L'omicidio di Meredith Kercher, noto anche come delitto di Perugia o delitto di Via della Pergola, è un caso di cronaca nera avvenuto a Perugia la sera del 1º novembre 2007.
Meredith Kercher era una studentessa inglese che si trovava in Italia nell'ambito del progetto Erasmus presso l'Università per stranieri di Perugia; venne ritrovata priva di vita con la gola tagliata nella propria camera da letto, all'interno della casa che condivideva con altri studenti. La causa della morte fu un'emorragia a seguito di una ferita al collo provocata da un oggetto acuminato usato come arma. Per concorso in omicidio è stato condannato in via definitiva con rito abbreviato il cittadino ivoriano Rudy Guede.
LINK
P01
https://dai.ly/xaa70ke
P02
https://dai.ly/xaa718e
Playlist Delitto Kercher
https://dailymotion.com/playlist/xc73z0
#MeredithKercher #RaffaeleSollecito #AmandaKnox #RudyGuede #Sollecito #Knox #Guede #Perugia #Crime #TrueCrime #Delitti #Misteri #Killer #SerialKiller #ColdCase #Cronaca #CronacaNera #Mistero #Delitto #Documentari #Documentario #Docu #Doc #DivinumCrime #Belve #BelveCrime
Meredith Kercher era una studentessa inglese che si trovava in Italia nell'ambito del progetto Erasmus presso l'Università per stranieri di Perugia; venne ritrovata priva di vita con la gola tagliata nella propria camera da letto, all'interno della casa che condivideva con altri studenti. La causa della morte fu un'emorragia a seguito di una ferita al collo provocata da un oggetto acuminato usato come arma. Per concorso in omicidio è stato condannato in via definitiva con rito abbreviato il cittadino ivoriano Rudy Guede.
LINK
P01
https://dai.ly/xaa70ke
P02
https://dai.ly/xaa718e
Playlist Delitto Kercher
https://dailymotion.com/playlist/xc73z0
#MeredithKercher #RaffaeleSollecito #AmandaKnox #RudyGuede #Sollecito #Knox #Guede #Perugia #Crime #TrueCrime #Delitti #Misteri #Killer #SerialKiller #ColdCase #Cronaca #CronacaNera #Mistero #Delitto #Documentari #Documentario #Docu #Doc #DivinumCrime #Belve #BelveCrime
Categoria
📺
TVTrascrizione
00:00:08Bavinieri Perugia
00:00:09Hello, good morning, I hear, someone has practically entered the house by breaking the window, the street is the pergola setta Perugia
00:00:2522-year-old English student brutally murdered in her bedroom
00:00:39in meredith's room i realized it was a lake that floor was full of blood
00:00:47the wound he had at the height of his neck was typical of a cutting weapon
00:01:07I lived in Perugia for four years in total and it was in this context that I met Amanda
00:01:15Unfortunately, after a week, the crime didn't even happen
00:01:24there are a number of things about amanda's behavior that don't add up I urge you to say I have
00:01:33I've said a lot of bullshit so far. This is the word he uses because Amanda made me say it.
00:01:40I am
00:01:42things that were also of a certain drama and of a certain heaviness so recalling them never makes me happy
00:01:49Pleasure
00:01:54at a certain point in my complete disbelief I find myself in handcuffs my wrists are Amanda Nox roommate
00:02:03Raffaele Sollecito, his boyfriend and Patrick from Hialubumba, the three arrested for the crime of
00:02:09young Englishman in the horror house patrick but why did they accuse me she
00:02:27two twists and turns happen
00:02:35on the pillow next to Meridith's body there are footprints of the so-called fourth man
00:03:06I lived in Perugia for four years in total and it has always had a very diverse life in the sense that for
00:03:14me
00:03:14it was my first experience outside and first of all I was fascinated by the idea of not disappointing the
00:03:21expectations of my parents who were supporting me in university in this context I met
00:03:27Amanda I had known a concept of classical music this concert they played Schubert and Astor Piazzolla
00:03:37when I noticed her there was always an exchange of glances and I say even if he was quite shy
00:03:42me
00:03:43I plucked up the courage to ask him if he wanted us to sit next to her and have a
00:03:49we started talking and that's how we met
00:03:57the classic girl who was beautiful just the way she is with her white skin, no
00:04:08he told me he worked at the bar in patriculum ombà if you feel like going for a walk with him afterwards
00:04:15I'll wait for you after working hours and then we went to the top of the hill
00:04:22the scenery is absolutely breathtaking and quite romantic too and well, twenty years later we had our first kiss there
00:04:35I had already become attached to it straight away because I'm also a bit like that and I had started this
00:04:42I had started to live with someone who somehow started to live together, I don't know how.
00:04:47call her that is we practically saw each other every day every evening she stayed at my place from there unfortunately but after
00:04:55a week there wasn't even the miso, the misdeed of a 22 year old English student barbarically
00:05:03Investigators killed her in her bedroom in a villa near the university for foreigners
00:05:09They knocked on her door and received no response, they broke it down and found the young woman
00:05:14I remember it well because it was the 2nd of November which was the feast of the dead and I
00:05:23I was saying
00:05:23a phone call from the deputy director of the mobile unit who tells me that the police have found the
00:05:32dead body of a girl in the area of via della pergola shortly after I arrived they told me that
00:05:45the body was of an English girl I entered the house I started looking around to look at the
00:06:05rooms
00:06:07in Meredith's room you could tell there was a body under the duvet, the foot was sticking out
00:06:15left naked I realized that it was a lake that floor was full of blood and so it was
00:06:25difficult to enter without altering the crime scene
00:06:33and then there was the famous slap with the blood-stained hand on the wall just practically a little behind
00:06:40the corpse on the wall in the background it was 2pm and a few minutes later I received a phone call too
00:06:54one of our collaborators was quite excited and told me look, I'm close to the university for
00:07:02foreigners because there is a corpse inside a house I went to the place bringing with me
00:07:09me a colleague a telecine operator
00:07:17among the many people who were there I saw two two two young people who were comforting each other then
00:07:24I told the rich operator to take back those two boys who are probably two friends of the
00:07:33victim there were these two boys I saw them immediately the girl was probably a foreigner
00:07:42Anglo-American probably this girl seemed very lost she was completely lost yes
00:07:48he was hugging this young man who seemed a little more confident to me. Amanda and Raffaele were there.
00:07:59I remember on November 2nd that Amanda got up early, like 8 in the morning, something like that
00:08:08kind of told me look I'm going to get my stuff I'll talk to my a little bit
00:08:12friends there
00:08:13let's see later to maybe have breakfast together. I obviously didn't stay to sleep but I find that
00:08:22she comes back to me she was nervous she was waiting for me to get a move on then she told me that I have
00:08:29found the door open and didn't know if a thief had entered or what had happened
00:08:39when I entered the house Amanda was agitated I started to explain around and the things that were happening to me
00:08:47they left me perplexed, there were some little specks of blood on the sink and on the floor
00:08:54let's say with some noticeable dirt and Romanelli's room completely unoccupied
00:09:06behind the door of the romanelli there were broken glass clothes left on the floor disaster when I
00:09:14I realized that Meredith's door was locked and that's when I got worried but in my head I thought
00:09:22that there was maybe a thief who had locked himself in because you want what took them I don't know
00:09:28I know
00:09:28so I said what do I do I break down the door between which I call my sister who was the lieutenant era
00:09:34of the Carabinieri and she told me not to touch anything and advised me to call the local Carabinieri
00:09:43bavinieri for the field is ready good morning without someone he practically entered the house breaking the
00:09:53window and put a lot of soil there is a closed door the street is an imitation madam then
00:10:07give me the name and cell phone number of one of the sweethearts yes I met Amanda waiting for the police outside
00:10:24the police aren't arriving, some postal police officers are arriving, someone has entered the house
00:10:31he broke the glass what did they bring they didn't take anything away the problem is that there is a closed door
00:10:36there is a closed door what is the closed door is one of the borders that is not there we do not know
00:10:47the policemen who were searching said we don't have a warrant so if you want us to
00:10:54we'll look around, you have to do it, then in the end the tenants came, both Laura and Mezzetti
00:11:01etc. one of Roma Zetti's friends entered and broke down the door
00:11:14they broke down the door and the same one who broke down the door back that is they all jump
00:11:18backwards the girls screaming scream like crazy describe things a way
00:11:28totally senseless random they said there is a leg of the wardrobe there was panic I
00:11:36Amanda and I were at the end of the corridor, first thing I do is push her out and we go outside.
00:11:46I tried to reassure her, she was worried that there was family far away and how there are
00:11:52here I said at that moment I have to try to comfort her for a moment in all this mess
00:11:59It turned out that Meredith was dead, they say she was stabbed
00:12:09and that's where a shocking scenario essentially unfolds.
00:12:18around 4.30pm these two boys that I had seen hugging were loaded onto the
00:12:28police cars and took them away from us they told us they are neither under arrest nor anything they are
00:12:35left to be questioned to be heard as people half-informed of the facts
00:12:42of the poverty the reconstruction that was going around was this the girl is a foreign student she was
00:12:50her throat was probably cut and she was killed by a thief that she caught in the act because there was glass
00:12:59a broken window the thing that struck me in particular was the break-in I saw the stone that
00:13:11it was under a sink and then also under a small table I see the glass and I see the clothes thrown on the bed
00:13:21with the
00:13:22glass above that is the glass was above the clothes
00:13:29then I thought that it was a staging, that is, an attempt to accredit an intrusion of
00:13:39a third inside the room of this Calabrese girl Filomena Romanelli this
00:13:49operation must have been carried out by someone who, by virtue of his cohabitation or his
00:13:55frequenting the house could have been fearful of being identified Meredith lived with three others
00:14:03girls who did not sleep at home the night before the crime Meredith knew her
00:14:09The tests carried out on the samples of organic fluids could lead to the murderer
00:14:16His acquaintances and cell phone records were found on the body. Late in the evening he was still there on the spot.
00:14:24the scientific police will be the first forensic doctor in charge of the case
00:14:34this one was also torn the hook part is missing it was torn
00:14:39here the hook part of the male part of the grappling hook is unstitched
00:14:45but also to the piece of the hook eh yes but the fact is that it is soaked in blood so this is what
00:14:50he had it at the time he was killed
00:14:57they had obviously illuminated the rooms from the outside I remember perfectly that you could see the white overalls
00:15:04that were moving inside the house we still had no idea what it was
00:15:10We knew exactly the perimeter of the house involved in the crime that had taken place in the room of
00:15:17meredith of the first most significant traces that caught the eye of the forensic police
00:15:25were the traces of blood washed because it was a pink color so not red scattered a little
00:15:32on the whole
00:15:32the small bathroom that was the one used by meredith and amanda nox these traces were
00:15:40on the light switch on the bidet on the sink on a box of cotton swabs
00:15:49and they immediately led to the idea of a clean-up operation by the murderer
00:15:59There was a bloody imprint on the bath mat that left almost a glimpse of it.
00:16:09a whole footprint was found in the unflushed tar along the corridor
00:16:20they were highlighted with luminous footprints of bare feet then metric streak of the footprints
00:16:26there was a lot of blood on the right shoe, there were many blood stains in several parts of that shoe
00:16:39house including the bathroom where we received news that there were important traces
00:16:47biological ones that could have identified a person and from there begin investigations and see
00:16:54what had happened and clearly there was a formal investigation opened for murder
00:17:01but voluntarily by unknown persons because the murderer was not known
00:17:17In the first few hours there was still a lot of confusion
00:17:24We immediately begin working on multiple fronts as we always do in the case of a murder and
00:17:29so to isolate the profile of the victim we begin to contact the university for foreigners to understand
00:17:34Meredith who she was how long she had been here what she was doing with who lived in that house
00:17:42Perugia had arrived in Via Dalla Pergola two months ago thanks to the Erasmus exchange project
00:17:50University students Meredith Kerker Meredith lived in London with her father John Kerkel, a freelance journalist
00:17:56who said he was shocked, devastated and dismayed
00:18:03by the time I met Meredith's parents and they already had knowledge of the
00:18:09violent cause of death because they had already gone to the morgue the day before for the
00:18:15victim's recognition Meredith's father demanded immediate answers Meredith's mother
00:18:29Arline was desperate, I must say, for the tragic causes of Meredith's death they could not find an explanation
00:18:42because they knew that their daughter was a very calm and present girl and therefore not
00:18:49they could think of such a dramatic solution to their daughter's life
00:18:58on the day of Meredith's autopsy they were notified that they were accompanying Meredith's mother who
00:19:07she wanted to say her last goodbye to her daughter and I remember that her daughter was covered by the sheet and she
00:19:16he made a gesture he approached his daughter he made a gesture he raised his finger as if to say if he could
00:19:25give
00:19:25instead she touched her lips if she could give her a kiss and obviously I let her I let her do it
00:19:44the information we got from the examination of poor Meredith's body gave a signal
00:19:52very important and which in my opinion is the fundamental element, many were traced
00:20:00small injuries, knife injuries which therefore showed a constriction activity
00:20:09coercion of the subject it immediately appeared as certain that Meredith had been killed with
00:20:20a cutting weapon because the wound he had at the height of his neck was a very large wound
00:20:28deep wound was typical of the cutting weapon and he had other very serious wounds scattered on his body.
00:20:38smaller ones always with a tip and cutting compatible with a knife these
00:20:44lesions also allowed for the creation of a temporal path of permanence, the subjection, therefore the
00:20:53Meredith's suffering also continued over time, all of us thought it was a
00:21:03preparatory conduct therefore to a more violent sexual approach activity up to two
00:21:11fundamental injuries on the neck then the lethal one based on the traces of blood and splashes of
00:21:23blood found on the victim's body it could be established with certainty that the victim had been
00:21:30stripped before being killed the clothes worn by the victim shortly before dying were
00:21:40all found, so the sweatshirt and the bra were found, which were cleanly cut at the height
00:21:49of the hook closure, the trousers, the bag and everything that Meredith Kercher might have worn
00:21:58that before dying she had gone out with her friends and that she could somehow talk about her
00:22:06Who
00:22:07had met and who could have killed her Meredith hung out with a small group of friends
00:22:20English lived in a house with an American and two Italian girls and as a 20 year old girl she was then
00:22:34also dedicated to new friendships and important conviviality
00:22:43speaking with the public prosecutor I was told that the investigations had essentially been directed
00:22:52immediately in relation to the acquaintances and acquaintances of the young English girl
00:23:00I remember that I also did investigations directly with several people, especially with the
00:23:08girls, Meredith's compatriots, who showed great availability and I noticed this attitude
00:23:16of a certain hostility towards Amanda, that is, these English girls didn't like Amanda, she had
00:23:27a different style from that of the others that of the others was a little more severe as Amanda's style was more
00:23:34nonconformist there were here it was it was a bit his style that
00:23:39I remember that I spoke with one of the tenants of the house on Via della Pergola and she started
00:23:46both tell me about this initial cohabitation between the girls on one side the two foreign girls
00:23:54Amanda and Meredith who, due to their common origins even if from two different countries initially
00:24:01They had bonded a little but right in the first few days two very different personalities emerged
00:24:08According to the testimonies collected by the investigators, it emerges that the relationship between the two girls was a
00:24:16rather stormy relationship also the result of a different approach to everyday life amanda la
00:24:25dynamic, enterprising girl but also perhaps chaotic, not very attentive to cohabitation, let's say Meredith
00:24:33instead what one could somehow define as the classic good girl was the one he saw for
00:24:43last meredith who was parton sophie then dwelt on the last evening she described it as completely
00:24:52Normally, Meredith's last evening was a very, very quiet evening, at least initially.
00:25:01because it was the day after the Halloween party the whole group of English girls were very
00:25:09tired because they had stayed up all night as they say they had dinner at snack time at someone's house
00:25:17of these girls eating a cake and a pizza
00:25:29after which saying that she was very tired and that she wanted to go to bed Meredith left the house
00:25:36of the friend to return to the villa on Via della Pergola
00:26:07the first days
00:26:10and until the night between the 5th and the 6th we were moving 360 degrees the police had concentrated
00:26:18his attentions on the two on the prompt and amanda
00:26:24in those days the interrogations of the boys were almost constant
00:26:32Talking about this part weighs heavily on me because these are things that have also been a bit dramatic
00:26:40a certain heaviness
00:26:41so I never like to think about them again, endless days at the police station, me trying in every way to concentrate
00:26:51on the fact that I had to finish my thesis
00:26:54I was a little tired and stressed. I actually gave my first testimony the first day I went there.
00:27:02police station and then that's it
00:27:03instead Amanda was called continuously
00:27:07there are a number of things about amanda's behavior and what she will later tell her in the various versions
00:27:15who gave respect to those crucial 24 hours
00:27:20that don't come back
00:27:22On the evening of the crime, Amanda says she spent it with Raffaele Sollecito at his boy's house.
00:27:31he says he spent the evening watching a film on the computer, that he cooked together, that he slept there,
00:27:42having spent the night there
00:27:44She worked every evening in her bar and retired a little late, let's say.
00:27:51then there was an evening of one of those who strangely had put the stars in place
00:27:55Patrick Lumumba had told her she didn't have to go to the bar.
00:27:59we could have stayed calm and minded our own business
00:28:03but we had a smooth evening
00:28:05We cooked a bit, we watched movies, we relaxed a bit, we did our own thing.
00:28:11who could have imagined everything that would happen from the next day onwards
00:28:20Amanda says she then returned to her house in the morning to wash herself.
00:28:27the first thing the investigators say is that she returned home the morning the body was discovered
00:28:36of having entered a house with the door wide open
00:28:40of having gone to take a shower
00:28:43of having noticed both traces of blood and even thinking
00:28:48will tell the menstrual cycle of some of the housemates especially Meredith because she shared the bathroom with her
00:28:57This peculiarity of the blood had not made her suspicious
00:29:00she says that the fact that the door to the house was open hadn't scared her either
00:29:07he had attributed this fact to the hypothesis that perhaps Meredith had also gone out for a quick errand
00:29:14and that somehow he had left the door open
00:29:21Amanda's story was a truly almost unbelievable story
00:29:26she had slept at Sollecito's house on the morning of the 2nd and had gone to his house to take a shower
00:29:33then he finds all that pandemonium that he finds because he finds the door open
00:29:38feces in the toilet, traces of blood in the English-speaking girls' bathroom
00:29:43if you see something like this, call the police immediately
00:29:48instead he comes back promptly and does nothing
00:29:51The surveys by the men of the ERT of Rome and the flying squad of Perugia continue
00:29:56in the horror house to trace Meredith Kerkel's murderer
00:30:00barbarically killed during the night between Thursday and Friday in her room with a cut to the throat
00:30:06On the 5th I remember that the word spread that Amanda and Raffaele were at the police station
00:30:14Only Raffaele had been called and Amanda went with him though
00:30:18all afternoon we try to find out something
00:30:22but the investigators at that time were very secure
00:30:27we realize that late at night they still hadn't come out
00:30:33on the evening of the 5th he is summoned promptly and promptly says
00:30:38I've said a lot of bullshit so far, that's the word he uses
00:30:43because Amanda made me say it
00:30:48Raffaele's first story is very linear and very simple
00:30:55Raffaele says Amanda and I have been at my house since the afternoon.
00:31:02and we saw a movie and we cooked and we had dinner and we were there
00:31:06but then at the police station during the interrogation another interrogator makes a small specification
00:31:17and he says I was at my house all night but I have no certainty to say that
00:31:24Amanda
00:31:25she could not have woken up, got up and left my house during the night
00:31:32and hypothetically went to her home which is a few dozen meters from Raffaele Sollecito's home
00:31:41that is, on that occasion he distances himself from Amanda and even accuses her almost
00:31:49because she says I was at home and she who wasn't there came back to my house at 1.00
00:31:56half
00:32:00how did it go?
00:32:01I got there, they were taking turns, there were a lot of people in the room, people coming and going, there were really a lot of them
00:32:08and they shone a lamp in my eyes and they were behind me
00:32:14who urged me to tell things as they were otherwise it would have been worse for me
00:32:19and I knew what the hell they wanted to talk about
00:32:23they asked me why you say stupid things because last time you told us one thing now you tell us something
00:32:28'other
00:32:28and they didn't let me understand what day they were talking about
00:32:31and they talked to me about that day as if I knew everything about it
00:32:35but in reality I didn't know anything and when they talked to me about that day for me
00:32:40at some point in the pressure it had become a metaphysical abstract thing
00:32:47so I didn't know where to go with this
00:32:52actually, from the reports I understood that I was contradicting myself on the movements
00:32:57They pressed me on things that they took for granted that I should know
00:33:04all in all, some situations that we can call tragicomic have been intertwined.
00:33:11in the sense that I went to the police station with the Serapa knife that I always carried around with me since
00:33:18I was 13 years old
00:33:19in the end they made me empty my pockets they found the knife
00:33:23they jumped in front of me
00:33:25I even had some shoes that the sole of those shoes
00:33:31it was very similar to the shoe design at the crime scene
00:33:35so for them it was just bingo
00:33:37the scenario was totally chaos
00:33:42at some point in my utter disbelief
00:33:46I find myself with handcuffs on my wrists
00:33:54when I leave the police station they accompany me to my house
00:33:57they make me walk barefoot because they had confiscated my shoes
00:34:03they had even carried out very summary searches
00:34:07They threw my comics in my collection in my face where I was a little more into horror anyway
00:34:12making me, giving me like a pervert
00:34:15and I wondered to myself where my father was
00:34:20why I found myself suffering this pain
00:34:24and I didn't know what to think
00:34:26I'm Amanda Knox, roommate, Raffaele Sollecito, her boyfriend
00:34:31and Dija Lubumba, known as Patrick
00:34:32The three arrested for the murder of the young English woman in the horror house
00:34:37three good guys, she is an American student, her boyfriend is an engineering graduate
00:34:42and Patrick, owner of a pub in the historic center with an eight-month-old son
00:34:46protagonists of a sexual story that later degenerated into a horrendous murder
00:34:50It was my best friend who broke down and confessed, Amanda wrote.
00:34:54repeatedly contradicted herself during her testimony with the investigators
00:34:58and it was her phone records that made her give in.
00:35:01a text message where she arranged to meet Patrick in the villa
00:35:07It was very early in the morning on November 6th, it could have been 7am.
00:35:13when I received the very first phone call telling me that there had been arrests
00:35:20and they definitely told me two for murder, the third perhaps for aiding and abetting
00:35:27obviously all the journalists who were following the case flocked to the police station
00:35:39the real novelty was Patrick, that is the Patrick element that until then
00:35:44he had not been in any way drawn by suspicion
00:35:50we didn't even know if he was a witness
00:35:53so we couldn't immediately understand what role this boy might have had
00:36:01Patrick Lumumba is now a suspect in the investigation following Amanda Knox's statements.
00:36:11Amanda had been heard just a few hours earlier
00:36:14once at 1.45am and the second time at the prosecutor's office shortly after, around 5am
00:36:25particular attention is paid to an exchange of messages between Amanda and Patrick Lumumba
00:36:31Amanda had to go to work at the pub
00:36:34Patrick wrote to her not to go because there was no particular need.
00:36:40a subsequent message culminating in a see you later
00:36:44for the investigators it is the appointment that Patrick and Amanda make on the evening of November 1st
00:36:51to then let's say start what then resulted in the crime
00:36:57Amanda tells
00:37:00Lumumba sent me a message
00:37:03telling me we don't keep the pub open
00:37:07you don't have to come tonight
00:37:11she answers
00:37:12see you later
00:37:15see you later in Italian means see you in a little while
00:37:19when the police look at her cell phone
00:37:22sees Lumumba
00:37:23the police are rightly getting agitated
00:37:26he says ah but then you had to meet with Lumumba
00:37:30at that point the mobile manager
00:37:32Doctor Giacinto Profazio has me called
00:37:35I get woken up in the middle of the night
00:37:38I am taken to the office where Amanda had been taken
00:37:43Amanda was crying
00:37:45I still remember
00:37:46this cry though
00:37:48it was a liberating cry
00:37:50that is, I had the perception
00:37:52the clear sensation
00:37:53that she was terrified of Lumumba
00:38:00and she makes this inference
00:38:03he says I met Lumumba
00:38:06I came home and let him in
00:38:09also because it was known
00:38:11that he was infatuated with Meredith
00:38:14Lumumba according to Amanda's story
00:38:17enter Meredith's room
00:38:19he says I was in the dining room
00:38:22I heard that Lumumba tried
00:38:24have a relationship with Meredith
00:38:27and then I heard confusedly
00:38:29that he is the one who killed her
00:38:33after which
00:38:33she asked to be able to rest
00:38:36and then she was given a blanket
00:38:38she was given breakfast
00:38:40I greeted her
00:38:40I retired to the office
00:38:42in an office
00:38:42and I began to study the documents
00:38:45after execution
00:38:47of the arrest
00:38:48Amanda
00:38:49draws up a memorial
00:38:53he practically said
00:38:55that as
00:38:55in a dream
00:38:57he felt at a certain point
00:38:59in the kitchen
00:39:00he felt at a certain point
00:39:03a heart-rending scream
00:39:05identified
00:39:05the Lumumba
00:39:06the subject
00:39:08that was killing
00:39:09Meredith Kircher
00:39:11Meredith knots
00:39:13to some sexual games
00:39:14they would have brought
00:39:15the situation to degenerate
00:39:16in the murder of the girl
00:39:18ended up with her throat cut
00:39:19now the investigators
00:39:21I'm on the trail
00:39:21of the murder weapon
00:39:23at a press conference
00:39:24they specified
00:39:25that Meredith Kircher
00:39:26she was a victim
00:39:27and that's it
00:39:28and it was morally
00:39:29upright
00:39:29in the press conference
00:39:31essentially
00:39:32the sentence he made
00:39:33around the world
00:39:34and that left everyone
00:39:35very surprised
00:39:36there and then
00:39:37it was the case closed
00:39:38voluntary homicide
00:39:40in competition
00:39:41in violence
00:39:42the three arrested
00:39:43I am Italian
00:39:44a woman
00:39:45of American nationality
00:39:47a man
00:39:48born in Congo
00:39:49and then
00:39:50this is the background
00:39:52and I'll melt it
00:39:52De Felice told us
00:39:54the case is solved
00:39:56there are no murderers
00:39:57at liberty
00:39:58we discovered them
00:39:59we took them
00:40:00and they are those
00:40:01that are
00:40:02going to prison
00:40:15when I arrive in Cappanne
00:40:16they put me
00:40:17in isolation
00:40:18up right away
00:40:21Why
00:40:22for the type of crime
00:40:24they were afraid
00:40:25for my safety
00:40:26and I didn't have
00:40:27no contact
00:40:28with the outside world
00:40:30except after two weeks
00:40:31have the visit
00:40:33of my lawyers
00:40:35first and my father's
00:40:35and then
00:40:38who had remained in Perugia
00:40:40and he couldn't wait
00:40:41to meet me
00:40:41see how I was doing
00:40:42etc.
00:40:43visits lasted one hour
00:40:45and then
00:40:46he had to go away
00:40:47I moved on
00:40:48Like this
00:40:49per year
00:40:58in isolation
00:41:00Anyway
00:41:00I started
00:41:01to have the first problems
00:41:03cognitive
00:41:04I didn't realize
00:41:06neither
00:41:06if I was naked
00:41:07if I was dressed
00:41:08I had no chance
00:41:10to see
00:41:11not even the sun
00:41:12to arise
00:41:12I had entered
00:41:14in one phase
00:41:17where I had had
00:41:19several attacks
00:41:20of panic
00:41:21it's proven
00:41:22Raphael
00:41:23No
00:41:24I saw it
00:41:25quite quiet
00:41:26Obviously
00:41:27I tried
00:41:28between the conditions
00:41:29environmental
00:41:30certainly not
00:41:31easy
00:41:32or pleasant
00:41:33or comfortable
00:41:34what did he say
00:41:35of behavior
00:41:36by Amanda
00:41:37it's a bit
00:41:38shocked
00:41:38because after all
00:41:39how to say
00:41:41is reviewing
00:41:42a bit
00:41:43his impressions
00:41:44about this girl
00:41:45with Amanda
00:41:47we were able to
00:41:48send us
00:41:49of the letters
00:41:50Obviously
00:41:51every time
00:41:52that we sent each other
00:41:52of the letters
00:41:53they were opened
00:41:54so basically
00:41:56we communicated
00:41:57every now and again
00:41:58with a series
00:41:59of writings
00:41:59without any
00:42:00particular
00:42:01emphasis
00:42:04they were intimidated
00:42:06Obviously
00:42:07with regard to
00:42:09the relationship
00:42:10Anyway
00:42:10he was gone
00:42:11everything
00:42:11to go out
00:42:13Why
00:42:13the situation
00:42:15there
00:42:15where we were at risk
00:42:16both life
00:42:17it had passed
00:42:17all over the world
00:42:18in the background
00:42:21and there's also Amanda
00:42:23that among the different
00:42:24given versions
00:42:25he declares himself innocent
00:42:26in huts
00:42:27on the visiting day
00:42:28the parents went
00:42:29arrived from Seattle
00:42:31there is no so
00:43:00no comment
00:43:01...and that says that...
00:43:03...his story though...
00:43:04...and he says he called...
00:43:06...his story.
00:43:08And then they came to me and you said...
00:43:11...let's see the girls...
00:43:12...let us see my heart.
00:43:14...and that is impossible, is not to do this.
00:43:16The other thing he did to me,
00:43:19...is it because Raffaele?
00:43:21Two...
00:43:22...can you hear from us?
00:43:23...
00:43:24...it's my share here is assured...
00:43:26It's like, the girls here were asking for me, the priest here was asking for me.
00:43:31Oh, I was really sad.
00:43:33Why?
00:43:34Because I was sad, I was here.
00:43:56Because I knew she wasn't Catholic, the first thing I said to her was whether it bothered her that I stopped by.
00:44:03to greet her.
00:44:04And she instead accepted the presence willingly, probably anyone who had approached the cell with a smile,
00:44:12there was a connection through songs.
00:44:18And then we talked about the Beatles for example, and so through those songs we were able to have a little dialogue about
00:44:26meaning of life.
00:44:28The initial approach is to be there, without judging.
00:44:34I never ask what you did, but I always ask what you are accused of.
00:44:39In some particularly intense moments, as our mutual trust grew, I even asked her for almost a confession,
00:44:52in quotation marks.
00:44:53As a priest, I am absolutely obliged to maintain absolute secrecy.
00:44:59She never confessed, so to speak, to being guilty, she always said she was innocent.
00:45:32We have subjected it to administrative wiretapping.
00:45:36The night.
00:45:37At one point, Amanda's mother says, but you realize that because of your statements, Lumumba
00:45:46did he end up in jail?
00:45:48And she realizes that she has practically committed a slander, because in those same conversations, she says that
00:45:55Lumumba had nothing to do with it.
00:45:56How did she know he was innocent? Because it means she was present at the crime scene and
00:46:05he knows he wasn't there.
00:46:07I mean, it's logic.
00:46:09Patrick!
00:46:09Patrick!
00:46:11So how are you?
00:46:12Hi, Patrick!
00:46:13I'm beautiful, I'm beautiful.
00:46:15Calmly, calmly.
00:46:16Yes, I thank God very much for helping me return home. And I'm happy to be returning home.
00:46:22But why was Amanda with her?
00:46:25He doesn't answer.
00:46:26Patrick, but why did Amanda accuse you?
00:46:28Why did Amanda say those things?
00:46:30Two twists and turns occur that change the context of the incident and the investigation. A customer at the bar where he worked
00:46:42Lumumba remembers perfectly that Lumumba was at the bar at the alleged time of the crime.
00:46:51Something to the people of Perugia who are always on the defensive.
00:46:54I thank all my friends from Perugia who have been very close to me in this very difficult time.
00:47:01But in the same minutes of Lumumba's release, investigators discover that on the pillow next to Meredith's body there is
00:47:11they are footprints of the so-called fourth man.
00:47:33In those days the figure of the fourth man was emerging, which we called the fourth man. Then in reality it is not
00:47:41never been a fourth man.
00:47:45I remember we were rushing home that morning and we were right in front of the front door
00:47:54of urgency when someone from the police arrived.
00:47:58He informed me that the other man who left the palm print had been positively identified.
00:48:08on the pillow and it's this Rudy Hermann Gede who was an Ivorian.
00:48:26The moment Rudy is identified by the investigators they begin to look for him.
00:48:34He had fled to Germany, he has no cell phones and therefore no one can trace him until he responds to a request for
00:48:43contact of one of his dearest friends, Giacomo ***.
00:48:48Rudy doesn't know that at that moment Giacomo *** is in the investigation room where they are carrying out the investigations of the
00:48:59judicial police.
00:49:01His entire Skype conversation was obviously recorded and will be included in the trial documents, and Rudy tells his version.
00:49:10right away.
00:49:13I met the girl who was killed the night before.
00:49:19He had met Meredith in a club in the Shamrock if I'm not mistaken and they had the chance to exchange a few words.
00:49:30I'm not saying we dated, no, but we saw each other a few times.
00:49:34Then on Alumi night I went out with some Spanish guys, after which we went to a cup of
00:49:41other Spanish guys where I spoke, we can say, well.
00:49:47Is this Alumi's night?
00:49:48With Meredith.
00:49:50Yes.
00:49:51It was during this party.
00:49:52Okay.
00:49:53She was dressed as a Vampire, I think you've seen this photo.
00:49:57Yes, yes.
00:50:06After the Spanish party, a group of these kids went to a disco in the historic center of Perugia,
00:50:15Domus, where he met Meredith.
00:50:20They started talking, this is Rudy's story, and they made an appointment for the next evening.
00:50:50After waiting for Meredith to arrive, they entered the house and started talking.
00:51:00As boys, there were some exchanges of affection, even, so to speak, thrusting, but they didn't go any further.
00:51:15After that I went to the bathroom to poop and I heard a ringing.
00:51:20Rudy had drunk some cold juice, had some sort of reaction, let's say, and asked to go to the bathroom.
00:51:29Rudy's habit, like that of many others, of always having these headphones with music nearby.
00:51:43And so Rudy, precisely because he had these headphones, didn't hear anything, except when there was a loud scream that
00:51:55forced him to immediately go out to the bathroom and see what was happening.
00:52:01In the corridor he met a male figure.
00:52:08I went out, I saw this guy, and this guy took a knife and tried to hit me, I also have the
00:52:17wounds on the hand, there are marks.
00:52:19And then I saw Meredith already bleeding, there was a cut on her throat.
00:52:28This one ran away, he sprinted, he went out the door.
00:52:32Understood?
00:52:33From there I tried to bear it, I took a bath, a towel, I tried to put it in the wound.
00:52:41Understood?
00:52:42What was he looking for?
00:52:44And she will be the one who pushes the door for me, pushes the door for me.
00:52:47He entered Meredith's room and immediately tried to staunch the blood coming from her neck.
00:52:58He went to the bathroom and got a towel and put it on her neck.
00:53:03Then what happened?
00:53:04It happened that he heard a sudden noise and got scared.
00:53:10He got scared and ran away.
00:53:11It's not that he ran away from us, he was scared of us.
00:53:14I mean, I was the only one at that moment, I was all covered in blood.
00:53:20And that's why Rudy's fingerprints are everywhere.
00:53:25All over the crime scene are Rudy's fingerprints.
00:53:30This is because he took it, tried to staunch the blood.
00:53:36I mean, I was afraid they would do it, it's a lot of my fault.
00:53:40He is Rudy Herman Guedet, a 21-year-old of Ivorian origins, who has been in Perugia since he was 5 years old.
00:53:46He would therefore be the murderer, whose DNA traces were found on the victim's body.
00:53:51and whose bloody fingerprints are on Meredith's pillow.
00:53:54But Rudy's version of events is different and exonerates himself.
00:53:58That night he would just kiss Meredith and then lock himself in the bathroom.
00:54:02Rudy says he heard the screams and when he was going out he said he saw an Italian man
00:54:07who didn't know to stab Meredith.
00:54:09At that point he would have helped her.
00:54:12From the very beginning it seemed quite incredible that after an entry, let's say, legitimate,
00:54:21because he said he had made an appointment with Meredith,
00:54:26that he had gone away to go to the bathroom and that in those very minutes,
00:54:33While he was listening to music, someone broke into the house and killed poor Meredith.
00:54:43Well, for Rudy Guedet, apart from the fingerprints on the pillow,
00:54:49His DNA was found in Meredith's vagina.
00:54:53Feces were found, but DNA could not be extracted from them.
00:54:58Instead, his DNA was extracted from toilet paper in the bathroom.
00:55:02The most significant clue that nailed Rudy Guedet to the crime scene
00:55:10It is his DNA found on the wrist of the sweatshirt worn by Meredith.
00:55:17Trace that practically made it seem like he had held her still
00:55:23while someone else committed the murder.
00:55:45Finding the murder weapon wasn't particularly easy.
00:55:51and however during a search of Sollecito's house
00:55:57one of the policemen who was doing the search
00:56:01found this knife which they later believed was the murder weapon
00:56:07in the kitchen drawer dedicated to cutlery.
00:56:12This knife is very important because the forensic police found two traces
00:56:23one on the blade from which he extracted Meredith's DNA
00:56:29and one on the handle of the knife
00:56:33but at the point where the handle joins the blade
00:56:37which was attributed to Amanda Knox.
00:56:42The end point of the handle was significant to consider
00:56:47that that knife had been misused
00:56:51because to cut a piece of bread or a piece of meat
00:56:56that part of the handle could not have been affected.
00:57:02The stop means you are giving a blow
00:57:07from behind to front
00:57:10that is, an offensive blow, let's say.
00:57:21Present this track as safe, certain
00:57:24of Meredith's blood on the blade and the knife
00:57:27It had made the world crumble around me.
00:57:30How was I supposed to figure out how it got there?
00:57:34I mean, I could never do that in my life.
00:57:40Frankly, no one imagined finding the murder weapon.
00:57:45at home as soon as possible.
00:57:49There has been much talk about the knife because that very knife
00:57:54why no other was taken as respect for the preservation of that find
00:58:01which is a story that continued through all levels of judgment until the end.
00:58:06This knife was found by makeshift means
00:58:11makeshift means consisting of a cardboard box
00:58:16because it was close to Christmas
00:58:18it was a box containing one of those diaries that banks give away at Christmas.
00:58:38At the beginning, very serious things were said.
00:58:43in the sense that we were talking about the kitchen knife in my house full of blood
00:58:47they're talking about my DNA on a bra hook
00:58:50there are things that were not to be joked about
00:58:53but they were those elements that I could not escape.
00:58:57The cleanly cut piece of cloth
00:59:01on which the bra hooks were sewn
00:59:05it was only discovered weeks later.
00:59:09DNA was found on those hooks
00:59:13and the Y haplotype of Raffaele Sollecito.
00:59:18The bra clasp had been left at the crime scene
00:59:23for more than 46 days
00:59:25it had already been found on the first day
00:59:29he had been photographed there
00:59:31strangely it had not been found
00:59:34even though it was clear it was a hook
00:59:36which had been pulled
00:59:37so it was deformed
00:59:39there was a cut part
00:59:41so it was a very interesting find
00:59:43to be analyzed.
00:59:48Then after 46 days they came back
00:59:51they found it in another part of the room
00:59:54then they found 5 profiles above
00:59:57of which 3 are unknown
00:59:59one was Meredith's profile
01:00:01clearly
01:00:02and the other one they attributed the profile to me
01:00:05but in reality there was only my Y
01:00:08To speed up the tracks
01:00:11from which, in our opinion, it transpired
01:00:13his participation in the crime
01:00:15they were his DNA
01:00:17on the bra hook
01:00:20and the blood imprint
01:00:23on the mat
01:00:24Regarding Amanda Knox
01:00:28well, apart from his statements
01:00:31his behavior is absolutely inexplicable
01:00:35mixed DNA was found
01:00:37Knox Meredith
01:00:39in all tracks
01:00:40in the bathroom
01:00:42and above all
01:00:43his DNA
01:00:45on the handle of the knife
01:00:51The painting after the end of the collection
01:00:56it was absolutely reassuring
01:00:59about the presence as authors
01:01:01at the crime scene
01:01:02by request Amanda Knox
01:01:05and Rudy Guedet
01:01:07All have declared themselves innocent of the murder.
01:01:10foreign age
01:01:11which the magistrate does not believe
01:01:13for which the two sweethearts
01:01:15they provided patently false statements
01:01:17to the investigators
01:01:18an impressive ensemble
01:01:19of contradiction and absurdity
01:01:21in an attempt to give an explanation
01:01:23of the facts
01:01:24that could exonerate them
01:01:40There was so much expectation
01:01:43for the first hearing of the trial
01:01:45and for the first time probably
01:01:47in the Court of Perugia
01:01:49they had to establish
01:01:50a sort of press office
01:01:53to be able to accredit
01:01:55all the newspapers
01:01:56who made requests for it
01:01:58in the first degree
01:01:59if they weren't
01:01:59there were 90
01:02:00as soon as Amanda and Raffaele entered
01:02:03there was a wall of televisions and photographers
01:02:07who were running to try to steal
01:02:09a look between the two
01:02:11Amanda was incredibly easygoing
01:02:15then she was very photogenic
01:02:17it pierced the screen
01:02:19and everyone was fascinated
01:02:23from the figure of this little girl
01:02:25Amanda Knox
01:02:27born July 9, 1987
01:02:29in Seattle, Washington
01:02:30in this story there is a key figure
01:02:39which is Amanda's
01:02:40on which so much has been built
01:02:42a noir character
01:02:44on the world stage
01:02:47I was not a defendant
01:02:48innocent until proven guilty
01:02:52on the other side we had a boy
01:02:55to the first sentimental experiences
01:03:01and were represented
01:03:03like devilish lovers
01:03:08Ludic E.D. in reality
01:03:10he's already talking about Amanda
01:03:11in the fairly early stage
01:03:13of the investigation
01:03:14in addition to having unknown
01:03:15at vocal level
01:03:17Amanda Knox
01:03:18I saw his silhouette
01:03:20what is being told
01:03:21even today
01:03:23about me by the media
01:03:25it's always very attractive
01:03:27often leaves a lot of shadows
01:03:32Rudy is definitely not
01:03:34the material author
01:03:36of the murder
01:03:37why on the murder weapon
01:03:38there is no trace of him
01:03:55there is no trace of him
01:04:11there is no trace of him
01:04:39lec Ezra
01:04:40for the workshop deadline
01:04:45Thank you all.
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