Jury sees knife in murder trial

Prosecutors: DNA from victim, defendant on blade, handle

— A knife that prosecutors say could have been used to kill a British woman in Italy was shown in court Saturday at the murder trial of her American roommate and an Italian codefendant.

The knife, wrapped in plastic and kept in a white box, was shown to the eightmember jury in Perugia, in central Italy, during the trial of Amanda Knox and her former boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito.

Knox and Sollecito watched as the knife was shown in court. The two are on trial on charges of murder and sexual violence for the 2007 death of Meredith Kercher. They deny wrongdoing.

The knife, handled by a court official wearing gloves and a face mask, was shown as Sollecito's defense called three forensic experts to discuss the weapon and other evidence they had studied.

Prosecutors allege the knife with a 6 1 /2-inch blade that investigators found at Sollecito's house could be the murder weapon. They say it had Kercher's DNA on the blade and Knox's on the handle - a claim defense lawyers reject, saying the blade is too big to match Kercher's wounds and the sample of what prosecutors say is Kercher's DNA is too small to match with certainty.

In Saturday's session, forensic expert Mariano Cingolani questioned the knife's "compatibility" with a wound to Kercher's neck, which is not considered to be the fatal one.

"Many other knives in general are more compatible with that kind of wound," said Cingolani, who was appointed by a Perugia judge before indictments for Knox and Sollecito were handed down.

One of three cuts on thevictim's neck would have been bigger if that knife had been used, Cingolani said. The expert cautioned, however, that no firm conclusion could be drawn without knowing the position of Kercher's neck during the attack or the elasticity of her tissues.

According to Cingolani, whose team studied photos and videos of the autopsy but did not observe the procedure, the 21-year-old died from a combination of blood loss and suffocation.

Bruises on her neck suggest she might have been strangled and may have choked on her own blood, he said.

Anna Aprile, another of the experts who testified Saturday, said Kercher's body showed evidence of sexual activity shortly before death. It could not be directly determined whether she was raped, but the fact that she was found in a pool of blood, with multiple wounds and bruises, suggests violence during intercourse, Aprile said.

Prosecutors allege Kercher was killed during what had begun as a sex game. Her body was found in her bedroom in the apartment she shared with Knox on Nov. 2, 2007.

Front Section, Pages 13 on 09/20/2009

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