PERUGIA, Italy — An American student and her former Italian boyfriend were together in a courtroom Friday in this university town but exchanged no words as they followed proceedings to decide whether they should stand trial for the 2007 slaying of a young British woman.
Amanda Knox, 21, of Seattle, and Raffaele Sollecito have been jailed separately since shortly after the Nov. 1 slaying of Knox’s roommate, Meredith Kercher. Kercher’s body, stabbed in the neck, was found in a pool of blood in her bedroom.
The third suspect, Rudy Hermann Guede, of the Ivory Coast, also attended the hearing to decide prosecutors’ request for the suspects to be charged and an indictment. All three have denied any wrongdoing.
Because Sollecito had skipped the opening hearing last week, Friday’s session was the first time he and his ex-girlfriend have been in the same room since they were jailed.
The hearings are closed to the media and public. A decision is expected in a few weeks, after more hearings.
Lawyers for the defendants gave some description of Friday’s nine-hour-long hearing.
Defendants are not allowed to talk to each other during the hearings.
One of Knox’s lawyers, Luciano Ghirga, told reporters that she gave Sollecito a “cordial, sober” smile.
“It was a kind of ‘pleasure to see you’ smile, nothing more,” Ghirga said.
Guede’s lawyer, Valter Biscotti, told reporters that all three suspects asked during the hearing for permission to address the court.
“They made very brief statements, along the lines of, ‘Everything you heard today is false,’ ” Biscotti said.
The court heard testimony from an Albanian man who had told prosecutors that he saw all three suspects together the night before the slaying in front of the rented house Knox, Kercher and other students shared.
The hearings also serve as a fast-track trial for Guede — a move requested by his lawyers.
In Italy, defendants have the right to skip hearings or trials.
Prison guards led the three suspects into the courtroom one by one. Only Guede was handcuffed.
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