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Video: Sisters defend Knox: ‘She isn’t a bad person’

By
TODAY.com contributor
updated 9/29/2011 9:13:50 AM ET 2011-09-29T13:13:50

Optimistic that Amanda Knox will be released from an Italian prison, two of her younger sisters are disputing her she-devil portrayal.

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“She is not the witch that everybody says she is,’’ Ashley Knox told TODAY’s Matt Lauer in a live interview in Italy on Thursday. “She is a very loyal and down-to-earth person that I know, and everyone that knows her knows.’’

Video: Sisters defend Knox: ‘She isn’t a bad person’ (on this page)

“I know the truth about my sister, so I just don’t think about it that way because my sister isn’t like that,’’ Delaney Knox told Lauer. “I just think of the positive about her.’’

Story: Amanda Knox was publicly 'crucified,' her lawyer says

The Seattle student was sentenced to 26 years in prison in 2009 after being found guilty by an Italian court of murdering her roommate, Meredith Kercher, in the apartment they shared in Perugia, Italy. Knox was arrested on Nov. 6, 2007, just four days after Kercher’s body was found in a pool of blood in the apartment.

Knox has spent approximately 1,000 days in jail after allegedly leading a sexual assault on Kercher in a drug-fueled sex game that also included her Italian ex-boyfriend, 27-year old Raffaele Sollecito and Ivorian Rude Guede. Sollecito was sentenced to 25 years in prison for his role in the murder. In his closing arguments, Knox's lawyer said she has been publicly "crucified."

Video: Amanda Knox: ‘she-devil’ or ‘angel face’?
The verdict on Knox’s appeal, which has hinged on arguments of shoddy police work and mishandling of DNA evidence, is expected to be delivered between Saturday and Monday. A court-ordered forensics review was critical of the DNA evidence found on Kercher’s bra clasp and a kitchen knife, and found that the police did not adequately handle the crime scene.

Ashley, 16, and Delaney, 13, are hoping those findings can help free their 24-year-old sister.

“She’s very nervous about (the verdict) because of what happened last time, but we’re also very hopeful about it,’’ Ashley said.

“I have my hopes pretty high,’’ Delaney said.

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The two sisters had not seen Amanda face-to-face in nearly two years until this week, relying on phone calls and letters to contact her.

“It was wonderful to be able to give her a hug and be able to touch her in person,’’ Ashley said. “She’s become a stronger person, and she is smarter,’’ Delaney said. “She’s learned more.’’

During her time behind bars, Knox has remained optimistic despite the prosecution’s vigorous attempt to portray her as a sex fiend who was jealous of Kercher and staged a robbery in their apartment in conjunction with Sollecito to throw police off-track. Her false claim that bartender Diya “Patrick’’ Lumumba committed the murder led Lumumba’s lawyers to call her a Satanic witch and a she-devil.

“I’m thinking a lot about court in September — what I can say, what needs to be said, (and) how to counter the prosecution,’’ Knox wrote in a letter to her sisters on Aug. 8. “I feel like this will end well, but you never know. I’m afraid, but OK.’’

Story: Knox a 'diabolical she-devil,' Italian lawyer says

Her supporters in the United States view Knox as an innocent student caught up in an unfair Italian justice system. During the trial, Knox has transformed from a fresh-faced student who played to the television cameras and sported an “All You Need is Love’’ T-shirt to a more subdued figure. But according to her sisters, she has remained positive and interested in their lives.

“She always tries to make the best out of every situation,’’ Ashley said. “She always asks how we’re doing. She doesn’t need a whole bunch of stuff to be happy. She isn’t a bad person at all.’’

Story: Timeline: Amanda Knox's murder trial

“She always thinks positive,’’ Delaney said. “She doesn’t like to talk about herself. She wants to learn about us and wants to just catch up on things and ask us questions.’’

Her sisters have revealed some of Knox's hopes, should she be freed.

“Amanda in all of her letters, she tells me that she wants to feel grass,’’ her other sister, Deana, told reporters. “She wants to lay down and put grass in between her toes and in her fingers and feel sunlight. It’s the little things that she misses the most.’’

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Explainer: Timeline: Amanda Knox's murder trial

  • Amanda Knox and her Italian former boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, are appealing a 2009 verdict

    Image: Amanda Knox
    Stefano Medici  /  AP
    Amanda Knox
    that found them guilty of murdering British student Meredith Kercher.

    Here is a timeline of the main events in the case. (Source: Reuters)

  • November 2, 2007

    Image: Meredith Kercher
    AP
    22-year-old British university student Meredith Kercher
    The body of Kercher is found with a deep stab wound in the throat, in the apartment she shared with American student Knox in the central Italian town of Perugia.

  • November 6, 2007

    Image: Raffaele Sollecito
    Tiziana Fabi  /  AFP - Getty Images
    Italian student Raffaele Sollecito
    Knox, Sollecito, and bar owner Patrick Diya Lumumba are questioned by Italian police.

  • November 19, 2007

    Image: Rudy Hermann Guede
    Police say they are seeking a fourth suspect, named as Rudy Hermann Guede, from Ivory Coast. He is arrested the next day in the German city of Mainz. On the same day Lumumba is released without charge from prison in Rome.

  • April 1, 2008

    Knox, Sollecito and Guede lose their appeals to be released from prison and are told they will stay behind bars until they are charged or released.

  • October 28, 2008

    Guede is sentenced to 30 years in jail for taking part in Kercher's murder. His sentence is cut back to 16 years on appeal in 2009. Judge Paolo Micheli also orders Knox and Sollecito to stand trial on murder charges

  • January 16, 2009

    Trial of Knox and Sollecito begins.

  • December 5, 2009

    A court sentences Knox to 26 years in prison and Sollecito to 25 years after they are found guilty of murdering Kercher during a drunken sex assault. Lawyers for Knox and Sollecito say they will appeal the sentences and Knox's family denounces the verdict as a "failure of the Italian judicial system."

  • November 8, 2010

    An Italian court orders Knox to stand trial for slandering police officers during the murder investigation.

  • November 24, 2010

    Knox and Sollecito's appeal against their convictions starts and is adjourned. It resumes on December 11.

  • December 16, 2010

    Guede's conviction is confirmed by Italy's highest appeals court.

  • June 29, 2011

    An independent forensic report discredits police evidence used to help convict Knox.

  • July 25, 2011

    Two court-appointed experts, Carla Vecchiotti and Stefano Conti, tell an appeal hearing the knife thought to have been used to kill Kercher carried no trace of blood but may have been contaminated with other DNA traces.

  • September 23, 2011

    Prosecutors display gruesome crime scene photos.

  • September 26, 2011

    Patrick Lumumba's lawyer Carlo Pacelli calls Knox a "she-devil" and tells the appeals court she destroyed Lumumba's image by falsely accusing him of the murder, testimony that helps prosecutors attack her credibility. Knox has said she wrongly implicated Lumumba under pressure from police.

  • September 29, 2011

    Wrapping up the defense case, Knox's lawyer Carlo Dalla Vedova points to errors in the probe by police and urges a panel of lay and professional judges to look beyond the image of Knox created by the media and the prosecution.

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