American Held in Study-Abroad Slaying

Amanda Knox is to remain in custody after her roomate was found dead.

ByABC News
November 7, 2007, 11:57 AM

ROME, Nov. 9, 2007 — -- An Italian judge ruled Friday that an American student, her Italian boyfriend and a Congolese bar owner should remain in jail as suspects in the death of a Britishstudent, her lawyer said.

Amanda Marie Knox, 20, from Seattle Wash.; Raffaele Sollecito, 24, and Lumumba Diya, 38, a local pub owner, have been detained since Monday in connection with the sexual assault and killing of Knox's roommate, MeredithKercher, 21, a student from Britain. Kercher and Knox were both exchange students and shared an apartment in Perugia, Italy.

Kercher's body was found Nov. 2 inside the apartment. She was half naked and laying under a duvet, with a stab wound in her neck.

The coroner says it appears she died fighting off a sexual attack.

The police chief says he believes all three suspects were all in the room when Kercher was killed.

Judge Claudia Matteini said in a 19-page ruling that there wassufficient evidence to keep the three in jail for up to a yearwhile the investigation continues, said Luca Maori, one ofSollecito's lawyers.

"We didn't expect it," Maori told reporters, adding that heplanned to appeal. He said he still had to read the ruling, but that the defenseteam was "perplexed" by the judge's decision, The Associated Press reported.

The three have denied involvement in the killing, according totheir lawyers.

Under Italian law, suspects can be kept behind bars withoutbeing charged if a judge rules there is enough evidence to jailthem and there is a chance they might flee, repeat the crime ortamper with evidence.

Knox is an exchange student from the University of Washington.

Police say Knox has given conflicting versions of events, according to leaks from local police. First she suggested a break-in. Then, according to press reports, she broke down when accused of holding Kercher while she was attacked. She claims she was in another room.

Friends back home in Seattle describe Knox as sweet, kind and fun-loving, and as having the time of her life studying in Italy on an exchange program.

In a clip on YouTube, Knox looks like a typical, carefree and fun-loving college kid.

But somewhere along the line it's gone horribly wrong.

Rick Kirsten, who owns a gallery where Knox interned, said Knox is no killer. "Amanda was so good with people. And that was my gut feeling. She's the all-American girl."

And at the coffee shop where she worked, co-worker Ross Peritore said, "I find it hard to believe that she could be involved with that. And I hope that it comes out in the end that she had nothing to do with it."

As for Kercher, her family tried to grasp some meaning from the tragedy.

"She was pursuing her dream. And we can take some comfort in knowing that she left us at what was a very happy time in her life," her sister Stephanie told reporters."We loved Meredith then, we love her still, and she is still very much part of our family forever."

Knox, her boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito and Lumumba Diya, a local pub owner, are all being detained. Police say they think all three were in the apartment when Kercher died.

Arturo De Felice, the police chief of Perugia, told the BBC Wednesday that Knox told investigators that she heard Kercher scream Friday, the night she was murdered. De Felice characterized Knox's statement as a "partial confession," but said she keeps changing her story.

The residents of Perugia, a peaceful Italian hilltop town, are still trying to make sense of the disturbing news emerging about the murder case, which has gripped all of Italy for days now.

Kercher was a third-year student at Leeds University and is from Coulsdon in south London.

A postmortem test reportedly showed that there was evidence of sexual activity before the death although medical examiners did not confirm that she had been raped. The murder weapon has still not been found.