors.

If acquitted, Knox would go back to prison for some paperwork before leaving, her family said. They declined to give details on any travel plans to go back to the United States.

The prosecutors contend on the night of the murder, Nov. 1, 2007, Knox and Sollecito met at the apartment where Kercher and Knox lived. They say a fourth person was there, Rudy Hermann Guede, an Ivory Coast citizen who has been convicted in the murder and sentenced to 30 years in prison. Guede, who is appealing his conviction, says he was in the house the night of the murder but did not kill Kercher.

The prosecution says Knox and Kercher started arguing and the three brutally attacked and sexually assaulted the Briton. They were acting, according to the prosecution, under "the fumes of drugs and possibly alcohol."

Kercher's body, her throat slit, was found in a pool of blood the next day at the apartment.

The prosecution painted Knox as a promiscuous, manipulative liar with low personal hygiene standards which led to animosity between her and Kercher, Pizzey reports.

Knox said Kercher was a friend whose death shocked her. Defense lawyers have described the American as a smart and cheerful woman.

DNA traces that the prosecutors have linked to the defendants have been disputed in court. The defense lawyers contend that traces are either two small to be attributed with certainty or that evidence may have been inadvertently contaminated in the police investigation.

The prosecution maintains that a a 6½-inch (16.5-centimeter) knife they found at Sollecito's house could be the murder weapon. The knife has Kercher's DNA on the blade and Knox's on the handle, they say. But defense lawyers argue that the knife is too big to match Kercher's wounds and that the amount of what prosecutors say is Kercher's DNA is too low to be attributed with certainty.

The defense has largely focused on the lack of evidence and what they say is the absence of a clear motive.

Knox has given contradicting versions, saying at one point that she was home the night of the murder and had heard Kercher's screams and accusing a Congolese man of the killing. The man, Patrick Diya Lumumba, owns a pub in Perugia where Knox worked. He was jailed briefly but was later cleared and is seeking defamation damages from Knox.

Knox said police pressure led her to initially accuse an innocent man.

Knox and Sollecito are also being tried on lesser charges, including staging a break-in, carrying a knife, and the theft of about euro300 ( or about $450) in cash and Kercher's cell phones and credit cards. Prosecutors say Knox and Sollecito broke a window in a bedroom to stage a burglary and sidetrack the investigation.

CBS/ AP
Add a Comment See all 37 Comments
by MrJonson December 4, 2009 6:28 PM EST
OMG CBS Lets cover ClimateGate.... isn't it a bigger deal then Amanda Knox and Tiger Woods... when Al Gore and other New World Order agents, try to extort Billions of Carbon Tax dollars out of the Earth's population. Arrest Al Gore and shut down the United Nations Enviro-Communist Movement. We all want to help the environment, but not by creating 200 New Carbon Taxes and a Police State.
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by barbaram99 December 4, 2009 6:23 PM EST
I 'member the teacher talking about when Americans go off American land and to another nation..We have to be on our best behaviuor and do the proper thing..It does not mean that girl/boy can do as they please. Americans don't have the US Constution when they leave America. I feel for the parents of the dead UK girl,,She got 26 years.
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by lemonskinkus December 4, 2009 6:16 PM EST
I smell a huge book deal here folks.
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by watchthis01 December 4, 2009 5:41 PM EST
The African guy got 30 years for rape in a trial that seem to have taken a couple of days. If Knox doesn't go down for murder (nearly two years of trial) and her ex-boyfriend doesn't either, then what does that say about the Italian justice system? Who pays for the murder of the young lady?
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by barbaram99 December 4, 2009 5:21 PM EST
SkirtLifter and others.
I 'member when others came to America years ago,they learnt American ways. When I was in high school I knew of a lady was was nationalised and she told me she had to learn english, our history..Years ago every thing was in one print and spoken American english..I knew of of others that spake french in the home..When in the company of Americans they used english. Be it broken english, They were prond to adope the way of their new nation they joined by raising their right paw, I am aware english is not easy to learn and yet they wanted to speak it and be American..One Nation.
I am 55.That girl from Seattle will do as the laws in the nation she is in. If the court gives her prison time she will serve it no if and or but. She had to know what she was getting into. With computer she and anyone can learn about the nations they are to visit and live in..America need to learn that that girl wrote her ticket. I am just a layperson..
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by msay3 December 4, 2009 5:17 PM EST
The six o'clock news will be interesting, to say the least.....
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by meshine December 4, 2009 4:55 PM EST
I totally agree with nowbewiththat. A young woman (Meredith Kercher) was brutally murdered and the Italian justice system will hopefully prosecute the killers. There is very little reported about the grieving family of the murdered girl and how their lives has been forever changed. You only hear about the Knox family and how they seem to want to blame the Italian legal system and everyone in Italy for the bad behavior of their daughter. They refuse to blame themselves for raising her with the apparent loose morals this girl displayed from the moment that she arrived in Italy.
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by bobgee_1999 December 4, 2009 5:33 PM EST
The grieving family is NOT news, it is precisely the type of sensationalism that people usually complain about. The trial and verdict ARE news, that's why they are being reported on.
by porcine_aviator December 4, 2009 4:43 PM EST
Hopefully this bratty reincarnation of Ira Eikhorn rots away for the rest of her worthless life.
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by jrc903 December 4, 2009 4:37 PM EST
I think those who say she is going to be found guilty are correct. This girl looks innocent enough--but unfortunately for her-- so do lots of guilty people. Clearly, she is a spoiled brat, who after manipulating everyone in her life for so long decided the thrill of deception could by satisfied with blood.
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by brianp55 December 4, 2009 4:14 PM EST
Amanda is cooked.
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