Taking the stage Saturday at an Italian conference on justice, Amanda Knox accused the media of having built a false narrative around her during her yearslong murder trial and appeals process, depicting her as guilty even though she was eventually acquitted, the AP reports. The former exchange student from the US who became the focus of a sensational murder case returned to Italy this week for the first time since an appeals court acquitted her in 2011 in the slaying of her British roommate, Meredith Kercher. Knox, speaking in Italian on a panel discussion at the Criminal Justice Festival in Modena titled "Trial by media," said she was depicted "on the global scene as cunning, psychopath, drug-addicted, whore. Guilty."
Speaking through tears, she said the media that labelled her "Foxy Knoxy" invented a "false and baseless story, which fueled people's fantasies and talked to their fears." Knox's 2011 acquittal was part of a long legal process that saw multiple flip-flop rulings before she was definitively acquitted in 2015 by Italy's highest court. Knox said she came back to Italy despite the fact that she was afraid of being "molested, derided, framed, that new accusations will be directed against me for telling my truth." She also criticized Italian prosecutors, who described a scenario made up of "orgies and sex toys" during her first trial, even though that version of the story was toned down in the appeal. Knox arrived at the conference Friday with her fiance but left for a time; an event organizer later said the media glare "traumatized" her, per CBS News.
(More
Amanda Knox stories.)