Convicted US coed upset, gets family visit in Italy prison

PERUGIA, Italy (AP) – Amanda Knox sought comfort from visiting family members Saturday on her first day in prison since being convicted of murdering her British roommate.
The family of victim Meredith Kercher said the verdict brought a measure of justice. However, they said, it was not a time to celebrate.
Knox, a college student from Seattle, was tired and upset following the midnight verdict and sentence of 26 years in prison, according to family members and a lawyer who saw her.
“Amanda like the rest is extremely disappointed, upset about the decision,” Knox’s mother, Edda Mellas, said after the visit to the prison just outside Perugia. “We told her that she’s gonna get out of here. It’s gonna take a little longer.”
Knox and Kercher’s families came to this central Italian town for the verdict, which was announced at around midnight after 13 hours of deliberations.
The court also convicted Knox’s co-defendant and former boyfriend, Italian Raffaele Sollecito, and gave him a 25-year jail term for the murder.
Knox and Sollecito are appealing the verdicts.
“She couldn’t sleep all night,” said lawyer Luciano Ghirga, who spent an hour with Knox at her jail just outside Perugia on Saturday morning. Kercher, 21, was Knox’s roommate while they studied in Perugia.
Her body was found in a pool of blood with her throat slit on Nov. 2, 2007, at the apartment they shared. Prosecutors said the Leeds University student was murdered the previous night.
“Meredith still leaves a big hole in our lives and her presence is missed every time we meet up as a family,” John Kercher Jr., one of her brothers, told a press conference in Perugia.
Kercher’s sister, Stephanie, said the verdict “does bring a little bit of justice, for us and for her.” But she added: “Life will never be the same without Mez.”
The prosecutors said they were satisfied with the ruling and would not seek to appeal, even though the court did not grant their request for life imprisonment. Prosecutor Manuela Comodi said that the verdict “recognizes the defendants are guilty of all the crimes they had been charged with.”

