Amanda Knox has expressed a desire to reconcile with the family of Meredith Kercher, the British student murdered in Perugia in November 2007. The statement, reported by La Nazione Umbria citing a Newsweek interview, comes weeks after the release of a television series about Knox’s case.
Knox, investigated, convicted, and later definitively acquitted of Kercher’s murder while maintaining her innocence, stated she would “really like” the opportunity to reconcile with Kercher’s siblings. Kercher’s parents, John and Arline, died in 2020. “We lived through a very traumatic experience together,” Knox told Newsweek. “It would be very nice and I think very therapeutic for us to talk about it. But ultimately, their grief is real and all-consuming, and my feelings about my own grief don’t demand anything from them.”
“I just want them to know I want to reconcile with them,” Knox declared in the interview, while acknowledging the prospect is remote. “I feel like nothing I could say would ever satisfy them,” she stated, “as long as they think I had something to do with Meredith’s death or that I know something about it that I’m not revealing. It’s like I don’t know what to do or say, other than that I’ve already said everything I know.”
Kercher family lawyer Francesco Maresca responded critically to Newsweek. “In general, neither I nor the Kercher family have been satisfied with the initiatives undertaken by Amanda Knox over the years, as they are unjustified and disrespectful of poor Meredith’s memory,” Maresca commented. “I am sure they will not watch the TV series,” the lawyer concluded, “because once again it violates the memory of the beautiful girl that Meredith was.”
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