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U.S. student 'kills roommate for refusing orgy'
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Pastor Dale Morgan  
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 More options Nov 7 2007, 9:42 pm
From: Pastor Dale Morgan <dgrmor...@telus.net>
Date: Wed, 07 Nov 2007 18:42:35 -0800
Local: Wed, Nov 7 2007 9:42 pm
Subject: U.S. student 'kills roommate for refusing orgy'
*
Perilous Times*

November 7, 2007
*
U.S. student 'kills roommate for refusing orgy'*

Amanda Knox, 20, reportedly crumbles under questioning, confesses

London Times

Meredith Kercher, who was found dead with her throat slashed in the
Umbrian town of Perugia

The flatmate of Meredith Kercher, the British student who was murdered
in the Italian town of Perugia, broke down and confessed to being
involved with two men in her death, it emerged yesterday.

Detectives said that Amanda Knox, 20, an American student who had the
bedroom next to Miss Kercher,confessed to a criminal act. Ms Knox’s
boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, 23, from Bari, southern Italy, and
Patrick Diya Lumumba, 37, of Perugia, are also being held.

Detectives said that they believed that Ms Kercher may have been killed
after refusing to take part in a violent orgy. Police have said that
they now consider the case to be cut and dried.

The body of Ms Kercher, 21, from Coulsdon, South London, was discovered
last Friday under a duvet in her bedroom at the house she shared with Ms
Knox. She was partially clothed and her throat had been cut, it is
believed, with a penknife.
Related Links

* Fingerprints could lead to killer

* Student killer leaves bloody footprint clue

* Student is found with cut throat

Police said that the breakthrough came when Ms Knox, from Seattle,
“crumbled” under questioning and confessed to what had happened late on
Thursday and early on Friday. Pathologists have put the time of death as
between midnight and 2am.

All three suspects were taken to Perugia police headquarters early
yesterday, and last night were in custody on suspicion of involvement in
murder and sexual violence.

There were reports last night that Mr Lumumba, whose wife is Polish, had
claimed to be the grandson of Patrice Lumumba, the revolutionary who
became the first prime minister of the Republic of Congo in 1960. He was
assassinated in 1961.

Arturo De Felice, the chief of police in Perugia, said that charges
could follow, adding that the inquiry into Ms Kercher’s murder was
“concluded”. It had become clear that the murder of Ms Kercher, a
student at Leeds University who was studying Italian at the University
for Foreigners, in Perugia, was sexually motivated.

“All three [suspects] took part in the act,” he said. Ms Kercher had
been “morally upright”, Mr De Felice added, and no traces of drugs or
alcohol had been found in her blood. “She was a victim, nothing more,”
he said. A post-mortem examination found evidence of sexual activity
before Ms Kercher’s death. Medical examiners refused to confirm reports
that she had been raped.

Ms Knox, an exchange student, studies German and Italian at the
University of Washington. Last month she wrote on a social networking
website: “I’ve been working every night (except for Monday night) from
10pm to 2.30am at a bar called Le Chic. It’s a really small place owned
by this man from the Congo. His name is Patrick.”

In July Ms Knox, who was educated at a $12,000-a-year (£5,750) Jesuit
college, was fined $269 over a “residential disturbance”. She wrote on
Facebook: “I don’t get embarrassed and therefore have very few social
inhibitions.”

Mr Sollecito, a computer-science student, had told a British Sunday
newspaper last weekend that he and Ms Knox had been horrified to see Ms
Kercher’s body after police broke down her door. He said that he and Ms
Knox had reported an apparent burglary and had been concerned to find Ms
Kercher’s door locked from the inside. “It was hard to tell it was
Meredith at first but Amanda started crying and screaming. I dragged her
away because I didn’t want her to see it, it was so horrible,” he said.

Last night Mr Sollecito’s father said that he could not believe that his
son was involved in any way.

Mr Lumumba moved to Italy in 1988, police said. He works at a bar in the
town and holds an official resident’s permit. His friends expressed
incredulity at his alleged involvement. One, a bar owner, said that he
was “a cultivated man, a great guy, a reggae musician and the father of
a little boy”. He was seen on Monday at the torchlit vigil held in Ms
Kercher’s memory.

Giuliano Amato, the Italian Interior Minister, described the murder as
“a terrible business in which people that were in this young woman’s
home tried to have relations with her she didn’t want to have, and she
was killed”.

Last night Ms Kercher’s sister, Stephanie, said that Meredith had
intended to come home this weekend “with a suitcase laden with
chocolates” for her mother’s birthday.

She added: “Meredith touched the lives of everyone she met with her
infectious, upbeat personality, smile and sense of humour.”

Amanda Knox described on MySpace how she found the house in which
Meredith Kercher was murdered:

“We run into a very skinny girl who looks a little older than me putting
up a page with her number on the outer wall of the university. I chat it
up with her, she speaks English really well, and we go immediately to
her place, literally two minutes from my university. It's a cute house
that is right in the middle of this random garden in the middle of
Perugia. Around us are apartment buildings, but we enter through a gate
and there it is. I’m in love. I meet her roommate Molly. The house has a
kitchen, two bathrooms, and four bedrooms. Not to mention a washing
machine, and internet access. Not to mention, she owns two guitars and
wants to play with me. Not to mention the view is amazing. Not to
mention I have a terrace that looks over the city/countryside. I put
down a down payment. I’m feeling sky high. These girls are awesome.
Really sweet, really down to earth, funny as hell. Neither are students
. . . they are desperate for roommates because the two they wanted
disappear[ed] all of a sudden"


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