Amanda Knox to present defense in Italian court for 16-year-old slander accusation

Amanda Knox to present defense in Italian court for 16-year-old slander accusation

MILAN — Amanda Knox will be back in an Italian courtroom this week to defend herself against a 16-year-old slander conviction that she hopes to beat once and for all.

Her chance was made possible when a European court ruled that Italy violated her human rights during a long night of questioning after the murder of her British roommate in November 2007.

The slander conviction for accusing a Congolese bar owner in the murder is the only charge against Knox that withstood five court rulings that ultimately cleared her in the brutal murder of her roommate, 21-year-old Meredith Kercher, in the apartment they shared in the idyllic central Italian university town of Perugia.

A verdict in the slander case retrial ordered by Italy’s highest court is expected on Wednesday, with Knox appearing in an Italian court for the first time in more than 12 1/2 years.

The slander charge was largely based on two statements typed by police that Knox signed during the early hours of Nov. 6, 2007, under extended questioning in Italian from police without a lawyer or a competent translator. The European Court of Human Rights ruled that the conditions violated her human rights.

Kercher’s brutal murder grabbed worldwide attention as suspicion fell on Knox, then 20, and her then-Italian boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, with whom she had been involved for just about a week.

Knox and Sollecito were convicted in their first trial, but after a series of flip-flop verdicts, they were ultimately exonerated by Italy’s highest court in 2015. Knox returned to the United States in October 2011, after her first acquittal. She is now the mother of two small children, and has a podcast with her husband while campaigning against wrongful convictions.

However, the slander conviction against Knox endured, a legal stain that continued to fuel doubts about her role in the killing, particularly in Italy — and despite the conviction of Rudy Hermann Guede, a man from Ivory Coast whose DNA was found at the crime scene.

Guede served 13 years of a 16-year prison sentence handed down after a fast-track trial that foresees lighter sentences under Italian law.

Based on the ruling by the European court, Italy’s highest court threw out Knox’s slander conviction last November and ruled that the two statements typed by police were inadmissible. It ordered a new trial, instructing the Florence court to consider only a handwritten statement that Knox wrote in English some hours later.

“In regards to this ‘confession’ that I made last night, I want to make it clear that I’m very doubtful of the verity of my statements, because they were made under the pressures of stress, shock and extreme exhaustion,” her statement said.

A pioneer of the study of false confessions, Sal Kassin, says Knox’s signed statements follow a playbook of false confessions.

“It is empirical fact that most false confessions contain accurate details not yet known to the public and ‘false-fed facts’ that are consistent with the police theory of the crime, but that later prove to be untrue,” Kassin, a psychologist at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, wrote about the case in his book “Duped,” which examines the phenomenon of false confessions.

Kassin said police “contaminated” Knox’s confession, which aligned with police theory at the time.

“To hold her accountable for a statement in which she also implicated herself is absurd,’’ he wrote.

Amanda Knox, the American woman who was acquitted of murder charges in Italy in 2015, is once again facing legal troubles in the country. This time, Knox is set to present her defense in an Italian court for a 16-year-old slander accusation.

The accusation stems from comments Knox made during her trial for the murder of British student Meredith Kercher in 2007. Knox, along with her then-boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito, was convicted of the murder in 2009, but the verdict was overturned on appeal in 2011. Knox was then retried and convicted again in 2014, only to be acquitted by Italy’s highest court in 2015.

During the course of her legal battles in Italy, Knox made statements to the media that were critical of the Italian justice system and the prosecutors who were pursuing the case against her. One such statement, made in a 2013 interview with an Italian television network, led to the slander accusation that Knox is now facing.

Knox has maintained her innocence throughout the ordeal, and has said that she was only speaking out in self-defense against what she saw as a wrongful prosecution. She has also expressed frustration with the Italian legal system and the media coverage of her case, which she believes has been biased against her.

Knox’s defense team is expected to argue that her comments were made in good faith and were not intended to defame anyone. They will also likely point to the fact that Knox has already been acquitted of the murder charges, which they believe should have a bearing on the slander accusation.

The case has drawn renewed attention to Knox and her legal saga, which has captivated audiences around the world for over a decade. Many have followed Knox’s story closely and have strong opinions about her guilt or innocence.

Regardless of the outcome of the slander case, it is clear that Amanda Knox’s legal troubles in Italy are far from over. The case serves as a reminder of the complexities and challenges of navigating a foreign legal system, especially when one’s freedom is at stake.