Amanda Knox:
I want to-- reiterate my position, for all of this case, and also to clarify-- the confusion that I-- have brought to this case.
Okay. I want to clarify what it is that happened to me in-- the-- in the Questore -- the day that-- the day that I made declarations that didn't make sense, that changed.
After-- the discovery of Meredith, I had spent days in-- cooperating with the police, to try to just give as much information as I could.
The day of the fifth, I wasn't called to the Questore. Raffaele was called, but I decided to go with him, to keep him company, but also because I was scared to be alone.
When I was there, I had just planned to wait, but the police came into their waiting room and wanted to talk to me more about what I knew, people that I knew who had come to my house. I gave them phone numbers and--
After that, they moved me into another room and started asking me the same questions, what I had done that night, asking me-- for times, exact time periods, exactly what I did. And was-- it was difficult for me because it was in the middle of the night that I-- we had been called. I was very tired. And I was also quite stressed out. And I-- so I--
They kept asking me the same questions, time periods-- exactly sequences of actions and I did my best, to give the same information over and over and over again.
At a certain point-- excuse me. At a certain point, the-- they began-- the police began to be more aggressive with me.
They called me a liar and--
They told me that I was-- of all the things that I had kept saying, over and over again, they said that I was lying. They said that--
They threatened that I was going to go in prison for 30 years because I was hiding something. But I-- but I felt-- I felt completely stressed out, blocked, because I wasn't lying. I didn't know what I-- I didn't know what to do.
Then they started pushing on me the idea that I must have seen something, and forgotten about it. They said that I was traumatized.
I didn't understand. I became really confused. I tried to-- re-express, re-explain what I had done-- the fact that I didn't have to go to work. At that point, they-- I gave them my phone so they could see that I didn't have to-- I received-- okay-- okay--
See - because I received an SMS, and for that reason, they kept repeating to me that I was lying about - SMS. I was confused.
So, what ended up happening was the fact that I had been pressured so much, and I was-- I was hit in the back of the head by one of the police officers and--
Who said she was trying to make me-- help me remember the truth.
I was terrified, because I didn't know-- I-- I didn't know what to do anymore.
And so what ended up happening was they said they-- they went-- take me to jail, and I'm - and because of all this SMS, because-- because of all this confusion, they kept saying, "You sent this thing to Patrick. We know that you left the house. We know." I just said his name. It wasn't because I was trying to say anything. I just said it because they were…
After that - at a certain point, I asked if I should have had a lawyer. And they said that it would have been worse for me.
So they asked me to make declarations about what I remembered, but I told that I didn't remember anything like this.
Because I was confused. What I remembered was different from what they were asking me to say.
They asked me for details, and I didn't have details to give them, so they just asked me questions that I just responded as -
From - I was stressed, so what I - what, in that moment that I was trying to think of something else - my memories of just random events, of seeing Patrick, for instance, one night, or…
I wrote these memorials that everyone's putting so much pressure on - only because I wanted to express the fact that I was confused. I felt like no one was listening to me anymore, and so I wrote these to express the fact that I didn't - I - I didn't - I wasn't for sure about anything anymore.
I want to stress the fact that I'm innocent. Meredith was my friend, and I could never have hurt her. I'm not the person that the prosecutor says I am.
And that's all I want to say. Thank you.
Amanda Knox statement in court.
This girl reminds me so much of Casey Anthony it is scary.