Advertisement
World

Amanda Knox offers her side of sensational murder case

3-MIN READ3-MIN
Amanda Knox. Photo: Reuters

Amanda Knox, the American student accused of the 2007 murder of her British roommate while both were students in Italy, paints herself in her new memoir as a naive young woman railroaded by a foreign justice system.

Knox, 25, spent four years in prison for the murder of Meredith Kercher while they were exchange students in Perugia, a hilltop Italian university town popular with foreigners. Knox, who became a tabloid sensation in Britain and Italy, was acquitted on appeal in 2011. She returned to her Seattle-area home, but Italy’s high court last month ordered a retrial.

Advertisement

In the hotly anticipated memoir, published by HarperCollins and in bookstores on Tuesday, Knox maintained her innocence and wrote that she regretted that in prison she had never reached out to Kercher’s family to say that the girl’s death had been a “heartbreak to so many.”

The memoir was released in conjunction with an interview with ABC’s Diane Sawyer that is due to air on Tuesday evening.

Advertisement

Knox wrote that she wished she had reached out to Patrick Lumumba, a Congolese bar owner whom Knox falsely accused of the murder. Lumumba, who was briefly jailed and then cleared, said in 2011 that Knox’s accusation destroyed his life.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x