THE AMANDA KNOX PRIMER: No, She Didn't Kill That Girl During A Sex Game

Amanda Knox
Amanda Knox

(REUTERS/Alessandro Bianchi )Amanda Knox - then.

Amanda Knox did not spend the hours after Meredith Kircher's death making out with her boyfriend, ABC revealed tonight in the first televised interview Knox has given since she was released from custody in 2011.

In a widely seen piece of video (skip to1.55 on this Sky News report), Knox was shown repeatedly kissing her boyfriend as Italian police investigated the stabbing of her roommate. However, ABC showed that what actually happens in the video is three brief pecks on the lips, followed by Knox looking down at the ground, looking sad and worried. That last part wasn't shown quite so much, ABC said, as news organizations simply put the kisses on a seemingly endless video loop.

Knox also told ABC that the experience of being falsely accused, convicted and sentenced to an Italian prison, followed by her release when the verdict was overturned, and with that then followed by a new Italian court order that may re-open the case once more, was like being in a nightmare:

"I felt like after crawling through a field of barbed wire and finally reaching what I thought was the end, it just turned out that it was the horizon," Knox said. "And I had another field of barbed wire that I had ahead of me to crawl through."

The case is much misunderstood.

Most people know that Amanda Knox — "Foxy Knoxy" — is the pretty American student who was arrested and found guilty of the stabbing death of her British roommate in Italy, during a "sex game" gone wrong, when the pair were on study-abroad programs several years ago.

Unfortunately, a far smaller number of people know that Knox was completely innocent of the crime; that another man was successfully convicted of the murder; and that NONE of the evidence — blood, DNA, or witnesses — ever really pointed to Knox.

ABC broadcast Diane Sawyer's interview with Knox tonight. In it, she explained that she was naive, and didn't realize how intense the scrutiny of her actions and words would be.

Here's a primer on the Knox case, and the miscarriage of justice at the heart of it.

Meredith Kercher
Meredith Kercher

(Wikimedia, CC)Meredith Kercher

Knox was initially convicted. Confusingly, the verdict was overturned by an Italian appeals court and then, more recently, a higher Italian court overturned that acquittal and asked that the case be heard again at the trial level.

This, of course, would never happen in a U.S. court, where the Constitution forbids suspects from being repeatedly retried.

The frustration for followers of the case — and Knox herself, of course — is that most people have a vague sense that she was Meredith Kercher's killer, and that somehow — on a technicality! — she wriggled free.