Amanda Knox: When Media Frenzy Eclipsed the Truth
How sensational coverage and flawed evidence led to the wrongful conviction of an American student in Italy

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Quick Facts
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Mediedækning og uskyldige dømte
Quick Facts
On November 2, 2007, British exchange student Meredith Kercher was discovered dead in her locked bedroom in a shared apartment in Perugia, Italy. She had been sexually assaulted and stabbed 40 times, with the fatal wound severing her thyroid artery. The murder would trigger one of the most controversial legal cases of the 21st century—one defined less by evidence than by sensational media coverage that shaped public opinion before facts ever reached the courtroom.
Amanda Knox, an American student and Kercher's roommate, and Knox's Italian boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito were arrested and charged with murder. In 2009, despite significant evidentiary problems, both were convicted. Knox received a 26-year sentence. The case immediately captured international headlines, with media outlets painting narratives that often contradicted the actual forensic record.
## The Unraveling of "Evidence"
The prosecution's case relied heavily on three key pieces of evidence—all of which collapsed under scrutiny. A kitchen knife from Sollecito's apartment was presented as the murder weapon, allegedly bearing Knox's DNA on the handle and Kercher's on the blade. Yet when examined rigorously, no trace of Kercher's DNA was found on the blade. Basic errors in gathering and analyzing the evidence suggested the investigation itself was flawed from the start.
A bloody bathmat footprint attributed to Sollecito turned out to match Guede's forefoot size instead. The bra clasp collected from Kercher's room—photographed on November 2 but not collected until December 18—had been moved between 4 and 5 feet. When analyzed, it contained multiple male DNA fragments alongside Kercher's, indicating contamination over the weeks it lay unsecured at the crime scene.
Mixed blood found in the bathroom became a linchpin claim that Knox had contact with Kercher's blood. But there was no direct physical evidence placing Knox in Kercher's bedroom during the murder.


