Casefile True Crime - Case 270: Meredith Kercher
Episode Date: February 3, 2024*** Content warning: Sexual assault *** For 21-year-old British student Meredith Kercher, spending a year studying in Italy was a dream come true. But within months of arriving in the medieval town o...f Perugia, that dream quickly turned into a nightmare. What unravelled next was one of the most polarising murder cases in Italy’s history, with one young American woman at the centre of it all – 22-year-old Amanda Knox. --- Narration – Anonymous Host Research & writing – Elsha McGill Creative direction – Milly Raso Production and music – Mike Migas Music – Andrew D.B. Joslyn Sign up for Casefile Premium: Apple Premium Spotify Premium Patreon For all credits and sources, please visit casefilepodcast.com/case-270-meredith-kercher
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The Russian poet Anna Akhmatova once said,
Italy is a dream that keeps returning for the rest of your life.
For British-born Meredith Kircher this rang true from a young age. Meredith first visited
Italy on a family holiday when she was just 18 months old and again at the age of 8. She
loved the way the wait-staff at restaurants treated her and her three siblings like young
adults rather than children, handing them the menus before anyone else.
In her childish eyes, everything just seemed so sophisticated.
So fond were these early memories that in year 9 of high school, Meredith began studying
Italian. Her teacher noticed she had a natural flair for the language, which was bolstered
further by a two-week exchange program to southern Italy later that year.
The experience was transformative and Meredith became enamoured with Italian culture.
On the last day of the trip, her classmates wept with sadness over having to say goodbye,
their teacher noticed that Meredith was the only one who was smiling. I'm not sad, because someday, when I'm older, I know that I'm going to live here,"
Meredith remarked.
I know that Italy is going to be a part of my life forever.
True to her word, when Meredith turned 18, she enrolled to study Italian and European
politics at Leeds University.
Not entirely sure what she wanted to do with her life,
she contemplated working at the European Parliament in Brussels, or following in her
father's footsteps to become a journalist. Although Leeds was over 200 kilometres from her home in
South London, and she didn't know anyone there, this four-year course was particularly enticing to
Meredith, as it offered the option
of spending the third year studying abroad.
She spent the first two years knuckling down on her studies and working part-time to fund
her upcoming travels, until August 2007, when, at the age of 21, the time finally came to
pack her bags for Italy.
Spoilt for choice when it came to picking a beautiful location, Meredith chose Perugia,
a cosmopolitan city located in the heart of central Italy's Umbria region.
Known for its large international student population and medieval town centre, Meredith
felt that staying in a smaller city with just 160,000 residents would give her
a better opportunity to interact with others than if she stayed in a major city like Rome
or Florence.
It also had good airport links and an annual chocolate festival, and Meredith adored chocolate.
She promised her sister Stephanie, whom she was particularly close to, that she'd make
plenty of friends
so the two would have places to stay when they travelled the country together once Meredith's
studies were complete.
Although the move was daunting, Meredith's easygoing and enthusiastic personality ensured
she made friends easily.
Within four days of arriving in Perugia, she'd already secured a place to live.
Number 7, Via della Purgola was a two-story whitewashed cottage perched on a steep hillside
below the city.
On one side, it overlooked a lush, sweeping valley dotted with cypress trees and olive
groves.
On the other was a ring road that boarded the city's medieval walls and a multi-level car park
overseen by a row of weather department buildings. Just a few minutes walk from
Perugia's University for Foreigners, it was a popular neighbourhood for students.
The cottage had been subdivided into two separate dwellings. The lower floor was occupied by four
young Italian men, while the upper story housed
two Italian law students, Filomena and Laura, both aged in their late 20s.
The young women welcomed Meredith with open arms, assigning her a small room at the back
corner of the cottage. The room next to Meredith's was vacant, but it wouldn't be for long.
Filomena and Laura informed Meredith that a 22-year-old American student would be The room next to Meredith's was vacant, but it wouldn't be for long.
Villa Mena and DeLora informed Meredith that a 22-year-old American student would be arriving
in a few weeks' time and had already paid her deposit.
Her name was Amanda Knox. Meredith Kerchart fully embraced her new life in Perugia. Through her language studies at
the University for Foreigners, she befriended a group of British students who became a support
network for one another as they navigated their new surroundings. Merideth helped put
her fellow Brits at ease. Not only were her Italian skills the strongest of the bunch, her quick wit and infectious
laugh made others feel welcome and included.
Meredith spent her days studying, exploring the city, and hunting down low-cost meals
with her new friends, always keen to snag a bargain.
In the evenings, they often met for dinner or drinks at one of the local bars, where they share stories about their day-to-day experiences and laugh over linguistic mishaps.
By the time Halloween rolled around on Wednesday October 31, 2007, Meredith had been living
in Perugia for almost three months and was settling in nicely.
To celebrate Halloween, she dressed up as a vampire and joined a group of her
friends for a dinner party followed by a night on the town. They stayed out until the crack of dawn,
dancing the night away. The next day, Thursday, November 1, was All Saints Day, a national
public holiday in Italy that honours the saints of the Catholic Church.
An exhausted Meredith dragged herself out of bed after midday, the fake blood from her
vampire costume still staining her chin.
Laura and Filomena were away for the holiday, so the house was quiet.
Only Meredith's American housemate Amanda Knox was home.
She and her Italian boyfriend,
Raffaele Solacito, were sitting in the common room eating pasta when Meredith arose. The
trio chatted briefly before Meredith had jumped in the shower, threw a load of laundry into
the washing machine, and then headed to a friend's place.
It was a mellow night for Meredith and her three British girlfriends. The group ate pizza
and watched The Notebook, pausing the film halfway through to eat homemade apple crumble
for dessert. By 8.30pm, Meredith was tired. She borrowed a textbook from one of her friends
and made plans to meet her for a class at 10am the following morning. Meredith then lightheartedly
said that 10.30 was more realistic. It was a running joke among Meredith's loved ones
that she was notoriously late for everything and terrible at keeping time. Meredith and
her friend Sophie said goodbye to the others and began the short walk to their respective
homes.
When they reached the turnoff for Sophie's place, they made plans to catch up the following evening before hugging each other goodbye and going their separate ways.
The following morning of Friday, November 2, Perugia resident Elisabetta Lana braved
the bitterly cold air to step outside.
It had been a strange evening for Elisabetta.
Overnight, she'd received a phone call warning that someone had placed a bomb in her toilet.
Although the bomb threat turned out to be a prank, Elisabetta was left feeling shaken.
As she tended to her roses, she heard
a ringing sound coming from a bush in her garden and followed it. It was a mobile phone.
Still on edge from the prank call, Elizabethta contacted the postal police, a special division
of the state police dedicated to crimes involving communication devices. At their request,
Elisabetta brought the discarded phone to the nearby police station. It didn't take long for
officers to identify its owner. The Italian SIM card was registered to Filomena Rominelli,
who lived at number 7 via Della Pergola, roughly half a kilometer from Elisabeth's home.
Villamena no longer used the SIM card in question. She'd given it to her housemate,
Meredith Kercher, so that Meredith could make cheap local calls during her time in Italy.
Villamena had spent the previous evening out of town with her boyfriend,
but was back on the outskirts of Perugia attending a festival for All Souls Day.
The annual celebration was a day to commemorate and pray for loved ones who had passed away.
Oblivious to the fact that Meredith's phone had been found, Filomena's own mobile phone
rang just after midday.
It was her American housemate, Amanda Knox.
Amanda told Filomena that she'd spent the night at her boyfriend's house and had just
returned to Via della Pergola to find some strange occurrences.
Amanda said that when she arrived home at around 11am, the front door was open but nobody
appeared to be home. that when she arrived home at around 11am, the front door was open, but nobody appeared
to be home.
She went to take a shower in the small bathroom she shared with Meredith, only to find what
looked like some drops of blood in the sink and smeared on the bath mat.
Amanda showered regardless.
She then went to dry her hair in the larger bathroom at the other side of the house.
She glanced into the toilet and saw it contained unflushed feces.
Knowing that no one in the house would forget to flush after themselves, Amanda told Filomena
she was scared.
Filomena asked where Meredith was.
Amanda said she didn't know.
She was currently walking back to her boyfriend,
Rafael's place, and Filomena was the first person she'd called.
Filomena told Amanda to go back to the house and check that everything else was in order.
They then ended the call. Filomena was worried that Meredith might have cut herself and gone
out to seek medical care,
accidentally leaving the front door open behind her.
She tried calling both of Meredith's mobile phone numbers, her local Italian one and her
British one.
Meredith always kept both phones with her, using the Italian SIM for local communications
and the British one to stay in contact with friends
and family back home. Both numbers rang out. This set off alarm bells for Filomena. She knew
that Meredith was incredibly close to her mother, Arlene, who was battling a serious illness back
in England. The two spoke numerous times every day, and Meredith always kept
her phones close in case she received an urgent call regarding her mother's health. In fact,
she never turned her British one off.
Filomena called Amanda back, panicked. Amanda said she'd just reached Rafaela's house,
and the two were going to go check on the cottage together.
Filomena waited roughly 10 minutes before calling Amanda again.
This time, Amanda told her, someone's been in your room, they smashed your window, but
it's bizarre, it doesn't look like they've taken anything.
Meanwhile, half a kilometer away, a second mobile phone was found at the bottom of Elizabeth
Alana's garden.
This one contained a British SIM card.
At 12.35pm, two officers from the postal police arrived at number 7 via della Pergola to
ask about the discarded phones.
They found Amanda Knox and Rafael Solacito standing outside.
The couple told the officers there had been a break-in and they couldn't get hold of
Amanda's housemate, Meredith.
They'd tried her room but but the door was locked,
and there was no response when they bashed on it or called her name.
Raffaele said they'd contacted the Carabinieri, Italy's national military police force, and
were waiting for someone to arrive. The postal police officers told them about
the two mobile phones that had been found nearby,
one of which was registered to a resident of this address.
Amanda said it couldn't be Filomena's phone because the pair had just spoken.
She led them into the house and showed them Filomena's bedroom.
Her window had been smashed and shattered glass littered the room. Clothing was scattered across the floor in what looked like a ransacking, but strangely,
valuable items such as a laptop, gold jewellery, a digital camera, and designer sunglasses
sat untouched out in the open.
Everything else in the cottage, aside from the mysterious drops of blood and unflushed
toilet, appeared to be
completely normal.
At that moment, Filomena arrived home with her boyfriend and two of their friends.
She rushed into her room and confirmed that nothing appeared to be missing.
She also identified this second mobile phone found at Elizabeth Alana's house as belonging
to Meredith
Kircher. During this entire fiasco, there had been no noise or movement from inside Meredith's room.
Amanda told the police that Meredith sometimes locked her door if she was going away or getting
changed, but Filomena disputed this, saying Meredith always kept her door unlocked.
Becoming increasingly panicked, Filomena ordered, break down the door.
The postal police didn't have authority to do so without a warrant and were concerned
about causing any damage to private property.
Filomena's friend, Luca Luca didn't hesitate. He backed up, raised his leg, and kicked the door
several times before it finally flew open. With the door off its hinges, Philomena began
screaming hysterically. The officers shouted, everyone out of the house, now. Meredith's bedroom was in disarray, with splashes of blood streaking the walls and blood
pulled on the tiled floor.
A beige quilt had been taken off the single bed and thrown onto the floor to cover something
up, but there was little doubt as to what. At the end of the quilt closest to the door,
a bare foot protruded out from underneath. Homicide investigators quickly arrived and
caught off the scene. Under the quilt was the body of 21-year-old Meredith Kircher,
naked aside from a long-sleeved top which had been pulled up to reveal her bare torso.
Her jeans and underwear had been removed and sat crumpled by her feet,
along with her blood-stained bra which had been cut off from her body post-mortem.
A pile of blood-soaked towels sat nearby.
Dozens of cuts and bruises covered Meredith's body, a majority of them on her face and neck.
Her hyoid bone, the small U-shaped bone at the base of her neck, was fractured,
indicating either an attempted strangulation or a hard blow.
Bruising to Meredith's nose, nostrils and lips suggested someone had attempted to suffocate her by clamping their hands over her nose and mouth.
Other bruising on her face and body indicated that she'd been forced to kneel down while
her arms were pinned behind her back and her face forcefully crushed into the floor.
Small cuts to Maradeth's neck suggested she'd been threatened with a knife while forced
into this submissive position and sexually assaulted.
Her throat was then slit twice before her body was dragged closer to the bed.
The smaller of the slashings was 4 cm deep, followed by a final 8 cm deep wound which
severed Meredith's right thyroid artery.
Although this final injury was fatal, it wasn't an instant death.
The condition of Meredith's lungs indicated that she'd likely survived for several minutes before
finally suffocating on her own blood. Back in England, Meredith's mother, Arlene, was watching the news when she saw a bulletin
reporting that a yet-to-be-identified young British woman had been killed in Perugia.
Arlene told herself there was no way it could be her daughter.
The two had just spoken the previous afternoon, and nothing about their conversation was out
of the ordinary. Arlene tried calling Meredith's phone.
There was no answer.
She then called Meredith's father, her ex-husband, to John, and told him what she'd heard.
Although John was alarmed, he assured his ex-wife that there were lots of British students
in Perugia, and Meredith would surely be fine.
But when John tried calling Meredith himself, his anxieties peaked every time her phone clicked to
her automated message bank. John was a journalist and he decided to use his contacts to see if he
could dig up any more information. He dialed the number of the foreign desk for the Daily Mirror newspaper. The person
he spoke to said that they'd call back when they had any more information.
The wait seemed like a lifetime for John. Although Meredith hadn't lived with him since his divorce
from Arlene, the two remained close, speaking on the phone most days.
Before she moved away for university, Meredith visited her father every Friday night for dinner and the weekly screening of her favorite TV show, The American sitcom Friends.
John had just seen Meredith a few weeks earlier when she'd made a quick return trip to England
to buy some winter clothes and a warmer quilt.
She'd been her normal happy self and talked excitedly about her time in Perugia.
After an agonising half an hour, John's phone rang.
His contact at the Daily Mirror said they had a name of the victim.
With great hesitation, they said, the name going around Italy is Meredith.
Within hours of Meredith's body being discovered, Via della Pergola was teeming with reporters.
Although Perugia had its fair share of crime, particularly when it came to drugs, murders
of this magnitude were entirely unheard of.
A foreign student being brutally killed in their own home was major news, and everyone
wanted to be the first to break the story.
With all eyes on the investigation and the student population needing reassurance they
were safe, the pressure
was on to solve the case, fast.
There was no doubt that Meredith had been a victim of sexual violence, but it also appeared
that robbery could have been a motive.
Two of Meredith's purses had been rifled through and her wallet, house keys and both
of her mobile phones had been stolen.
The keys had then been used to lock her bedroom door.
A check of Meredith's bank account revealed that two days prior to her death, she'd withdrawn
€250 from an ATM.
This coincided with her rent payment which was due at the start of the month.
But Meredith hadn't yet paid her landlord, nor was there the start of the month. But Merrittath hadn't yet paid her
landlord nor was there any sign of the cash anywhere on the property, leading to the suspicion
that this too was likely stolen during the attack. The state of her room indicated that
someone had been looking under her bed after the murder had occurred. At first glance, the broken window in Philomena's
bedroom appeared to have been the perpetrator's point of entry. But for the first officers on
the scene, this immediately raised some red flags. For starters, some clothing had been removed from
one of Philomena's cupboards and haphazardly scattered around in an apparent ransacking. However, the broken glass from the window lay on top of the clothing, not
under it as one would expect. This implied that the clothes had been scattered around
first and the window broken afterwards. Not only was nothing of value stolen from Filomena's bedroom, other cupboards,
drawers and boxes of hers hadn't even been touched. If someone was ransacking the room looking for
valuables, why hadn't they searched the whole room? A four kilogram rock, roughly the size of a human
head, was found underneath Filomena's desk, having seemingly been used to smash
the window from the outside.
Filomena's window on the second floor was fitted with wooden shutters, which she insisted
she'd left closed.
Yet the shutters were found only slightly ajar and perfectly intact.
For the rock to have shuttered the glass, but not the shutters, the shutters
would have had to be opened. But the only way to open them from the outside was to pry
them open. This meant the intruder would have had to scale the wall once to open the shutters,
go back down to throw the rock, and then scale the wall again.
The problem with this scenario was that Filaminer's window was roughly 3.5 metres off the ground
and there was nothing underneath to climb on.
Scaling the wall would require what one investigator described as a superhuman effort, and not
just once, but twice. The ground outside was damp and muddy, yet there was no evidence on the outside wall
such as shoe marks or traces of earth to indicate such a climb had occurred.
About halfway up, an old nail could have theoretically been used as a foothold.
Had it been used as such, investigators were sure the nail
would have fallen out, or at the very least become bent. But the nail showed no such damage.
Furthermore, there were no footprints or signs of disturbance in the vegetation underneath the window.
The rock itself also raised questions. At 4 kilograms, it would have been incredibly
difficult for someone to heave it so high into the air when a smaller, lighter rock
could have just as easily done the trick. The top portion of Filomena's window pane was still
intact, indicating the rock had been thrown at low speed from a short distance away.
Broken glass lay on the internal window sill, but strangely, there was none on the floor directly underneath. If the intruder had pulled themselves in via the window, investigators believed at least
some of the glass would have fallen down. If not naturally, the intruder would have had to move
some of it out of the way to avoid
being cut as they pulled themselves in. It also didn't make sense that an intruder would
target Filomena's bedroom over one of the others. In addition to being difficult to reach,
it was in full view of the main street and lit up by the headlights of any passing cars.
The rear windows were not only out of sight, but one had a table and chair underneath it
which could have been climbed upon to scale the broiler and reach the window.
With all these inconsistencies and no other signs of forced entry, investigators quickly
became convinced that the window had actually been broken from the inside.
The break and enter was completely staged.
Whoever killed Meredith had to likely attempt to derail the investigation when the truth
was much more simple.
They had come in through the front door.
This meant that either Meredith knew her killer and to let them inside. Or, they had a key.
Bolstering this theory was the belief that a random intruder would have been desperate
to flee the scene as quickly as possible. They wouldn't stick around to lock Meredith
in her bedroom and fake a robbery. It also seemed unlikely that they'd go to the effort
of stealing both of her mobile phones, only to dispose of them a short distance away.
Blood marks on the quilt covering Meredith's body indicated it had been placed there after she was already dead.
In criminology, this is typically known to indicate remorse and is usually done when a killer knows the victim.
Investigators immediately honed in on those in Meredith's social circle.
Her friends told the police there was a young Moroccan man named Heisham who had a bit of
a crush on Meredith.
In the weeks leading up to the murder, they'd all been out dancing together when Heisham started had a bit of a crush on Meredith. In the weeks leading up to the murder, they'd all
been out dancing together when Heisham started acting inappropriately, pulling his pants down in
front of Meredith. Police tracked Heisham down but could find nothing to tie him to the crime.
They started gathering all the photos that had been taken from the Halloween party Meredith had
attended the night before she was killed, scrutinizing each one for potential persons of interest.
The police learned that Meredith had been casually dating one of the downstairs tenants,
22-year-old Jacomo Cilenzzi.
Although the relationship was still very new, Meredith had agreed to do a favor for Jacomo
while he was out of town for the public holiday.
He'd been growing a couple of cannabis plants in his room, and Meredith agreed to water
them for him, even though she was nervous about doing so.
Investigators forced their way into the lower floor of the cottage.
Inside, nothing appeared to be out of place, but there was something of
interest. Several small drops of blood. Jacomo and his housemates were quickly tracked down,
each claimed to have been out of town visiting family at the time of Meredith's murder.
These alibis were confirmed, ruling all of them out as suspects. The blood
in their apartment was determined to have come from a stray cat they'd been caring
for who had injured its ear. Maradeth's Italian housemates, Filomena and Laura also had airtight
alibis, having been out of town on the night in question. This left just one resident of number seven
Villa della Pergola, who was in Perugia at the time Meredith was killed. Amanda Knox.
The postal police officers who had first arrived at the crime scene had been suspicious of Amanda
from the moment they arrived. For starters, they thought
that Amanda and her boyfriend, Rafael Solachito, had seemed startled, nervous and embarrassed
by the police presence. Secondly, Amanda's story that she'd showered despite finding
the front door open and blood in the bathroom just seemed bizarre. Amanda told one detective she thought one of her housemates might have simply left the
door open while they went to put the bins outside.
The detective noted this as odd.
The bins were clearly visible from the front porch and Amanda would have been able to see
this wasn't the case.
As for the drops of blood in the bathroom's sink, Amanda said she'd
recently had her ears pierced and had been taking her earrings out over the sink to
clean them. She assumed that's what caused the blood.
Amanda said she'd been more concerned about the smear of blood on the bath mat, but thought
it might have been menstrual blood that Meredith had forgotten to clean up. It was only when she
noticed the unflushed feces in the other bathroom that she started to get the feeling that something
wasn't right. When she returned to the house with Ruffaielle, she looked in the bathroom again and
saw that the feces had since been flushed away. According to Amanda, this led her to believe that the killer might still be in the house.
Detectives checked the toilet for themselves. The feces were still there.
But it wasn't just the investigators who were dubious about Amanda Knox's behaviour.
Within hours of Meredith's body being discovered, Meredith's Italian housemates and British friends had gathered on the property to help with the investigation.
They stood outside, waiting for their next instructions.
As reporters milled around the police cordon, camera crews honed in on Amanda and Raffaele.
They didn't look like two people who had just discovered a horrific murder.
They didn't look like two people who had just discovered a horrific murder.
Instead, they appeared perfectly composed, embracing one another warmly, and often leaning in to kiss each other on the mouth.
Unsure what to make of Amanda's claims, police summoned Meredith's friends and housemates to the station for questioning.
There, Raffaele and Amanda's odd behavior continued. While Meredith's friends were visibly distraught, investigators noted that Amanda and Raffaele seemed indifferent
to the entire situation. While they waited for their turn to be questioned, they were
witness to laughing, kissing, and pulling faces at one another.
Numerous times Amanda complained about being tired, yet an officer saw her doing what they
described as stretches, the splits, and a cartwheel.
The officer wondered how she could be behaving like this when a dead body had just been found
in her house and told her off.
Meredith's friends were asking themselves the same question.
It seemed to them like Amanda was boasting about being the one who found Meredith's body as though
it was something to be proud of. They resented the fact that she complained about being tired and
hungry when she was lucky to be alive. Raffaele seemed equally notchal on to the seriousness of the situation.
At one point, he was overheard on the phone bluntly saying, they've slit her throat,
as though it was a normal occurrence.
One of Meredith's friends remarked that she hoped Meredith hadn't suffered.
Amanda responded harshly.
What do you think? She had her fucking throat slit.
For investigators, there was no doubt that Amanda Knox's behaviour was out of the ordinary,
but there were no immediate reasons to suspect her of the crime. On paper, Meredith Kircher and Amanda Knox were quite similar.
The Seattle-born and bred Amanda had grown up in a middle-class family with divorced parents
and was particularly close with her sister. She was a keen and athletic student at her
Catholic High School, with a particular love for soccer and rock climbing. As a teenager,
a family trip to Italy sparked Amanda's love for Italian and rock climbing. As a teenager, a family trip to Italy sparked
Amanda's love for Italian culture, and she eventually enrolled to study Italian, German,
and creative writing at university. When Amanda told her parents she intended to spend one
year studying abroad, they weren't entirely pleased. They considered Amanda to be book smart, but not
necessarily street smart. She was also too trusting of people and could be incredibly
naive. Regardless, they supported the decision, recognizing it as an opportunity for growth
and maturity.
Amanda saved for her trip by working multiple jobs and arrived in Perusia a few weeks after
Meredith had already settled in.
Meredith took Amanda under her wing, showing her around town and introducing her to her
friends.
While they got along fine, Meredith confided in her friends and family that she found some
of Amanda's behaviour off-putting. In comparison to her British
friends, Amanda was very extroverted and energetic. Mid-conversation, she'd sometimes jump up and
start doing yoga poses or play her guitar. Meredith thought Amanda liked to show off to get attention.
One night, when Amanda joined Meredith and her friends at a restaurant,
the Brits were taken aback when Amanda suddenly stood up and started singing loudly at the
top of her voice. As Amanda described on her Facebook page,
I don't get embarrassed and therefore have very few social inhibitions. I love new situations and I love to meet new people.
The bigger and scarier the rollercoaster, the better."
Meredith told her friends and family that Amanda's quirks irritated her, as did her
hygiene habits.
She complained that Amanda didn't do her fair share of the housework and sometimes
forgot to flush the toilet. Amanda had also left a cosmetic case
in the bathroom with an adult toy and condoms out on display and had brought some strange men back
to the house which made Meredith uncomfortable. While the two maintained an amicable relationship
and sometimes hung out together around the house, they mostly did their own thing.
sometimes hung out together around the house, they mostly did their own thing.
As Amanda told Meredith, she was more interested in spending time with Italians so she could immerse herself in their language.
Amanda had an American boyfriend back home, but the two had decided to open their relationship
while they both studied abroad. Amanda didn't consider herself to be particularly experienced
with the opposite sex, and she viewed Italy as a chance to be a bit more adventurous.
In her first few weeks in Italy, she had a few casual dates before meeting Raffaele Solacito.
One week prior to Meredith's murder, Amanda was attending a concert at the university when she locked eyes with the 23-year-old, a bespectacled computer science student originally
from southern Italy.
Raffaele's father was a prominent urologist, and his mother had recently passed away.
Described by Franz as quiet and studious, Raffaele had a somewhat different take on
himself.
On social media, he wrote that he was, honest, peaceful and sweet, but sometimes absolutely
crazy.
Raffaele also kept an online blog in which he wrote about his disappointing college experience
and his desire to find bigger thrills.
Although Raffaele was shy and not used to getting much attention from the opposite sex,
when he saw Amanda Knox smiling at him at the concert, he struck up the courage to approach
her.
The two immediately hit it off.
Speaking in a blend of broken English and Italian, they spent almost every night together from that point on, with Amanda returning to Via della Pergola intermittently to fetch
clean clothes and check in with her housemates.
Anyone who spent time around the couple could tell that Raffaele was completely smitten
with Amanda.
His father noted that Raffaele had never spoken about a woman the way he spoke about her.
When Raffaele visited Via della Pergola to cook Amanda dinner,
her housemates noticed that Raffaele followed her around like a shadow,
kissing and cuddling her even while she did the dishes.
Meredith's friends told investigators that there had been some friction between Meredith
and Amanda, but Amanda denied this.
While they hadn't been extraordinarily close, she had nothing but fond memories of Meredith.
The two did the grocery shopping together, some bathed on the terrace while sipping espressos,
and borrowed clothes from one another.
Amanda claimed she'd last seen Meredith on the afternoon before her body was discovered.
Amanda and Raffaele had been hanging out in the cottage's common area smoking a joint
when Meredith woke late after her big night out for Halloween.
She'd been her normal self before leaving for her friend's
place at around 4pm. An hour or two later, Amanda said that she and Raphael Ere walked
back to his apartment, a one bedroom bed-sit, a 10 minute walk from Viadela Pergola. Amanda
had recently gotten a job working at a bar called La Chique, and she'd been rosted on to work later that evening.
To her delight, she received a text message from her boss saying she was no longer needed.
The couple stayed in for the night, watching the French movie Amelie on Raphael's computer
and having a late dinner before going to bed sometime after midnight.
The next morning, Amanda said they both slept in.
She decided to walk back to Viadela Pergola to shower at home and get a fresh change of
clothes.
She also needed to grab a mop because the pipes under Rafael's kitchen sink had sprung
a leak and he didn't have a mop of his own to clean it up.
When Amanda noticed all the strange occurrences at the cottage, she walked back to Rafael's apartment and he then accompanied her back home to see what was going on.
Rafael's version of events was more or less the same, but investigators obtained the couple's
phone records and discovered a strange discrepancy.
When the postal police arrived at Villa della Pergola at around 12.35pm, Raffaele told them
he'd just called the carabinieri.
His phone records revealed he hadn't actually made this call until 12.51, 16 minutes after
the postal police were already on the scene.
He had, however, called his police officer's sister to tell her about the situation at the
cottage and ask for her advice. Amanda told the police that when she returned to the cottage to
find the strange occurrences, she tried calling Meredith, but both of her phones kept ringing out.
Her phone records confirmed that she did try calling both of Meredith's mobiles,
but they only rang for a couple of seconds before she ended the calls.
While the hunt for evidence ramped up, covert intercepts were placed on both Amanda and Rafael's phones. Nothing incriminating was
captured, yet the couple continued to seem oddly unaffected by the gruesome tragedy.
This too was noted by the owner of a local clothing store, Carlos de Renaudi,
who contacted the police to voice his concerns. On Saturday, November 3, the day after Meredith's body was discovered, Carlos noticed Amanda
and Raffaella walking the aisles of his store.
He recalled,
They were all over each other, kissing and embracing.
Their behavior was so exhibitionist that the other customers were looking at them.
Amanda picked out some lingerie and
brought it to the cash register. Carlos overheard Rafael's say,
you can put these on at home and we can have wild sex. The police had given Amanda and
Rafael strict instructions not to speak with anyone about the case, but on Sunday November 4, Amanda
sent a lengthy group email to her friends back home in Seattle.
In it, she detailed her version of events on the night of Meredith's murder and the
day her body was found.
Amanda explained,
I have to get this off my chest because it's pressing down on me and it helps to know that
someone besides me knows something."
She then wrote casually about her future plans, saying she was looking for a new place to
live but quote,
"...it kinda sucks that we have to pay the next month's rent."
She continued,
"...I guess I'll go back to class on Monday, although I'm not sure what I'm going to
do about people asking me questions because I really don't want to talk again about what
happened.
I've been talking an awful lot lately, and I'm pretty tired of it.
Anyway, that's the update, feeling okay.
Hope you all are well.
One friend was so taken aback by the email that they forwarded it straight to the police.
In an attempt to ascertain Meredith's time of death, police looked at her phone records.
At 8.56pm she'd tried calling her family in England, presumably to check in before calling
it a night, but the call had gone unanswered.
An hour later, at around 10, the phone was used to dial Meredith's voicemail service,
but the call was cancelled before it connected.
Shortly after, another call was made to Meredith's bank in England, but this failed to connect
because the mandatory foreign prefix hadn't been entered. At 10.13pm, a 9-second
internet connection was recorded, which was possibly related to an incoming multimedia message.
Investigators therefore concluded that Meredith was still alive at this time.
An elderly woman named Nara Kappazali lived in an apartment overlooking the cottage at 7 via Della Pergola.
Nara told the police that she went to bed early on the night of November 1, but woke
up sometime at around 11 or 11.30pm to use the bathroom.
Although she didn't look at the clock, she assumed this to be the time because she was
in the habit of waking up at around the same time each night.
As Nara passed her dining room window, she heard what she described as an agonizing woman's
scream coming from the direction of the cottage.
It made her skin crawl.
But what Nara found most unsettling was that it didn't seem like a cry for help.
She recalled,
it was just a scream and then nothing.
Nara said she looked out the window but couldn't see anything. A few seconds later,
she heard the sound of gravel and leaves crunching under someone's feet as they ran up the Cottages
driveway. This was followed by the sound of footsteps as they ran up the Cottages driveway. This was followed by the sound of footsteps as they ran
up the Irons stairway leading from the car park across the street. There was only one set of footsteps,
but moments later, Nara heard another person scurry up the driveway and run in the opposite direction.
CCTV footage was obtained from the car park, but the only detail of interest was an unidentifiable
shadowy figure that was captured around 8.41pm.
Nothing was captured during the key time period where screams were heard between 11 and 11.30pm.
Regardless, Naira's statement led investigators to believe that this was an accurate window
for Meredith
Kirch's time of death. They were particularly interested in Nara's claims of having heard
two sets of footsteps. Given that the two major wounds on Meredith Kirch's neck varied in size,
it had been concluded that two different knives had been used during the attack.
The bloody outline of one was visible
on the bedsheet. This led to the question of how one person could have wielded two separate weapons,
while also maintaining control over Meredith and inflicting the other injuries.
The evidence indicated that Meredith had struggled for her life, yet there were no skin cells or foreign DNA
underneath her fingernails to suggest that she'd scratched or clawed at her attacker.
For investigators, this was a sure sign of a multi-perpetrator attack.
Amanda and Raffaele both claimed they hadn't left Raffaele's apartment at any point.
Their phone records
revealed that they both typically kept their mobile phones switched on until late at night.
On the night that Meredith was killed, however, Amanda turned her phone off at 8.35. Raffaele
turned his off seven minutes later. The couple claimed they'd slept in late the following morning.
Amanda's phone supported this, remaining off until around midday, but Rafael's was turned
back on at 6.02am, a time he claimed to have been asleep.
With these inconsistencies in Rafael's story, he was summoned back to the police station
to repeat his version of events for the evening of November 1.
Amanda arrived with him, but was told to wait outside.
The two had barely left one another's side since Meredith's body was discovered, which
prompted the question of whether they were staying close in a bid to keep their stories straight.
Investigators hoped that separating them might elicit some new information, and they were
right.
Raffaele told police that his earlier statement was incorrect.
The truth was that he and Amanda had parted ways at around 9pm. According to
Raffaele, Amanda told him she was going to Lechique, the bar where she worked, to meet
up with some friends. Raffaele spent the evening in his apartment alone, where he smoked a
joint and spent the next few hours surfing the internet. During this time he watched the
film Amelie and spoke to his father. Amanda returned sometime around 1 a.m.
Raffaele couldn't recall anything about their interaction, only that they woke
at around 10 a.m. the next morning and Amanda said she had to return to her
house to have a shower and change her clothes.
When asked why this version of events differed from his original one, Raphael Air replied,
I told you a lot of bullshit in my earlier statement because Amanda had convinced me
that her version of what happened was right and I didn't think of the inconsistencies. Police checked Rafaela's claims against Amanda's
phone records. Amanda had previously told them that she never responded to her boss's text
message saying she didn't need to come into work on the night of November 1. But phone records
revealed that she'd actually written back straight away, acknowledging the message and signing off with the Italian words,
C'è vedi amo. In English, this translates to,
we will see each other later.
Amanda's boss was D'ia Patrick Lamumba, a Congolese immigrant who'd been living in Perugia since 1988. Although his bar La Chique wasn't very successful,
Patrick himself was an upstanding respected member of the community.
Involved in the local music scene, he played in a reggae band and organised for other musicians
to perform at the university. Although he had no prior criminal record, Amanda's text message combined with Raffaele's
updated story had investigators wondering. Was it possible that Amanda had taken Patrick
LaMumba back to Via della Pergola? From the waiting room, Amanda was called in for formal
questioning, but only as a witness. Under Italian law, this man to an attorney wasn't required to be present.
Over several hours, Amanda maintained that she never left Raffaele's apartment on the night
of Meredith's murder. She explained that the text message to Patrick LaMumba was simply being
lost in translation. C. Vediamo was her way of telling Patrick goodbye, like an American would say, see you
later.
She didn't realise that the translation could be taken literally.
But as the police pressed on, they could tell that Amanda was beginning to crack.
One officer told her, I want to help you, but you need to tell me who the murderer
is. You know who the murderer is. You know who killed Meredith.
Amanda began to sob uncontrollably.
Patrick, she said.
It's Patrick.
Case file will be back shortly.
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Amanda Knox signed a statement in Italian confirming that on Thursday, November 1, 2007,
she left Raffaele's apartment at around 9pm and walked to the basketball courts at
Piata Gramana, a town square just around the corner from Via della Pergola.
There, she met her boss, Patrick Lomumba, and the two walked back to Amanda's house.
Meredith Kertcher had just returned from her friend's place.
At some point, Meredith and Patrick disappeared into Meredith's bedroom while Amanda stayed
in the kitchen.
She wasn't sure how long the two were in there but she eventually heard Meredith screaming.
Amanda was so scared that she covered her ears. After that, she
couldn't remember a single thing that happened, explaining,
I have a lot of confusion in my head. I do not remember if Meredith screamed or if I
heard any thuds, because I was in shock, but I could imagine what was going on.
The police didn't believe Amanda's claim of memory loss.
Although they weren't sure whether Amanda was directly involved with Meredith's death,
they were convinced she'd helped Patrick Lumumba in some way.
They also remained convinced that Raffaele Solotito had played a role.
By retracting Amanda's alibi, Raffaele had essentially removed himself from the picture,
but his new version of events had raised some new inconsistencies.
It also didn't explain why both he and Amanda had turned their mobile phones off at almost
the exact same time on the night of Meredith's murder.
Raffaele claimed that he'd watched the film Amelie alone after Amanda had left the apartment.
But her forensic examination of his computer determined that the film had actually been
watched at 6.30pm.
After that, the computer wasn't accessed again until 5.32am.
At a time Raphaelé claimed to have been asleep.
Raffaele also said he spoke to his father on his mobile phone at around 11pm.
Phone records revealed they'd actually spoken on Raffaele's landline at 8.42pm.
His father had sent him a goodnight text message at 11.14pm, but Rafael's phone was already switched off at this point, and he only received the message when he turned his phone back on at 6.02 the next day.
The suspicion against Rafael only intensified when a search of his pockets turned up a jackknife with a 3 inch blade.
Rafael explained he'd carried a knife with him since he was
a kid, as he liked to make carvings in trees.
A search warrant was issued for Raffaele's apartment. Opening the door, investigators
immediately noted the smell of bleach. Several bottles of bleach were found in his kitchen,
along with a receipt dated the morning of Sunday, November 4, two days after Meredith's body was
discovered. In Raphael's cutlery drawer, one item in particular caught investigators' attention,
a black-handled Marietti brand knife with a 6.5 inch blade.
Although this was a typical knife of any Italian kitchen, it looked as though it had been recently cleaned.
The knife was subject to forensic examination.
No traces of blood were found, but there were several scratches on the side of the blade
consistent with what one investigator described as intense
scrubbing.
On the handle were traces of Amanda Knox's DNA.
This wasn't unexpected, Amanda had spent a lot of time at Raphael's place and the two
often cooked together.
But something significant was found on the blade,ace elements of Meredith Kerch's DNA.
Given that Meredith had never visited Raphael's apartment before, this raised the question,
how could her DNA have gotten on it, unless it was used during the attack?
In Raphael's bedroom, police found a collection of Japanese manga comics they described as
a mix of pornography and horror.
Some of them depicted extreme acts of violence, with the storyline of one comic revolving
around the killing of female vampires on Halloween.
Not only did this strike investigators as noteworthy given Meredith had just dressed
as a vampire for Halloween herself,
they also noticed similarities between some of the images in the comics and the crime scene in
Meredith's bedroom. While these finds were all compelling, police still didn't have anything
that linked Raphaela to the crime scene. They turned to the forensic evidence. In Meredith's
bedroom, a partial bloody shoe print had been found underneath the quilt
that had been used to cover her body.
It was determined to be a men's size 9 with a pattern made up of numerous concentric circles.
The print was compared to a pair of Rafaela's sneakers, a pair of size 9 Nike Air Force
1s. Although the results weren't conclusive,
the initial analysis indicated a potential match.
With all these details coming to light, investigators theorized that Patrick LaMumba likely had
a crush on Meredith and had asked for Amanda's help in getting the two together. After being
told she didn't need to come to work, Amanda texted Patrick to let him
know she'd see him later.
She and Raffaele then went to meet him at the basketball courts at Piazza Gramana, before
walking him back to the cottage on Via della Pergola.
There, Patrick joined Meredith in her bedroom.
Investigators couldn't be sure exactly what unfolded next, but they viewed Amanda as a
seductress who had Raphaela completely under her spell.
Both seeking excitement and adventure, Raphaela and Amanda likely intervened, and the group
tried to force Meredith to do something sexual that she didn't want to do.
They likely threatened her with one of the knives that Raffaele had admittedly always carried around, forcing her face into the floor and sexually assaulting her. When Meredith screamed,
one of them panicked and slit her throat. The trio then desperately tried to clean up after themselves before staging a break-in
and fleeing the scene.
But there was just one problem.
The bloody shoe print wasn't a definite match to Raffaele and the police still had an uncovered
any physical evidence putting Amanda or Patrick at the crime scene.
Nervous that Amanda might flee the country, they decided it was time to make their move
regardless.
A cautionary arrest warrant was issued for all three suspects.
At Patrick Lamumba's home, investigators found him warming milk for his 18-month-old
son.
Appearing completely shocked by the police presence, he asked what was going on,
to which one officer responded,
�You know what you did.�
But Patrick claims he had nothing to do with Meredith Kerch's death. He said he'd only
met Meredith a handful of times, the last being on Halloween when she'd showed up at
La Chique in her vampire costume. Patrick said he wasn't
attracted to Meredith, nor had he flirted with her in any way. As for the night she was killed,
Patrick said he worked until closing time, which was sometime after midnight, and then went straight
home. At no point did he see or speak to Amanda Knox.
No point did he see or speak to Amanda Knox. Following her arrest, Amanda retracted her previous statement.
In its place she submitted a handwritten statement of her own volition claiming that her previous
version of events had been made under the pressure of stress, shock, and extreme exhaustion.
Amanda claimed it was the police who suggested that Patrick Lumumba could have been involved.
She only went along with it after they told her they had evidence proving she was at the
cottage on the night of the murder and threatened to put her in jail for 30 years.
According to Amanda, an officer had also hit her over the head when she didn't remember
a fact correctly.
Amanda wanted to set the record straight as she was worried that details were being lost
in translation.
She said her recollection of the night of Thursday, November 1 was hazy because she'd
been smoking cannabis.
She and Raffaele had also been doing a different version of the same thing every night that
week and the days blurred into one.
All she was sure of was that she and Raffaele had eaten a late dinner, after which Raffaele
washed the dishes and his kitchen pipes began to leak.
The next thing she remembered with certainty was waking up the following morning at around
10 o'clock.
After very little sleep and many hours of intense pressure from the police, Amanda said
she started imagining the scenario in which Patrick LaMumba had come back to her house.
She wrote,
I am unsure if they are real things that happened or are just dreams my mind has made to try
to answer the questions in my head and the questions I am being asked. But the truth is, I am unsure about the truth."
Amanda acknowledged that her confusion must be frustrating for the police, but stated,
I also want to tell the truth the best I can. I know I didn't kill Meredith. That's all I know for sure."
The police firmly denied the allegations that Amanda had been mistreated or coerced in any way,
but because she'd only been questioned as a witness, her interrogation hadn't been recorded.
Therefore, it was a case of Amanda's word against theirs.
it was a case of Amanda's word against theirs. During Rafael's Solachito's arrest hearing, he distanced himself from Amanda, but said that he too had cracked under pressure from police.
He claimed the truth was Amanda had spent the entire night of Thursday, November 1 with him at
his apartment. He flat out denied that the chup print found in Meredith's bedroom was his,
saying he'd never entered her bedroom, and even if he had, he wasn't wearing his
Nike's on the day she was killed. Patrick Lumumba stuck by his story that he'd worked
at La Chique all evening. It had been a quiet night with only about a dozen customers,
hence why he'd texted Amanda not to bother coming in.
Patrick claimed there was at least one person who could vouch for his alibi,
a Swiss professor whom he'd chatted to briefly while serving drinks. The only problem was,
he couldn't remember the professor's name. Patrick claimed he'd opened the bar sometime
around 5pm, but a search of La Chique's
records revealed that the first receipt of the night was timed 10.29pm.
Patrick explained this was because he'd only built the customers when they left.
He stated, Amanda's house. I didn't kill Meredith. I'm innocent. And God knows it."
It had been an incredibly difficult week for Meredith Kerch's family.
Not only did they have to come to terms with the news of Meredith's murder and the subsequent
arrests, there were additional hurdles to navigate given that the crime occurred in a foreign country.
additional hurdles to navigate given that the crime occurred in a foreign country.
They were left feeling completely helpless. The people of England rallied behind them, leaving floral tributes and notes for Meredith outside of her mother's home, her former high
school, and online. When granted permission to do so, Meredith's mother Arlene, her father John, and sister Stephanie arrived
in Perugia to formally identify Meredith's body.
John couldn't bring himself to enter the morgue.
He wanted his last memory of his daughter to be the vibrant and happy young woman he'd
had lunch with just weeks earlier, her whole life ahead of her.
Arlene and Stephanie made the identification instead. To spare them the sight of Meredith's
injuries, a crisp white sheet had been pulled up to her chin. Arlene asked for permission to kiss
her daughter on the head. The lead prosecutor present was so moved by this he had to remove
himself from the room. Stephanie thought her sister looked peaceful but determined as though she was trying to
express how hard she'd fought to survive.
Stephanie said,
For that, I am eternally grateful and love her more than she could ever know.
It was from that moment that we knew we had to fight for her too.
Meredith's family agreed that more than one person had to be involved with the slaying.
Meredith had started studying karate at the age of 17 and had earned three belts.
They'd seen her take on grown male opponents.
If she was attacked by just one person, her family felt confident that Meredith could
have held her own.
Meredith's murder and the subsequent arrests were major worldwide news.
At a press conference following the identification, members of the media gathered from Italy,
the UK and US, as Stephanie described her little sister as one of the most beautiful,
intelligent, witty
and caring people you could ever meet.
Her family took comfort in knowing that Meredith died while pursuing her dreams and during
one of the happiest periods of her life.
Stephanie stated,
�We love her then, we love her still, and she's still very much a part of our family
forever.� But then, we love her still, and she's still very much a part of our family forever.
With the three suspects behind bars, investigators had to build their case against them before
any official charges could be made.
They turned their focus onto the forensic evidence.
Given that Amanda lived at the cottage and Raffaella had visited several times before, it stood to reason that their fingerprints, footprints and DNA would already be present.
Therefore investigators needed to find something indisputably tying them to the crime scene.
Numerous bloody fingerprints had been found in Meredith's bedroom, but many of them were
smeared to a point of being unidentifiable. Of the bloody fingerprints
that were found, none were a match to Amanda Knox, Raffaele Solacito or Patrick Lamumba.
No blood from anyone other than Meredith was found anywhere in the cottage.
The blood in the bathroom was determined to be Meredith's, indicating that someone had used the bathroom after committing the crime.
The stain on the bath mat was determined to be a bloody footprint.
Although it lacked the characteristics needed to make a definitive match, it was compared
to the three suspects and provided a probable match to Rafael Solacito.
Luminol, a chemical that reacts to traces of blood invisible to the naked eye, was sprayed
throughout the cottage.
Several areas lit up, revealing partial bare footprints in Amanda's room, the bathroom,
and the hallway outside of Meredith's bedroom.
Testing determined them to be a probable match to both Amanda and Rafaela.
Luminal testing of Filomena's bedroom also revealed two drops of blood which carried the
DNA profiles of two individuals. Amanda Knox and Meredith Kertschar.
While this was deeply incriminating evidence against both Amanda and Raffaele, investigators
couldn't find a single piece of physical evidence to suggest that Patrick LaMumba had
ever visited the property at all.
But there was an even more troubling detail.
When Meredith's body was found, a blood-soaked pillow had been placed underneath her body.
On it was a bloody handprint that didn't match either of the three suspects.
Police ran the fingerprints through their database. There was a match.
Twenty-year-old Rudy Gueda was known to be a bit of a hanger-on of Perugia's
student scene. Having immigrated to Italy from the Ivory Coast at the
age of five, Rudy's father eventually returned to Africa, leaving a teenaged Rudy in the care of
a wealthy Perugian family who put him into school studying hotel management. But Rudy was a habitual
liar with no drive when it came to work or study. Disappointed with his behaviour, the family kicked him out.
Rudy worked odd jobs to get by, but also started dabbling in petty theft and selling cannabis.
The week before Meredith Kirch's murder, the owner of a preschool arrived at her workplace
out of hours to find Rudy Guede on the premises. She called the police who discovered that Rudy had stolen
a knife from the school's kitchen. A search of his backpack also revealed a laptop and
cell phone that had recently been stolen after a break-in at a local law office, along with a
gold watch that had been stolen during a break-in four days prior. When the tenants of Seven via
Della Pergola had been questioned after Meredith's death,
they'd each been asked to provide a list of all the recent visitors to the property.
The young men who lived downstairs had mentioned an African man with whom they sometimes played
basketball.
They knew him from around town but only by his nickname, The Baron.
Amanda Knox had mentioned him too.
She and Meredith had met him when they joined the downstairs neighbours to smoke a joint
one night.
According to the downstairs tenants, The Baron had asked them whether Amanda had a
boyfriend and mentioned he wanted to sleep with her.
Later on, he fell asleep on their toilet, drunk. When he woke up,
he left the house without flushing. Unable to ignore the similarity between the unflushed toilet
at the crime scene, detectives had been eager to track the Baron down, but had so far been unsuccessful.
Little did they know that Rudy Gueda and the Baron were one and the same.
With the bloody handprint on Meredith's pillow confirmed to belong to Rudy Guader, investigators
raided his apartment. There was no sign of him there or anywhere across town.
An international arrest warrant was issued and his name and face were splashed across
the news.
Witnesses came forward to report that they'd seen Rudy dancing at a Perusion nightclub
at around 2.30 on the night of Meredith Kerch's murder.
No one had noticed any blood on his clothing, but they did recall he was acting strange
and smelled terrible.
He'd also mentioned to some friends that he was
thinking of going to Milan. As efforts to locate Rudy Guadar ramped up, a friend of
his contacted the police to let them know that they'd just received an email from Rudy,
in which he claimed to be in Germany. The friend agreed to work with police to lure
Rudy back to Italy.
He contacted Rudy via instant messaging on the telecommunications app Skype, asking where
he was and what was going on.
Rudy claimed he was in the city of Dusseldorf, flat broke and sleeping on trains.
He said he'd seen the news and the police had it all wrong.
He wasn't involved with Meredith's death, but he had been there on the night she was
killed.
He also said, Amanda doesn't have anything to do with it.
Rudy agreed to speak to his friend over the phone.
He explained that he'd run into Meredith at a Halloween party on October 31 and the two
had arranged to meet at her house the following night.
When he got there, Meredith was the only one at home.
The two talked for a while, during which Meredith mentioned that some money was missing
from her underwear drawer, and she suspected Amanda might have taken it.
Meredith was fired up, accusing Amanda of being a drug addict.
She apparently said, when Amanda comes back, I have to talk to her.
Rudy claimed that after Meredith calmed down, the two of them began making out.
They engaged in oral sex but stopped things there after realizing neither of them had
a condom.
At around 9.30, Rudy went to the bathroom to use
the toilet, his stomach feeling upset from a bad kebab. He put his iPod on and over the sound of the
music, he heard the doorbell ring. After listening to about two and a half songs, he heard Meredith
screaming. Rudy claimed he rushed out with his pants down, only to find a man he didn't recognize
standing over Meredith with a bloody knife.
It was too dark to see much of the man's appearance, but he was shorter than Rudy,
and had chestnut-colored hair.
The man tried to stab Rudy, swearing at him in what sounded like a local Italian accent,
before fleeing the scene.
Realizing that Meredith had been stabbed, Rudy claimed he ran to the bathroom to grab
some towels.
He packed them into the wounds in Meredith's neck to try and stop the bleeding, but it
was too late.
She died in front of him.
Terrified of being wrongly implicated, he too fled the scene.
Rudy's friend offered to wire him some money for a train ticket back to Italy where they
could get him a good lawyer and figure everything out. Rudy agreed, but before he could collect
the money, a ticket inspector caught him for fair evasion and he admitted he was wanted for questioning in Italy. Detectives were sent
to extradite him back to Perugia.
Meanwhile, the Swiss professor who Patrick LaMumba claimed to have served on the night
of Meredith's murder came forward. He confirmed that he was indeed at Lucic on the night in question, eating dinner and chatting
to Patrick LaMumba from around 8.30 to 9.55pm. With this airtight alibi and no physical evidence
tying him to the crime scene, Patrick was released after almost three weeks behind bars.
He told reporters that Amanda Knox had thrown him under the bus to derail the investigation
when, quote, Amanda hated Meredith because people loved her more than Amanda.
She was insanely jealous that Meredith was taking over her position as Queen B.
With Patrick no longer a suspect, investigators maintained their theory about a group sex
attack had gone wrong. They simply replaced Patrick's role with Rudy Gueda.
What Rudy didn't know was that investigators had already obtained his DNA from a hairbrush
found in his apartment. Testing confirmed traces of Rudy's DNA were inside of Meredith's
body, in blood stains on her underwear and clothing,
on her purse that had been ruffled through, and in the unflushed toilet.
Furthermore, the partial bloody shoe print under Meredith's quilt that had been attributed
to Raffaele's Solicito was compared to a pair of Nike Outbreak II's owned by Rudy
Gueda.
While the threads on both Rudy and Raffaele's
Nike's shared remarkable similarities, the number of concentric circles differed.
While testing had only revealed a probable match to Raffaele's shoes, it revealed a
conclusive match to Rudy's. Back in Italy, Rudy added some more details to his version of events.
He maintained that the window in Filamene's bedroom hadn't been smashed while he was
there and claimed that just before the attacker fled the scene, he'd warned, you are a black
man, you'll get the blame.
As Rudy tended to Meredith's wounds, she apparently tried to tell him something but
he couldn't quite make it out.
It sounded like…
F.
Rudy said he wanted to stay and help or call an ambulance but he didn't have his mobile
and also feared that he'd get the blame.
Instead, he ran home and changed his clothes, but the smell of Meredith's blood was nauseating
and he needed to get away from it.
He went to a friend's house and out clubbing, trying to act as normal as possible, while
inside he was feeling extremely confused and traumatised.
Rudy said, If I had been a man, I would have stayed and tried to save Meredith.
According to Rudy's lawyer, this story explained why his client's DNA was found throughout
the crime scene, but, quote, it does not mean that he is the killer.
Investigators begged to differ.
In their view, the forensic evidence didn't just prove that Rudy Gueda was at the crime
scene, it proved that he was involved with the crime itself.
Furthermore, they already knew that Rudy was lying about having pre-arranged plans to
meet up with Meredith.
In contradiction to his claim that the two had met at a Halloween party, Meredith's
friends confirmed they had been at a
completely different party, and that at no point did they cross paths with Rudy Guader. Meredith
had never mentioned Rudy to anyone, nor had anyone ever seen her with him outside of the one time
they shared a joint at the downstairs flat. Friends of Rudy's also taught police he had a habit of acting inappropriately towards
women when he was under the influence, and that he'd been accused of molesting girls before.
As the story continued to dominate headlines, the media showed little interest in Rudy Guader.
They were much more interested in Amanda Knox.
As Daily Mail journalist Nick Pisa later explained to Netflix,
�Maradeth was a terribly attractive woman, and now we've got Amanda Knox involved as well,
a pretty blonde girl, 20-something. It had that sexual intrigue, girl on girl crime if you like.
Day after day new headlines came out about Amanda in which she was portrayed as quote
�sex-obsessed� a �she-devil� and a witch of deception.
Viewed by many as the puppet master behind Meredith�s murder, some outlets labelled
her Amanda the man-Eater. But it was when Amanda's online
Myspace page surfaced that things really heated up. There, Amanda had listed her nickname as Foxy
Noxy. This was a childhood nickname given to her by her soccer teammates who deemed her quick,
like a fox. The English-speaking media took it as a sign of
Amanda's opinion of herself as some kind of seductive vixen and the nickname quickly soared to
infamy. It didn't help that Amanda had recently posted a photo of herself on Myspace from a visit
to a Nazi History Museum, where she posed behind a giant machine gun with a maniacal
laugh on her face.
This picture was quickly spread by the media, as was a photo Raphael S. Solacito had shared
on his own blog in which he was dressed like a mummy, brandishing a giant meat cleaver
and holding a bottle of bleach.
Videos of Rudy Gueda also surfaced of him dressed as Dracula and looking into the camera
as he said, I want to suck your blood.
Tabloid headlines accompanying these provocative images screamed, orgy of death, and Amanda
was a drugged up tarred.
Amanda's reputation as a moral sex crazed temptress only got worse when CCTV footage
was published of her buying underwear with Raffaele the day after Meredith's body was
found.
Tabloids printed the photos alongside headlines like one from The Standard which read,
Pitches of the moment Foxy Noxy went shopping for sexy lingerie the day after Meredith's
murder.
These along with the images of Amanda and Raffaele hugging and kissing outside of the
crime scene were viewed as not only indifference to Meredith's murder, but possible arousal.
What the tabloids didn't mention was that Amanda and her housemates had been forbidden
from returning to their cottage while it was an active crime scene and therefore had no access to their clothes. Amanda wasn't
shopping for sexy lingerie, but the bare basics. Nor had she been doing cartwheels and the splits
at the police station as one officer reported, but yoga. According to Amanda, she had got up to stretch after sitting hunched over for so
long, and another officer had asked her to show him how flexible she was. Adding further fuel to
the fire, diary entries Amanda made whilst in prison were leaked to the press. Tabloids reported
that Amanda kept the details of her many lovers and expressed her fears
that she might have contracted HIV.
Her entire stay in Italy was portrayed as one drug-fueled sexual encounter after the
other, bolstered by photos that surfaced of her partying back home in America.
Journalist Nick Pisa said that as these photos and tidbits emerged, members of the press were thinking, quote,
Wow, great. She's a complete and utter nut job.
You just couldn't ask for any better material to illustrate a story with.
I don't think I've ever had so many front pages.
Just story after story.
Just story after story. The Meredith Kirchers family, the focus on Amanda Knox added insult to injury as she
became the centre point of the tragedy in which Meredith was often pushed to the sidelines.
Meredith's father, John, resented the Foxy Noxy nickname, saying it would, quote, come to define the case and shift its focus entirely from Meredith than the other suspects.
Four weeks after the crime, more than 500 people crammed into the Croydon Parish Church on the
grounds of Meredith's former high school for a memorial service. A floral tribute had been
made to spell out her nickname, Mez. sold her brother Lyle, lightheartedly told the congregation that Meredith would probably
be looking down at the flowers, happy that her family had used her nickname as it was
cheaper than spelling her name in full.
Lyle reminded those gathered that it was important to remember Meredith for her endearing qualities, such as her quick wit and fantastic sense of humour.
46 days after Meredith Kirch's murder on Tuesday, December 18, investigators were
doing another sweep for evidence in Meredith's bedroom when they lifted up a rug about five feet from where her body had
been found. Underneath was the broken clasp from Meredith's bra. The clasp was tested and revealed
some faint traces of male DNA. Although weak, there was no denying who it came from, Rafael
Solachito. Given that it had already been determined that the bra had
been cut from Meredith's body post-mortem, this placed Rafaela in Meredith's bedroom
with her dead body. Rafaela's lawyers acknowledged that this finding wouldn't help Rafaela's
case, but they argued that it wasn't definitive. The DNA trace was weak and it could have gotten
there prior to the murder.
Investigators stuck to their initial theory that this was a sexually motivated crime involving
all three suspects.
They just couldn't be sure whether it was spontaneous or premeditated, or how exactly
it spiralled so far out of control.
They considered multiple scenarios before concluding it was most likely that Amanda and Raffaella
had met Rudy at the basketball courts in Piazza Grimana.
All three of them were under the influence of cannabis and possibly alcohol, and decided
to go back to Seven via Della Pergola.
Rudy had already admitted to friends that he wanted
to sleep with Amanda, so he might have seen this as his opportunity. Either that, or she
might have promised to help him hook up with Meredith.
Amanda and Raffaele both turned off their mobile phones, and the trio then returned
to the cottage sometime after 9pm.
Once inside, Meredith confronted Amanda about her missing rent money and heard this comfort over Amanda bringing yet another strange man into their home. An argument broke out between them,
igniting a rage that Amanda had been harboring towards Meredith for some time.
Tired of her serious and prudish nature, Amanda saw this as her
opportunity to teach Meredith a lesson. While Rudy excused himself to use the toilet, Amanda
and Raffaele confronted Meredith in her bedroom. Their argument escalated until Amanda finally
reached out and smacked Meredith's head into the wall. Raffaele, eager to impress Amanda, joined in on the physical altercation.
Rudy heard the commotion and ran into the bedroom.
Feeling a level of competitiveness against Raffaele and wanting to earn Amanda's approval,
he too joined in.
As the violence escalated, things took a sexual turn.
When Meredith refused to cooperate, Amanda and Rafaela each threatened her with a knife,
while Rudy started to sexually assault her.
The more Meredith struggled, the harder the knives were held to her throat, until she
began screaming, and one of the trio panicked and administered the fatal wound. Amanda and Raffaele then
fled with Meredith's mobile phones and ditched them so she wouldn't be able to call for help.
Rudy momentarily tried to stop the bleeding before fleeing himself and then going out
clubbing in a bid to create an alibi. Amanda and Raffaele returned to the cottage to clean up the scene and staged the break-in.
In late January 2008, a new witness came forward with the startling revelation. 33-year-old
Hakuran Kokomani told the police that on the night of Thursday, November 1, 2007,
he was driving down Via della Pergola when he noticed something sitting on the night of Thursday November 1, 2007, he was driving down Via
della Pergola when he noticed something sitting in the middle of the road. It looked like a black
garbage bag. Hakuuran bipped his horn, but the object didn't move. He got out, only to realize
it wasn't a bag at all, but a man and a woman. Both of them appeared to be, quote, off their heads.
The woman took a knife out of a bag and approached Hukuran with it, threatening for him to leave.
A young black man then emerged.
The woman told the two men to hide their faces, but it was too late.
Hukuran recognized the black man from around town as Rudy Guader.
He kept driving, and it was only when he saw the news about Meredith's murder that he
recognised the man and woman to be Raffaele Solacito and Amanda Knox.
Hukuran claimed he'd been too scared to come forward until he realized how significant
this sighting could be.
Hakuuran Kokomani wasn't the only one who'd been withholding important information.
In early February 2008, homeless man Antonio Curitolo came forward to report that at around
9.30 on the night of November 1, he was in Piazza Grimana when he saw Amanda Knox
and Raffaella Solicito hanging out and chatting animatedly.
Antonio knew the area and its people well, as he spent his days loitering around and
sleeping rough in a nearby park.
Antonio claimed he saw them in the square again at around midnight, just before he left
to sleep in the park for the night.
This was a major breakthrough for investigators.
Combined with Hukuran Kokomani's reported sighting of the three suspects, it not only
placed Amanda and Raffaele near the crime scene, but also debunked the couple's alibi
that they hadn't left Raffaele's apartment the entire evening.
A local shop owner also came forward claiming that an exhausted-looking Amanda had come
into his shop at 7.45 on the morning that Meredith's body was discovered, at a time
she claimed to have been asleep.
Prosecutors now had DNA evidence and witness statements linking all three suspects to the
crime scene.
In early July 2008, after eight months of gathering evidence, they finally felt they
had enough to formally press charges.
Amanda Knox, Rafael Solachito and Rudy Guede were each charged with Meredith Kerch's sexual assault and murder.
Back in the United States, the Knox family hired a public relations advisor and began their own media campaign in Amanda's defense.
media campaign in Amanda's defence. They alleged that Amanda had been treated unfairly by the Italian police, who had interrogated her unlawfully and used physical abuse to
coerce untrue statements in a bid to solve the case quickly. In total, she had been interrogated
for a total of 53 hours over five days in a language she only had a beginner's grasp of. For the
investigators, Amanda's behavior mightn't have been typical, but it had also
been completely misinterpreted and then regurgitated as fact. Comments made by one
of the league investigators also raised some eyebrows. He'd said,
We were able to establish guilt by closely observing the suspect's psychological and
behavioral reaction during the interrogation.
We don't need to rely on other kinds of investigation.
The diary entries Amanda had written about contracting HIV had only been made after prison
guards told her that her blood tests had come back positive for the disease.
In response, Amanda had written a list of all the men she'd ever slept with, seven
in total, trying to determine who she could have contracted the disease from.
A second blood test confirmed she didn't have HIV at all.
The HIV threat was seen as a ploy to get Amanda to provide information
about her sexual history so that prosecutors could leak it to the press, thus supporting
their portrayal of her as morally loose. Prominent names in legal circles started jumping on
the bandwagon in support of Amanda, vocalising their opinion that Amanda and Rafaela were
simply scapegoats in a case where all fingers pointed to Rudy.
Many believed the prosecutors were only continuing to go after the couple because they'd publicly
displayed them as killers for so long that it would look bad to admit that officials
had it wrong.
As private investigator Paul Cialino told CBS News,
we know one thing for certain in life, that when you're dead, the last guy who is with you
is usually responsible for you being dead. And the last person that was with Meredith,
from the horse's mouth, is Rudy.
the horse's mouth is Rudy. The Italian justice system offers defendants the option of what's known as a fast track
trial.
This essentially means that instead of going to trial before a jury, the defendant can
have their case decided by a judge alone during the pre-trial proceedings.
Given that this saves a considerable amount of time and money, the incentive for
the defendant is that if they're found guilty, they're typically given a shorter sentence.
Given the overwhelming evidence against Rudy Gueda, including his own admissions that he
was present at the time Meredith Kercher was killed, it came as no surprise when he chose
to have a fast-track trial. While the judge decided whether or not there was enough evidence to put Amanda and Raphael
there to trial, he'd also be coming to a verdict regarding Rudy's involvement.
The pre-trial hearing commenced in September 2008. Lawyers for Amanda and Raphael there argued that
Rudy had acted in a lone wolf killing.
It should have been a fairly open and shut case, he'd likely broken in intending to
rob the place thinking it was empty, but came across Meredith instead.
He sexually assaulted and killed her, before fleeing with her rent money, credit card and
phones.
Knowing what he'd done, he fled the country to evade detection.
Amanda and Raffaele, on the other hand, had no association with Rudy and were nowhere
near the cottage on the night of the murder. Any DNA evidence suggesting otherwise had
likely been contaminated was inconclusive or incorrectly tested. The prosecution disputed this, stating,
all three left traces of their presence at the scene of the crime and were involved. We are
convinced of that. After 12 hours of deliberation, the judge concluded that several perpetrators
had agreed to satisfy their sexual desires by launching
some kind of sex game on Meredith Kercher.
It quickly escalated in violence, to the point that the only way to silence Meredith's
scream was to slit her throat.
While the judge couldn't determine which of the attackers administered the fatal wound,
the fact that none of them had stopped the attack or called for help
meant they shared equal responsibility. The judge declared Rudy Guadal guilty and sentenced him to
30 years prison. As for Amanda Knox and Rafael Solacito, they would proceed to a full trial.
they would proceed to a full trial. Meredith's family had mixed feelings about the decision.
Her father, John, said,
We were not elated, but we were at least satisfied that justice was progressing in the right
direction.
It was difficult to say what you feel at a time like this.
It was certainly not relief, because I knew that this was, in effect, only
the beginning.
Case file will be back shortly. Thank you for supporting us by listening to this episode's
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The joint trial of Amanda Knox and Raphael S. Sollecito was one of the most highly anticipated events in Perugia's recent history, with several media outlets touting it as the trial
of the century.
It was expected that the forensic evidence would be sharply contested, while the prosecution
would have to convince the jury of their circumstantial evidence.
With the case continuing to make international news headlines and attract heated debate,
everyone had an opinion as to whether or not the two defendants were guilty.
But they'd have to wait a while for a verdict.
Amanda and Rafael's trial was scheduled to take place twice a week, three weeks a month, over several months.
Meredith Kerch's family couldn't afford to stay in Perugia for that long, so they made the decision to only attend when it came time to testify.
The proceedings were also held entirely in Italian, a language they didn't speak.
As the child got underway, the prosecution remained loyal to their ongoing theory about
sexual misadventure.
The defence argued that the prosecution had put forward several different theories over
the course of the investigation, but not a single one had produced evidence of any motive
for murder.
Amanda and Meredith might not have been close friends, but there was no deep hatred or animosity
between them.
Amanda might have been seeking adventure and casual romance during her time in Italy,
but she was far from the sex-crazed party animal that the media made her out to be.
Similarly, Rafael Solachito didn't have a perverse obsession with the occult,
and neither of them had a history of violence. They were simply two young people whose behaviour
had been misinterpreted by a prosecution team who refused to back down after vocalising their
theories so early on in the investigation. No matter how hard the prosecutors tried to
put the puzzle together, the defense believed the pieces simply didn't fit.
Over the course of their investigation, not a single piece of evidence had been
found to prove their clients ever had any interaction with Rudy Guader, beyond
the one time Amanda had met him downstairs of the cottage. Phone records
didn't link them in any way, and there was nothing to suggest Raffaele and Rudy had
ever crossed paths at all. As far as the prosecution was concerned, there was physical evidence
that indisputably placed Amanda and Raffaele at the crime scene, such as their bare footprints
which had been tied to the crime scene via luminal testing. But as the defense pointed out, luminal doesn't just react
to blood, it can also react to certain acidic substances including some
household cleaners, certain types of soil, rust and even fruit juice. In what
has been described as a serious procedural oversight, the footprints were
never tested to conclusively confirm that they had been made using Meredith Kerch's blood.
Even if they had, the fact that Amanda's DNA was also present didn't mean both samples
were deposited at the same time. The two women had also shared a house for six weeks, walking
barefoot on the same floors.
It was only natural that their DNA would be mingled over time.
Prosecutors had determined that the bloody bare footprint on the bath mat was a probable
match to Rafael Solacito and that it was too small to have been made by Rudy Gueda.
When experts for the defense inspected the print,
they found that it had been incorrectly measured and that it was indeed compatible with the shape
and size of Rudy's foot. Raffaele also had a distinctive feature on his second toe,
known as a hammer toe, which didn't match the prints.
The knife found in Raffaele's apartment which had been labelled the double DNA knife was
put forward by the prosecution as being the murder weapon.
Yet, this knife didn't fit the bloody outline of the knife that had been found on Meredith's
bedsheet, nor did it match the size of either wound inflicted to Meredith's throat.
Meredith's autopsy had determined that the murder weapon had been forcefully thrust into
her neck as deep as the blade would go.
According to experts for the defense, the knife from Raphael's apartment would have
caused a much deeper wound if this had been the case.
Prosecutors believed the knife had been cleaned, which explained why none of Meredith's blood
was found on it.
This would also explain the smell of bleach in Raphael's apartment.
But no traces of bleach were found on the knife, nor did aluminal testing reveal any
evidence of a cleanup in Raphael's apartment.
As the defense pointed out, if the knife had been cleaned so extensively, how had Meredith's
DNA profile been retained?
Not only didn't the so-called double DNA knife match evidence found at the crime scene,
one expert testified that the traces of Meredith's DNA on the blade were so low that they hadn't
even been detected during initial testing.
The sample had to be amplified to a degree much higher than usual just to get the positive
result.
Given that the tests were done in a lab where large amounts of Meredith's DNA was present,
it was suggested that the DNA could have been accidentally transferred.
Not only had this knife seemingly been picked at
random from a drawer containing many others, control testing was never conducted on any
other pieces of cutlery from the drawer to compare for background contamination.
Furthermore, the DNA samples attributed to Rudy Gueda were consistent with him being the
perpetrator of a violent crime. Yet, the
samples attributed to Amanda and Raffaele were so minor, and none were present in the
murder room itself except for the almost indescribable trace on Meredith's bra clasp.
Meredith's room was only small. If all three suspects had participated in the frenzied crime,
why was Rudy's DNA all over the place, but Amanda and Rafael's was not?
Prosecutors posited that Amanda and Rafael had cleaned up afterwards.
To the defense, it seemed ludicrous to think that they could have cleaned away their own
prints and DNA while miraculously leaving only Rudy Gueda's behind. The scarce DNA samples linking Amanda and Raffaele to
the crime could be explained by one thing… contamination.
Their strongest argument in favor of contamination was the Bra clasp that supposedly had Rafael
as DNA on it.
When Meredith's body was first discovered, the clasp was found underneath her pillow,
but accidentally wasn't bagged as evidence.
Instead, it was unknowingly moved around the room for 46 days before it was rediscovered.
During that time, dust had gathered and many people had trampled around the house, moving
from room to room.
Meredith's mattress had even been dragged around in the search for her missing belongings.
Rudy Guéder's DNA was found on the fabric of the bra strap, while Rafael's was only
found on the small of the bra strap, while Rafael's was only found on the
small metal clasp.
One of Rafael's lawyers asked, how can you touch the hook without touching the cloth?
The defence suggested that Rafael's DNA could have got on it in a number of ways.
Not only was he a regular visitor at the house, he'd also admitted to trying to
break Meredith's door down before her body was discovered. It was possible that his DNA
had been transferred from the door to the room as more people came and went.
One expert testified that with each visit by investigators to the crime scene, the possibility
of contamination increased. Another said that incorrect procedures had been followed and weren't up to international standards.
The prosecution strongly disputed this, with several experts testifying that strict protocols were followed
and contamination would have been impossible.
The most important testimony came from Patrizia Stefanoi, the lead forensic
expert who oversaw the collection and testing of DNA evidence in Meredith Kerch's case.
She testified that everything had been done to the highest possible standard, and there
was no chance that any of the samples had been mixed. According to Stefanoi, there hadn't been a single instance of contamination
in her lab in at least seven years. The defence team argued they hadn't been given enough
documentation to fully interpret the DNA data. They requested specific information about certain
procedures, such as how often the forensic team had changed their protective gear and exactly how the samples had been collected. These requests
were denied, but the judge did agree to a review.
The task was assigned to the head of the scientific police, the person who worked above Patricia Stefanoi. They confirmed that everything had been handled
to the highest standard. The defense requested an independent review of the DNA evidence and
forensic findings. The lead prosecutor rejected the request, arguing,
there is no need for a review, as the evidence was gathered in a very professional way by
qualified persons.
The judge agreed.
In addition to the DNA evidence, some questions were raised about the validity of key witness
testimony.
Hakuuran Kokomani, the only person who claimed to have seen Amanda, Rafaela and Rudy outside
the crime scene on the night of the murder, was put on the stand.
Over time, his version of events had differed slightly.
He also testified that it had been raining on the night he drove by.
It hadn't been raining on the night that Meredith was killed, but it had been the night before.
When pressed, Hakuuran couldn't be certain whether this alleged incident had occurred
on October 31 or November 1, 2007.
The defence argued that he was an unreliable witness and therefore there was nothing to
prove Raffaele Solacito had ever come into contact with Rudy Guader.
As one lawyer commented, the only link between them is the charge sheet.
Nara Kapazali, the elderly woman who claimed to hear screams coming from Via della Pergola
was also put on the stand.
Her account of hearing the screams around 11 and 11.30 on the night of Meredith's murder had been the key to prosecutors believing this to be Meredith's time of death.
However, the defense pointed out that Nara never actually looked at a clock, she had merely guessed the time based on her own personal habits.
Rudy Gueda himself had timed the attack as happening at around 9.30. The
activity on Meredith's phone at around 10pm didn't prove she was still alive at this
time. This activity could be explained by someone unfamiliar with the phone trying to
either use it or turn it off. After all, why would Meredith call her own voicemail only to
hang up before it connected? And why would she call her British bank so late at night but forget
to add the foreign prefix? The bank was the first number listed in her phone. It was therefore
entirely possible that someone unfamiliar with the device had called it by accident.
The prosecution's answer for this was that Meredith was likely just relaxing on her bed,
playing absentmindedly with her phone. But as the defence pointed out, Meredith had been exhausted
from her night out the previous evening. Why would she just lie around fully clothed if she was preparing to go to sleep?
They deemed it much more likely that Meredith had been killed around 9.30, at a time that the
prosecution's witness, homeless man Antonio Curitolo, had put Amanda and Raffaele at Piazza Grimana.
The screams heard by Nara Capizzali either didn't happen between 11 and 1130,
or didn't come from the cottage at all, but one of the many other young people or drug addicts
who frequented the busy area around Via della Pergola. The defence argued that it didn't matter
if there was no evidence to conclusively prove that Amanda and Raffaella had spent the entire night at Raffaella's apartment, because there
was no evidence to prove otherwise.
Their hazy memories and conflicting timestamps were not proof of guilt.
As had been the case throughout the entire investigation, all lies were on Amanda Knox
for the duration of the trial.
The press reported on her every move, including the outfit she wore and the way she styled
her hair.
When she first entered the courtroom, the press reported that she was beaming with a
reporter for the Daily Mail describing her as,
making an entrance like a Hollywood diva sashaying along the red carpet. Amanda later
explained that she'd only smiled because she saw her aunt and uncle in the room and she was
so grateful to see familiar faces. Amanda caused a stir on Valentine's Day when she wore an oversized t-shirt printed with
the words, All You Need Is Love.
Many members of the media interpreted this to be a sign of disrespect and the fact that
Amanda wasn't taking the trial seriously.
Some even believed it was a secret message to Raphael.
But according to Amanda, it was simply a line
from her favourite Beatles song, and she thought it would be appropriate given the holiday.
In summing up, the prosecutors called Amanda Knox an aggressive narcissist who manipulated
others and had little empathy. They claimed she dominated relationships and strongly disliked people who didn't share
her opinions.
As for Rafael Solechito, the prosecution concluded he was cold, emotionally unattached, and
dependent on others.
They told the jury that this was a sexually violent murder carried out for futile motives
and, quote, Meredith will never go home again to hug her loved ones.
She was killed in a horrifying way, and now her relatives can only go to the cemetery
and stand quietly in front of her grave.
You must give the accused what they deserve.
A life sentence.
The defense reminded the jury that they were sealing the fate of two young people when
there was absolutely no motive and no reliable DNA evidence to connect either of them to
Meredith's murder.
They urged the prosecution to explain to them how the bra clasp came to be moved, and if they couldn't do that, then they should, quote,
have the courage to throw it away.
After 11 months of testimony, the jury was finally left to deliberate. At midnight on
Saturday, December 5, 2009, they reached their verdict. Court resumed, despite the laid-out
with hordes of reporters and curious members
of the public gathering on the streets outside. The verdict for both Amanda Knox and Raffaele
Solicito was the same. For the murder and sexual assault of Meredith Kercher, both were declared
guilty. Raffaele was sentenced to 25 years in prison, while Amanda was sentenced to 26, one additional
year for also being found guilty of slandering her former boss, Patrick Lumumba, the man
she'd wrongly accused.
The verdict triggered mixed reactions.
Amanda collapsed forward and began to sob, her parents looking on in disbelief.
The blood drained from Rafael's face while his stepmother collapsed.
Some members of the press began to cry.
The Kirchers weren't sure how to feel.
At a press conference held immediately after the verdict, Meredith's older brother
Lyle told reporters,
Ultimately, we are pleased with the decision and that we got a decision. But at the end
of the day, it is not a time for triumph or celebration. We are satisfied. But we are
gathered here because our sister was murdered and brutally taken away from us."
Arlene said,
"...we are the ones who have been given a life sentence.
We have to live with what's happened for the rest of our lives.
People say that time heals.
But it doesn't."
News of the convictions sparked anger in the United States, with many believing that
Amanda and Raffaele had been victims of a miscarriage of justice.
The senator of Amanda's home state, Maria Cantwell, told the press,
I am saddened by the verdict and I have serious questions about the Italian justice system
and whether an anti-Americanism tainted the trial.
The prosecution did not present enough evidence for an impartial jury to conclude,
beyond reasonable doubt, that Ms Knox was guilty.
Donald Trump called for Americans to boycott Italy.
One Washington Superior Court judge told the Seattle Post Intelligence that Amanda's conviction, quote,
"...borders on the diabolical.
To me, it just proves that they didn't care whether she is guilty or innocent.
They just believe that Amanda needs to be convicted.
I haven't been too sure of too much in my life, but I'm totally convinced that she's
innocent."
Another Washington lawyer accused the Italian prosecutors of turning a straightforward murder into, quote,
a fable with no precedent in the annals of crime.
She called the evidence against Amanda and Raffaele so ambiguous and compromised
that it should have no place in a fair trial.
In the Italian legal system, those convicted of murder are automatically given two rights
of appeal, with each appeal hearing similar to a retrial.
Two weeks after Amanda and Rafael's guilty verdicts, Rudy Guadar's first appeal was held.
This time, he directly identified Rafael's Solicito as being the man who killed Meredith.
He also claimed that when Rafael fled the scene, another person was standing outside.
He didn't see them, but he heard their voice and recognized it as being Amanda Knox.
Both of Rudy Guadar's appeals were unsuccessful, but his decision to undergo a fast-track trial
was rewarded.
His 30-year sentence was reduced to just 16 years, almost half of his original sentence
and 10 years less than his co-accused.
Amanda and Rafael's first appeal began in late November 2010, by which point they'd
already spent three years behind bars.
Addressing the court in Italian, Amanda's voice shook as she said,
I am innocent, Rafael is innocent. We did not kill Meredith.
I ask you to recognize that an enormous mistake was made, and that no justice is rendered
to Meredith or her loved ones by taking our lives away from us.
I am not the person the accusers say I am.
They say I am dangerous, devilish, jealous, uncaring, and violent.
Their theories depend on this, but I was never that girl."
She offered an apology to Meredith's family, saying,
I can never know how you feel, but I have little sisters, and the idea of their suffering
and loss terrifies me."
Rafael told the court he'd never hurt anyone in his life.
Removing a bracelet from around his wrist, he said,
�My bracelet says Free Amanda and Rafael.
I think the time has come to take it off.�
Their defense teams submitted another request for an independent review to be done of the
DNA evidence, specifically the double DNA knife and Meredith's bra clasp.
This time, their request was granted.
Two independent forensic experts were tasked with reviewing the footage of the crime scene.
They couldn't believe what they were seeing.
Various people came and went without wearing
protective clothing or changing their booties,
while key evidence, including the bra clasp,
was handled without investigators changing their gloves.
One expert described it as,
total chaos, disorganization in every respect.
The independent experts concluded that the bra class had been incorrectly collected,
handled and transported, presenting numerous opportunities for contamination.
In regards to the double DNA knife, they discovered that when this was collected from
Raphael's apartment, it was placed into an envelope that had been used to store new gloves.
It was then handled by an officer who had been in Meredith's bedroom earlier that day
and in a lab that contained more than 50 items of Meredith's.
Another officer later noticed the envelope wasn't properly sealed and closed it up with tape, while another then transferred the knife to a non-sterile box.
There was no doubt that the DNA on the handle belonged to Amanda Knox, but the sample attributed
to Meredith was deemed to be so scarce that one expert concluded the likelihood of contamination
being so high that it should be rendered inconclusive.
The independent experts found that anti-contamination procedures weren't documented,
basic errors had been made, and international DNA protocols ignored.
They rendered the evidence on both the Brachlasp and double DNA knife as unreliable given the higher
likelihood of contamination.
Key witness, homeless man Antonio Curitolo was once again put on the stand, having since
been incarcerated for an unrelated incident.
Asked if he saw Amanda and Raffaele at Piazza Gramana, Antonio responded.
Yeah, it was Halloween when I saw them.
I know this because I saw the kids getting on the disco buses all dressed up in costumes.
That's how I also know what time it was.
In Perugia, shuttle buses were used to transport partygoers to different nightclubs around
town, but barely any were running on the night Meredith
was killed.
With Antonio now saying this sighting occurred the night before Meredith was killed on Halloween,
he'd essentially cast doubt on the only sighting that disproved Amanda and Rafael Azalabay.
The prosecution suggested that Antonio might be getting confused with any number of tourist
buses or public transport operating on Thursday, November 1.
They also said this discrepancy was irrelevant, given that Amanda had been at work on Halloween
night and therefore couldn't have been in Piazza Grimano.
But, when Antonio also admitted to being a heroin addict who was high at the time of
the sighting, the judge ordered him out of the courtroom, saying, take him away, I'm done.
It was almost a year before the appeal verdict was announced. On the evening of Monday, October 3, 2011, a crowd of 4,000 people gathered
outside the courthouse, the air thick with anticipation. Inside, Judge Claudio Hellman
declared that the key evidence against Amanda Knox and Rafael S. Solacito was unreliable,
and the first trial did not establish the appropriate standard of proof.
Hellman agreed with the independent findings that the DNA on the knife and Meredith's
bra clasp was invalid, thus there was nothing to conclusively place Amanda and Raffaele at the crime
scene. He discredited witness testimony from Antonio Curitolo and said that any discrepancies in
Amanda and Rafael's accounts of how they spent the night of Thursday, November 1, 2007
didn't mean that they'd provided false alibis.
In Hellman's view, the evidence pointed to just one person being responsible, and that
person was Rudy Gueda.
He concluded that the break-in hadn't been staged at all, but was genuine.
Both Amanda and Rafaela were declared not guilty of Meredith Kerch's murder and cleared
of all related charges.
Amanda's slander conviction against Patrick Lumumba was upheld, with her sentence increased
from one year to three.
With this time already served, the judge ordered the pair's immediate release from prison.
Amanda immediately began to sob.
She managed to hug her lawyers and sister before being whisked from the courtroom.
Raffaella gave a slight smile before his lawyer swept him into a warm embrace.
While the Kirchers respected the decision, they couldn't understand how something that
had been so certain two years prior could suddenly be so emphatically overturned.
To them, it felt like they were straight back to square one.
England's Prime Minister, David Cameron, commented,
�We should be thinking of the family of Meredith Kircher.
Those parents had an explanation for what happened to their wonderful daughter, and
that explanation is there no more.�
Patrick LaMumba, the man Amanda falsely accused, had struggled to find work in the wake of
the allegation and had since relocated to Poland.
He told reporters the only reason Amanda was acquitted was because she was American and
rich, commenting,
�What Amanda did, I don�t know, but I think she knows why Meredith died.�
Newspapers accused Judge Hellman of cracking under pressure from the United States.
In response, Holman admitted it was still possible that Amanda and Raphael were guilty,
but the evidence simply didn't exist to prove it.
He told the Corriere de la Serra newspaper, the Air Ed Delacera newspaper. No one has been able to say exactly what happened. The
truth will probably remain hidden.
For the people of Perugia, the news came as a great relief. For four years, their city
had been plunged into global headlines, sullying its reputation as a charming town filled
with art, history and chocolate, and instead portraying
it as a notorious party town rife with sex and drugs.
This reputation as a dangerous place impacted the student population.
The mayor of Perugia said he didn't care what the outcome was, he just wanted it to
be over.
Commenting, He just wanted it to be over, commenting, All of us have felt the hit from this media attack against us.
Thirty hours after her acquittal, Amanda Knox returned to the United States.
At the Seattle Tacoma International Airport, a throng of reporters gathered to capture her arrival.
A teary Amanda told them she was feeling overwhelmed and unable to grasp the reality of the situation,
commenting,
�Thank you to everyone who�s believed in me, who�s defended me, who supported my
family.
My family�s the most important thing to me, so I just want to go and be with them."
Amanda's lawyer said that the Knox family had endured a gruelling, four-year nightmarish
marathon, but above all, they wanted the public to remember Meredith and keep the Kertcher
family in their prayers.
Meredith's father, John, said that while his family would never want to see innocent people imprisoned.
Quote, We are left thinking.
The world cared about justice for Amanda Knox and Raffaele Solicito.
But what about justice for poor Meredith?
She was the kindest and most caring person you could imagine.
So why was her life taken from her so cruelly? What was the reason?
Will we ever know?
Despite the findings of the appeal court, the controversy regarding the forensic findings
continued. The prosecution team believed the entire process had been done under unacceptable
media pressure and appealed the acquittals to Italy's highest
criminal court. The case was reviewed by the Supreme Court of Cassation, where it was concluded
that Judge Hellman had erred in his acquittal by not ordering any new DNA testing to be conducted
on the disputed evidence. The court also found that he'd failed to give weight to any of the circumstantial
evidence against Amanda and Raffaele, and that too many questions remained unanswered.
In March 2013, the court of Cassations set aside the acquittals and ordered another retrial.
This went ahead in September the same year, to much less fanfare and media attention than
the previous proceedings, especially given that Amanda and Raffaella weren't required
to attend.
After several months of re-examining the available evidence and testimony, in January 2014, presiding
Judge Alessandro Nancini reinstated the convictions. Once again, both Amanda Knox
and Rafael Sola Cito were declared guilty of Meredith Kerch's murder.
This didn't mean the two were automatically sent back to prison. Once again, the verdict
needed to be confirmed by the Court of Cassation before it became absolute.
be confirmed by the Court of Cassation before it became absolute. Amanda was free to remain in the United States for the time being, while Raffaele had his passport taken away to prevent
him from leaving the country. If the High Court confirmed to their convictions, Italy could
request that Amanda be extradited, and the two could be ordered to complete the remaining 25 years of their sentences.
Defence teams for both Amanda and Raffaele argued that Judge Nancini's findings were
filled with clamorous mistakes.
In an opinion piece for The Guardian, British journalist Andrew Gumball wrote, To read the new conviction report in detail is to enter a kind of alternate reality,
where concrete facts appear ignored and alternate facts are seemingly plucked from the air.
Kirch's murder is reduced to a parlor game, and all roads lead to the inevitable, if not also
foregone, conclusion that Knox and Solacito are guilty.
By this point, Meredith's murder case had received three trials and two high court hearings
over the course of seven years.
Nancini's verdict was sent to the Supreme Court of Cassation in Rome, where a panel
had several options.
They could overturn the convictions for a second time, in which case they could either
dismiss the case entirely or have the errors in Judge Nancini's findings fixed.
Alternatively, given that Italy has no double jeopardy rules, they could order yet another
trial.
In March 2015, a Supreme Court panel of five deliberated for 10 hours before concluding
that there was insufficient evidence to convict either Amanda Knox or Rafael S. Solacito.
They ruled that the case against the two defendants had no foundation and that the entire process
had been marred by glaring errors and investigative
amnesia.
The court blamed flaws in the investigation and the overwhelming media attention for creating
a frantic search for suspects.
It concluded that there were no biological traces linking Amanda or Raphael at the crime,
and that sloppy police work and contaminated evidence
made it impossible to do an unbiased review of the evidence.
The case was thrown out, with the court definitively ruling that the pair be fully exonerated.
Amanda was at home with her family when the news came through.
A shriek of excitement rang throughout
their home as Amanda immediately jumped on the phone with Raffaele and congratulated
him on their mutual freedom.
Speaking to reporters outside her home, Amanda said,
�Right now I�m still absorbing what all this means, and what comes to mind is my gratitude
for the life that�'s been given to me."
Amanda Knox's claims of police mistreatment went before the European Court of Human Rights in France.
The court ruled that there wasn't enough evidence to support her claims of degrading police behavior, but agreed that her defence rights had been violated given she wasn't provided with adequate
legal representation
or a professional interpreter during her initial interrogations.
The court declared that these failures effectively derailed the fairness of the entire proceedings
and ordered the Italian government to pay Amanda 18,400 euros in damages, the equivalent
of around 2121,000.
Amanda used this ruling to challenge her slander conviction against Patrick Lamumba.
In an Instagram post, she explained,
�We are both victims of the violation of my human rights during my interrogation,
without which I was helpless against the coercive pressure of the
police. The outcome of that interrogation derailed the investigation into Meredith
Kirch's murder and led to the wrongful imprisonment of three innocent people.
Patrick LaMumba suffered 10 days of wrongful imprisonment and Raffaele and I nearly four years.
and Raffaele and I nearly four years. In October 2023, the Court of Cassation in Rome accepted Amanda's appeal and ordered
a new trial for the slander conviction.
As of February 2024, a trial date has yet to be set.
Amanda shared the news on social media, writing, I am no longer a convicted person, and I will fight with my lawyers to prove my innocence
once and for all.
Four years after her release from prison, the paparazzi followed Amanda as she went about
her life in the United States.
Both her and Rafaela have written books about their experiences, with Amanda's
memoir reportedly earning her around $4 million. Some have accused her of cashing in on the
tragedy, while her stepfather told the press that a majority of this money went to paying
off the exuberant legal fees and multiple mortgages her family had to take out to pay for her defence.
In a letter to Guardian journalist Simon Hattonstone, Amanda discussed how the media helped shape
her into a villain by using decontextualised images. She wrote,
�Some people have made claims that I am histrionic or autistic because it might explain strange
behaviour.
I think people have exaggerated how strangely I reacted.
I was not concerned with what people were thinking.
I wasn't remotely concerned with how people were looking at me.
Now I take it more into consideration because I've had people dissect everything I do in
a way that makes me pause."
As for the kisses she and Rafael shared outside the crime scene, Amanda told Simon that was
a single five-second moment taken from hours of footage.
"'The media made it sound like I had no feeling whatsoever for what was happening in the house,'
she said. I was actually sitting there devastated and traumatized and shocked.
Amanda explained that any courtroom photos that captured her smiling were misconstrued
into something sinister, when those smiles were only ever directed at her family.
She said,
I didn't want them to see me scared. I wanted them to know I'm okay,
because they can't do anything about it. They don't speak Italian, they're just sitting
there worrying about me, looking at the back of my head. That was turned into a man to
make the catwalk across the courtroom because she loves all the attention. I never made eye
contact with those journalists.
They were just a bunch of lenses yelling out or making comments about what I looked like.
Amanda is now a journalist, podcaster and activist for the wrongly accused who lives
in Seattle with her husband and two young children. She has described herself as flipping between
wanting to be invisible and wanting to
clear her name. In a controversial move, she returned to Italy in 2019 to speak at the country's
Criminal Justice Festival, where she addressed the role the media played in the case against her.
Through tears, Amanda said,
On the world scene, I wasn't a defendant, innocent until proven guilty.
I was a clever psychopath, dirty and drug addicted whore, guilty until proven innocent.
It was a false and unfounded history that lit up people's imagination because it fed
fears and fantasies.
Despite this, she continues to acknowledge that the media can also be a force for good
and have used those who prosecuted her with empathy.
Amanda explained,
�The real justice happens when we see the other people with compassion, when we judge
with moderation, and when we come back to each other after the pain with the courage
of an open heart.
Many believe the case only ever attracted the level of attention it did because both Meredith and Amanda were considered to be conventionally attractive women who sat on different sides
of the good versus evil scale. As journalist Jessica Bennett wrote in The New York Times,
As journalist Jessica Bennett wrote in The New York Times, Ms. Knox became a kind of vessel onto which society could project its fears and judgments,
as well as its pornographic fantasies.
Ms. Knox was perceived as an unsophisticated American, loud and flamboyant, ignorant of Italian culture,
an exhibitionist and slob who brought strange men to the house.
She was a sexual deviant, a Karen who had accused an innocent black man of the crime.
Despite Amanda and Raffaella's official exonerations, the case continues to attract speculation
and public interest, with some still believing that the pair are guilty.
Journalist Barbie Latzenedo wrote in her book Angel Face,
"...nothing in this case ever made sense, and no one, it seems, played by the rules.
Amanda Knox will always be remembered as someone who hung in the balance between sinner and
saint, good and evil, and Meredith's murder will
always be a mystery that was blurred by the headlines and lost in translation.
One CBS reporter noted that the irony of this case is that the Italian authorities actually
did a great job in that within three weeks of Meredith's murder, Rudy Guadar was identified and caught. It was when
they refused to drop Amanda and Rafael as suspects that the problems began. Private
investigator Bob Graham agreed, responding, the prosecution dug a hole so deep that they
couldn't get out of it, and pride, vanity, whatever it was, ensured they just kept digging.
Rudy Guadar was released from prison in November 2021, having served 13 years of his 16-year
sentence for Meredith Kercher's brutal sexual assault and murder.
His lawyer told the press that Rudy had been adequately reeducated, while a lawyer for the Kircher family said the early release would renew the family's unspeakable suffering.
Amanda voiced her opinion on Twitter, writing,
Gwede holds a tremendous power to heal others harmed by his actions.
He has the power to tell the truth, to take responsibility, to stop blaming me for the
rape and murder of Meredith Kerger, which a wealth of evidence shows he committed alone.
Rudy was free for just over two years when in December 2023 his 23-year-old girlfriend
accused him of personal injury, ill treatment, and violence.
He was charged with domestic
assault given a restraining order and fitted with an electronic tag.
Rafael S. Solacito, who now works as a software engineer in Milan and has never been compensated
for his wrongful conviction, commented to the press. I don't follow Gwede's life, but in light of what has happened, it seems like he
hasn't changed very much. In the years following Amanda and Raphael's exonerations, Meredith Kerch's
family mostly remained silent. Throughout the lengthy legal proceedings they continue to feel that Meredith
was being written out of her own story. Testifying at the first trial, Meredith's mother Arlene
described her daughter's death as quote, unbelievable, unreal. In many ways it still
is. I still look for her. It's not just her death, but it is the nature of it, the brutality of it, the violence of
it, and the great sorrow it's brought everyone.
It is such a shock to send your child to school and for them not to come back.
We will never, never get over it."
Their frustrations over the media attention given to Amanda increased upon finding out that
a movie was being made about the case titled, Amanda Knox, Murder on Trial in Italy. At the time,
Arlene told the press, I don't understand why it was called Amanda Knox when my daughter was the
victim. The Kirch is focused on keeping Meredith's
memory alive no matter what, leaving her room exactly as she'd left it, her table stuck with
books and makeup. Every year they gathered on her birthday to raise a glass in Meredith's honor
and share some of their favorite memories. Prior to Meredith's death, her father John had bought the box set of friends so that
the two could watch it together on Meredith's weekly visits.
He watched it gather dust on the shelf, a constant reminder of their happy evenings
together.
As John explained to the Daily Mail, it was easier for him to pretend that Meredith had
just gone away for a while. He liked to imagine that, quote,
someday soon she will ring me, her voice bubbling with laughter and enthusiasm,
to tell me about her latest adventure.
In January 2020, John was found lying on the road near his home with two fractured legs,
a broken arm, and a head injury after a suspected hit and run.
He died from his injuries shortly after.
Four months later, Meredith's mother Arlene passed away from natural causes.
The couple's three surviving children released a statement saying that losing both of their
parents so quickly brought its own tragedy, but, quote,
"...we can take some solace in knowing that they are now united with Meredith and no longer
have to live with the grief which consumed them."
A poem Stephanie had written for her sister held more power than ever before.
Delivered at Meredith's funeral, it read,
Remember you are never alone.
I am always with you when you roam.
So close your eyes.
I'm with you still.
I haven't left you.
I never will.