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1 week ago |
theage.com.au | JP O’ Malley |Amanda Knox
, register or subscribe to save articles for later. Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. In September 2007, Amanda Knox was just another American abroad. Then a 20-year-old student, Knox arrived from Seattle to study Italian in Perugia, a small city north of Rome. Two months later, she found herself in the city’s police station. November 6, 2007, was the fourth night of questioning.
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Jun 1, 2024 |
apu.fi | Amanda Knox
The Atlanticin englanninkielisen jutun voit lukea tästä linkistä. Artikkeli on alun perin ilmestynyt toukokuussa 2024. Olin vältellyt ystävääni Jens Söringiä jo useiden kuukausien ajan. Kun sain häneltä sähköpostia, avasin vastausikkunan ja jäin kauhuissani tuijottamaan ruudulla vilkkuvaa kursoria. En enää tiennyt, mitä sanoisin hänelle, miehelle, joka oli istunut 33 vuotta vankilassa kaksoismurhasta, johon hän vannoi olevansa syytön. Jens oli tuomittu murhasta vuonna 1990.
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May 2, 2024 |
theatlantic.com | Amanda Knox
I had been avoiding my friend Jens Söring for months. Whenever his emails arrived, I’d open a reply window and stare with dread at the blinking cursor. I no longer knew what to say to him, this man who had spent 33 years in prison for a double homicide he swore he didn’t commit. Jens had been convicted of murder in 1990. I had been convicted of murder nearly 20 years later. But the parallels between our cases were striking.
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Apr 10, 2024 |
justdial.com | Amanda Knox
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Jan 13, 2024 |
thefp.com | Amanda Knox
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Jan 13, 2024 |
thefp.com | Amanda Knox
If you know anything about Gypsy Rose Blanchard’s case―which has, like mine, become its own cottage industry within the broader world of true crime―you know that 48-year-old Clauddine “Dee Dee” Blanchard had it coming. This post is for paying subscribers only Subscribe now Already have an account? Sign in
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Jan 11, 2024 |
slate.com | Rich Juzwiak |Katie Heaney |Amanda Knox
Illustration By Slate and Getty Images PlusA series of essays on stopping things—or not. Illustration by Slate and Getty Images Plus
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Jan 2, 2024 |
slate.com | Amanda Knox
Skip to the content Downtime This is part of Quit It, a series of essays on stopping things—or not. My freshman year of college, I was hired as a barista at a small café near campus, and during my shifts, I could have as much free coffee as I wanted. Not that I wanted all that much, but you always pull shots in multiples of two, so if someone ordered one shot, or three (hello, all-nighter!), there was a perfectly good shot of espresso just sitting there.
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Dec 1, 2023 |
persuasion.community | Amanda Knox
The long-simmering debates about cancel culture are flaring up once again as posters of kidnapped Israeli children are ripped down on street corners, and as students march with Palestinian flags, chanting “From the river to the sea!” while their Jewish peers cower behind locked doors. Do such actions merit cancellation? When does free speech cross over into hate speech? Should a person be stained for life by signing a statement that minimizes the atrocities of Oct 7th?
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Nov 16, 2023 |
inkl.com | Amanda Knox
“This information, misinformation, is pumped out along with the images and the films. So how do we deal with that?” he asked during a hearing. He considered a setup similar to that of the public service network C-SPAN, musing that he has “never seen anything very sensational on C-SPAN.”Keeping trials public is meant to protect defendants against arbitrary or flawed proceedings—but the type of media circus that often accompanies highly publicized trials can play against them.