Knox spoke in an
exclusive interview with CNN on Thursday, two days after an Italian
court released an explanation of her conviction.
In a retrial, Knox and
Raffaele Sollecito, her then-boyfriend, were found guilty in the 2007
death of Meredith Kercher, Knox's onetime roommate.
"I did not kill my friend. I did not wield a knife. I had no reason to," Knox said.
"In the month that we
that we were living together, we were becoming friends. A week before
the murder occurred, we went out to a classical music concert together
... We had never fought."
Knox struggled to speak
at moments in the interview, seemingly overcome by emotion and thoughts
of Kercher. But, for the most part, she was calm, collected and
methodical in how she broke down arguments in the case.
In its more than 300-page
document, the Florence appeals court said a third person convicted in
the murder, Rudy Guede, did not act alone, and cited the nature of the
victim's wounds.
Ruling Judge Alessandro
Nencini, who presided over the second appeal in the case, said Kercher
and Knox disagreed over the payment of the rent in the house they shared
in Perugia and that "there was an argument then an elevation and
progression of aggression."
Knox dismissed those allegations out of hand.
"If I were there, I
would have traces of Meredith's broken body on me. And I would have left
traces of myself around -- around Meredith's corpse," she said.
"And I -- I am not there. And that proves my innocence."
'I'm not that person'
When asked what type of person Judge Nencini must think she is, Knox cited his report.
"He believes the
prosecutor when the prosecutor describes me as a person who was capable
of not only completely disturbing everyone around me, but then getting
drugged up," she said, trailing off.
"But I'm not that person. And the evidence doesn't show that."
She said she has been haunted by how people perceived her behavior in the immediate aftermath of the murder.
Knox was filmed kissing
Sollecito outside the murder scene. At the police station, she
reportedly sat on Sollecito's lap, making faces. She told Kercher's
friends she must have suffered.
"I think it's true that
people seemed to have had a kind of tunnel vision in my regard and that
has been something that I've been having to fight against for a long
time," Knox said.
The Florence court in
January said that Knox, who also was convicted of slander, was sentenced
in absentia to 28 1/2 years in prison. Sollecito's sentence was 25
years.
They were first convicted of murder in 2009, but those verdicts were overturned on appeal in 2011.
Claudio Hellman, the judge who tossed their convictions, has lashed out at colleagues.
"The Florence Appeal
Court has written a script for a movie or a thriller book while it
should have only considered facts and evidence. There is no evidence to
condemn Knox and Sollecito," said the judge in a scathing statement
obtained by CNN.
"It's a verdict that, seems to me, is the result of fantasy and has nothing to do with evidence."
Guede is the only person in jail for the slaying, and many aspects of the crime remain unexplained.
'It's not a complex case'
Knox's conviction has
raised questions about her possible extradition to Italy to serve her
sentence, since she was in the United States and did not attend the
retrial. She gets one more appeal -- to Italy's highest court.
She said she thought the Florence appeals court would find her innocent, and was caught by surprise when it didn't.
"As this case has
progressed, the evidence that the prosecution has claimed exists against
me has been proven less and less and less. And all that has happened is
that they've filled these holes with speculation," she said.
Separately, Knox added:
"What I keep seeing in this case is trying to put an artificial
complexity to it. It's not a complex case."
If Italy's highest court
affirms her conviction, the country could ask for her to be sent back
to Italy, where she spent four years in prison awaiting and during her
first trial. U.S. authorities would then have to decide whether to
extradite.
Knox said she is hopeful such a scenario can be avoided and that her next appeal will be successful.
She is optimistic her life in limbo will finally be resolved.
"From this whole
experience, especially in prison where you have to take everything day
by day, right now I'm having to take everything step by step. And if I
think about everything that I could possibly be facing, it's way too
overwhelming for me to even conceive," Knox said.
"I truly believe that it
is possible to win this, and to bring an end to all of the speculation
and the nonsensical theories, and really bring peace to everyone who has
suffered."
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