The Jordan Harbinger Show - 386: Amanda Knox | The Truth About True Crime
Episode Date: August 4, 2020Amanda Knox (@amandaknox) is an exoneree, journalist, public speaker, and author of Waiting to Be Heard. She was the host of The Scarlet Letter Reports and currently co-hosts The Truth About ...True Crime podcast. What We Discuss with Amanda Knox: How Amanda was coerced into wrongfully confessing that she was at the scene of her roommate's murder without being made aware of her rights or being given access to a lawyer. Why not understanding the difference between being questioned as a witness and interrogated as a suspect landed Amanda in custody for 1,428 days without being allowed to see her family. How even a false confession, once made, often sways a jury to convict a defendant before any of the evidence is even considered, and why it's not uncommon for a completely innocent person to give a false confession to a skilled interrogator looking to close a case quickly. Why a police department investigating a case under the scrutiny of a worldwide media frenzy might be less interested in carrying out justice than covering up its own countless acts of gross incompetence. Why a populace literate in its own legal rights is the only real way to combat the manipulation of ignorance -- by both prosecution and defense -- in the court system that leads to so many wrong outcomes. And much more... Full show notes and resources can be found here: jordanharbinger.com/386 Sign up for Six-Minute Networking -- our free networking and relationship development mini course -- at jordanharbinger.com/course! Like this show? Please leave us a review here -- even one sentence helps! Consider including your Twitter handle so we can thank you personally!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Coming up on the Jordan Harbinger Show.
They were wrong.
They didn't have enough information.
They didn't have enough evidence to lead me down a path to confessing in any way that was meaningful.
Then they arrested the wrong person who had an ironclad alibi.
And when finally the forensic evidence came back, the fingerprints that had been left in blood,
the DNA that was all over Meredith's body, belonged to a completely other guy.
They were like, oh shit.
Welcome to the show.
I'm Jordan Harbinger.
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Today's guest is someone you may have heard of, whether you're a true crime junkie,
you follow the news, or you simply caught the documentary on Netflix, it's likely that
Amanda Knox has been on your radar at some point. At age 20, she was studying abroad in Italy
when her roommate was brutally murdered.
The media and Italian police
quickly assumed her guilt,
and for the next several years,
Amanda was put on trial by the Italian courts,
the police, and the international media.
After eight years of hell,
she was finally acquitted
by the Italian Supreme Court.
What follows is a conversation
about justice, injustice,
putting your life back together,
and living in or with infamy.
By the way, y'all,
I don't want to talk too much
about the murder itself.
The details are gruesome,
and that information is all over the internet.
if you want to delve deeper. I'm more interested for the purposes of this conversation in Amanda's
experience, and so we focus on Amanda and her story in this episode. This is not to overlook the plight
of the victim, Meredith Kircher, may she rest in peace, but that simply is not the focus of this
particular episode. I really enjoyed my conversation here with Amanda, and a lot of you ask me how I
managed to get the guests I do on the show, how I managed to get opportunities. It really is always
about the network, and nothing is more important than that right now, especially.
especially if you might be looking for work or looking to shift jobs, move, make a big life
change, your network can always help you. I'm teaching you how I created mine and teaching you
how to do it for yourself for free over at Jordan Harbinger.com slash course. By the way, most of
the guests on the show, they subscribe to the course and to the newsletter. So come join us,
and you'll be in smart company where you belong. Now, here's Amanda Knox. I admit I found out about
you because, well, I'd followed the case a little bit when I was younger because I studied abroad
and I was like, oh, but for the grace of God go eyed, right?
Like, that could happen to anybody.
So it was scary.
And then, of course, no one knew what the real deal was because the trial hadn't concluded
yet.
Like, this is real time.
And I'm looking at tabloids.
I'm probably the same.
I'm 40 now.
I don't know how old you are, but I'm probably like the same age as you are a little bit
older.
And I remember thinking these tabloid headlines, and we'll get into this in a bit,
are like, you know, foxy-y-noxy, brutal sex game gone wrong, question mark.
And I remember being like 23 and going, no.
Whenever the headline is ridiculous thing, question mark, the answer is always like, no, it's
different than that.
And I saw the Netflix documentary and I was like, oh, she would be really interesting.
In fact, let me go see what's new with her.
And then it was like, Amanda Knox is getting married.
And I was like, let me join what I assume are thousands of well-wishers on Twitter
saying nice things to you after this harrowing experience.
And then I had to bleach my eyes because everything was so horrible.
And I thought like, oh my gosh, people are still harassing you.
But anyway, I'm getting ahead of myself.
Yeah, that was rough times, honestly, because it's one thing when people do it to me, I'm sort of used to it, not in like a good way, but when people do it, people I care about because of their proximity to me, that remains really, really hurtful. But okay, so going back, and for the record, I'm 33. I just turned 33.
Oh, okay. I'm 40, so I was much older than you, but it still seemed at the time like I was right, I mean, just being another student studying abroad, living with people that they don't know. Like, I just felt like, oh my God, this is like really close to me. You know, I studied in Germany. Yeah, and I think that a lot of people, even if you don't even have to study abroad necessarily, there's just this like interesting moment in a person's life where they are just away from home for the first time. And away from home can be,
you know, across the city at their state school and suddenly the environment and is very different
and the culture is very different or it could be across the country or it could be across the world.
I happen to be across the world. And I was 20 years old. In fact, when my youngest sister,
I have three younger sisters and when my youngest sister turned 20, she's 11 years younger than me.
So she was a baby when everything was going on with me and didn't really quite understand it.
she, when she turned 20, I was like, so how does it feel? This is the time that I went to prison.
Do you feel like you're ready for that? But anyway, yeah, so I was 20 years old. I was studying abroad
in Italy in a sort of small but very ancient and established town in central Italy called Perugia.
sat on top of this beautiful hill, kind of one main street kind of town with a beautiful church and a fountain, and two universities.
One was the regular university for Italian students or people who are fluent in Italian, and the other was for foreigners like me who were coming to learn the language.
and I can't remember if it's like five or six weeks into me being there.
It was the day after Halloween.
I had recently started a relationship with this young Italian guy named Rafael Isoletico.
I spent the night at his house and I came home to find a murder scene.
I didn't realize it was a murder scene because I didn't actually see into the room where the murder occurred.
I just came home to take a shower and get changed, and I noticed that things were off,
but I didn't know quite what to make of it.
So I called my mom. I talked to Rafael.
Eventually, we poked around and realized that this was a break-in.
It wasn't just, you know, the door had been accidentally left open, and we called the cops.
The cops arrived.
They break down my roommate's door and find her body there.
Meredith was just a year older than me at the time.
She was British from Leeds, a really, really nice girl.
I remember we had like this little terrace that was right outside of our apartment.
And Meredith would sit out there and read like thriller novels and detective novels.
Amazing.
Now I'm realizing the irony of that.
And I would go outside and play guitar.
Anyway, you know, we were hustled out of the house.
The house was deemed a crime scene. And for the next five days, I was at the disposal and mercy of the police officers, who, unbeknownst to me, had targeted me as a person of interest.
Now, this is where we get into, like, speculating, like an innocent person. People, let's say that I acted guilty.
And there have been numerous theories about this, people speculating that I'm histrionic, or,
or I'm on the autism spectrum, or that cultural translation issues, they talk about how I was
making out with my boyfriend right outside the crime scene. And I was doing cartwheels and I was
doing splits and I was saying things that were inappropriate. And I think for me, way back when I
first got home and I wrote about this time, this like period of five days, I was still blaming myself
a lot for what had happened to me. I was still thinking, like, what did I do wrong? You know,
what was my role in all of this to make this happen to me? And that went so far as to trying to explain
away why the cops were hitting me in my interrogation and, you know, like, trying to come up with
all of these, like, very, the way that women so often try to blame ourselves when bad things happened
to us, I was doing that. And it's only been over.
many years and through a lot of reflection and a lot of looking into how these things happened
to other wrongfully convicted people, that I realized that it wasn't really about me.
And I think that a sort of major mistake that set the entire investing me when it wasn't about
me. So back then, my understanding was, oh, my God, my roommate's been murdered.
I could have been murdered.
I don't have a home now.
I'm 3,000 miles away from home.
The only person who's close to me
are my other roommates and my new boyfriend,
but I also have only known them for a few weeks.
And in Rafael's case, I only knew him for a week, less than a week.
What do I do?
What do I need to do?
What's the right thing to do?
You know, being the naive person that I was,
I've never had any contact with police before,
had any experience with the criminal justice system before, nothing remotely bad ever happened to me
like this before. My thought was to just take direction. I did what I was told. And what I was told
was by the police to come in every day for questioning. And I did. I freely came. I willingly came.
I was exhausted. I was scared. But I came in for questioning and I sat for hours and hours and hours
and hours. My attorneys eventually tallied up that I had done 53 hours of questioning over five days.
Wow. That's insane. And they weren't like, you know what, this is enough of this crap.
You're not going in anymore. This is ridiculous. They're just abusing you.
Well, so here's the thing. It's way more subtle than that. Or maybe it isn't subtle and I was just an
idiot, but like, I understood that the police were under a lot of pressure.
Like, it seemed like the entire police station was only working on this case.
Everyone was running around.
People were coming in and out.
People that I had seen maybe talk to Meredith once came in.
Like, they were trying to talk to anybody, and they were trying to solve the case
really quickly because the media had descended immediately upon this case.
and we're reporting on it.
So I understood that the cops are under a lot of pressure.
And it was for that reason that I sort of didn't think to worry
when they were abrupt or short with me, when they seemed upset.
I often worried that maybe the reason that they were upset or short with me
was because I just wasn't speaking Italian well enough.
And I wasn't complaining myself well enough.
I thought that was the reason why they kept asking,
me questions over and over and over again. And that was the thing that eventually sort of broke my brain
was the fact that no matter how many ways I answered the same question to them, they never seemed
happy with it. They never seemed happy with what I'd given them or that it was enough. They always
seemed dissatisfied with me. And, you know, being the person who was trying to help and was doing
the best I could and didn't know what else to do because that was my touchstone.
Like suddenly my whole life became help with this because I don't really have anything else
except for do I go back to school? Like how do I go back to school with all of this insanity?
I just sort of submitted myself and allowed myself to be subjected to what was ultimately
a very coercive interrogation technique that lasted days that culminated with an overnight interrogation.
and that broke me.
I was made to believe that everything that I said,
the reason they were upset with me
was because I didn't remember correctly,
that actually I had witnessed the murder
and that if I didn't tell them what I had witnessed,
that I risked going to prison for the rest of my life
and never seeing my family again.
Wow.
which was a weird psychological trap to be put into because I thought like if I can't remember
why are you trying to punish me like why are you hitting me? Why are you yelling at me? Like and so eventually
like I was led down this path of questioning that made me believe that what I must have witnessed
was my boss at the time who I was you know working for minimum wage at a local bar. He had come over to
my house and raped and murdered my roommate and I had witnessed it and just didn't remember because
I was so traumatized. And the police typed up the statement. They just had me sign it. And then the
next thing I know, I'm being stripped naked to get photographed. I have handcuffs on me. They tell me
the handcuffs are there only as a formality that they're taking me to a holding place for my own
protection. Never saw a lawyer. Never saw anything. Never had my rights read to me.
me. I had handcuffs on me. I was taken to prison where I was told that I would get to see my mom
soon. And I was left there for 1,428 days. And you're 20 years old. Well, at the beginning,
you were 20 years old. Is the no lawyer thing? Is that a European thing? Because I'm an attorney here
in the United States, and I'm not so up on my European criminal justice. But I remember that the
Napoleonic system that they have in Europe is not innocent until proven guilty. It's kind of like,
not necessarily guilty until proven innocent, but kind of adjacent to that where it's like,
you're in a cage when you're on the stand there. You're not like a witness in your, or a defendant
slash witness in your own trial with representation that assumes that the government has to
prove their case. It's kind of like, well, we got you now. So the rest is up to you.
So there definitely are differences. However, they did a tricky thing with my interrogation that
they sometimes do here in the U.S., which is they tried to distinguish between what they mean
by questioning a witness and what they mean by interrogating a suspect.
And the investigators claimed that they had never been interrogating me, that they were only
questioning me as a witness. And I freely and voluntarily, while be in the process of
being questioned as a witness, turned myself into a suspect.
So that's the reason why I was never offered an attorney. And that was why when they arrested me,
you know, it wasn't a normal, like, you have the right to remain silent and anything you can say
can and be used against you. Like it was this, they argued that I had never been a suspect.
And we know now that that is false, like that is patently false, but like that was what the claim was.
That was the reason why they said they didn't record that interrogation.
They had recorded every single questioning of me leading up to that final interrogation,
but they just happened to not have turned on the recorder for that interrogation.
A lot of sketchy stuff.
they happened to have decided to break me the day that they knew my mother was arriving in Italy
to come and support me. So they basically knew that they had one last day to get me when I was at
my most vulnerable. And that's what I decided to break me literally like overnight as my mom's on a
plane to Italy. And then like everything that follows is simply the same old story of the police
digging in their heels, like trying to prove my guilt, no matter what evidence comes out.
So, like, there was a lot of talk about all the different evidence in the case, all the physical
evidence. Ultimately, what the case came down to, though, was a question of my character,
what kind of person I was. Was I the type of person who would, out of the blue,
like, orchestrate a sex game and then murder my roommate? And amazing.
that was a really compelling story for a lot of people.
There was this idea that there's this, you know, loose woman
who's using her sexual wiles to manipulate the sort of puppet men around her
and is like using men to commit her violence for her,
and her violence is obviously directed towards other women
because other women hate other women.
That was the sort of compelling argument that was presented,
and it was compelling.
people believed it. I was convicted. I spent four years in prison. And that's sad, but there are a lot of things that, where my case is really similar to a lot of wrongful convictions cases. As soon as the jury hears that someone confessed, they tend to stop thinking about whether, you know, even what the forensic evidence and what the physical evidence of the case means, because a confession is such a powerful,
statement for a lot of people. It's such a powerful piece of evidence. And people don't seem to
like empathize with how someone could be coerced into saying anything not true. Who in the hell
is going to go, oh yeah, I would definitely confess to something I didn't do. Everyone thinks,
well, if I didn't do it, I'm definitely not going to say anything. I'm never going to say that I was
there if I wasn't. I'm never going to say I committed a crime. Doesn't somebody who confesses know
the consequences of confessing to a murder.
And the answer to that is watch making a murderer
and then tell me that Brendan Dassey, for example,
understood what he was saying when he's like,
yeah, I did it, I cut her up.
And I have a project, though, in fourth period.
Can I leave now?
And they were like, you're under arrest.
And it's like, hello, the kid is not all,
he doesn't know what's going on.
Yeah.
And false confessions is, you know,
it's one of the causes of wrongful convictions
and that includes, you know,
incentivizing witnesses.
to lie and the problems that come with eyewitness identification. A lot of people come into the
courtroom claiming to be able to definitively identify a person and it turns out they can't.
They're actually not so sure. But false confessions for me are one of the more brutal ways
that cause wrongful convictions because they are an insidious and subtle way to hurt someone.
You know, like there are overt ways that police can abuse people punching them, hitting them,
throwing them to the ground, putting a knee on their neck.
And then there are subtle ways that police can abuse people who are in their custody in it.
Or in my case, you know, technically, I wasn't in their custody.
I was just in their office.
You know, with Brennan Dassey, he's a classic example of someone who is particularly susceptible
to the coercion and manipulation of what was happening to him.
He was young.
He doesn't have a terribly high IQ.
He understood that these were authority figures
who wanted something from him
and he was doing his pest to give them what he wanted.
A lot of people think now because,
especially of Brendan Dassey,
there's a sort of acceptance that,
oh, okay, well, if you are very young
and you are very impressionable,
false confessions can happen.
We understand that now.
But what people still don't understand is that you don't have to be super young and not have a high IQ to be susceptible to these kinds of coercive tactics.
There are a million reasons why people falsely confess. In my case, it was because I was tricked into thinking that I had amnesia.
It didn't help that I was in a place where I was also very young. I was alone. I didn't have any of my normal authority figures around me that I could refer to.
and I was speaking a foreign language, you know, all of that didn't help me. But some people have argued,
well, Amanda wouldn't falsely confess because she's a college student. She's intelligent. She's,
you know, got high test scores. And it's like, no, to be impressionable simply means that someone has to
have to be able to impress something on you. And we all have our points of weakness and vulnerability
that a skilled interrogator can learn to press.
And if they press it hard enough in just the right way,
at just the right moment,
they can get anyone to say anything.
You know, I was made to genuinely believe
that I had somehow witnessed the murder
and didn't remember it
because I couldn't understand
why else the police were screaming at me and hitting me.
That seemed like the only thing
that made sense to me at that point.
So how did we get from,
than you witnessing it and not remembering it,
to then it's like, dot, dot, dot, she did it.
It gets to that because when the police tried to confirm
what I said to them, it wasn't true.
Right, yeah.
Obviously, it wasn't true.
I didn't know what the hell happened to Meredith.
So I just said what I thought that they wanted me to say
based upon what the line of questioning
and then they wrote up the thing and I just signed the thing.
They were wrong.
They didn't have enough information.
and they didn't have enough evidence to lead me down a path to confessing in any way that was meaningful.
So I just said something that didn't make any sense.
Then they arrested the wrong person who had an ironclad alibi.
And when finally the forensic evidence came back, showing that the fingerprints that had been left in blood at the crime scene and the DNA that was all over Meredith's body belonged to a completely other guy who had fled to Germany, they were like,
oh shit.
Either Amanda is completely innocent and we're assholes or we're still right and Amanda just put in someone else into her scenario.
And so we're going to just kick him out and put the other guy in and make Amanda the criminal mastermind because here she is in the interrogation room telling us half lies.
So that is so instead of saying like, okay, let's be rational about this and like,
like go look at this. It's like, oh, shoot, I've just given 8,000 interviews about how great of an
investigator I am in our forensic team, which is like a bunch of cops that have never done
forensic investigation and have contaminated every piece of evidence to the maximum extent
possible. We will have to outline all of that for all the politicians, the whole media, the courtroom,
or we just double down and be like, no, she's still guilty. Here's this other gymnastics that we can do
that sort of like still ropes her into this. That way we don't look like we just could
convict literally anyone of a heinous crime, which would be a nightmare, because the media never
cared about the truth when it came to this story. They just wanted to sell tabloids and capitalize
on the situation. Like I said in the beginning, it was like these dumb headlines that even as a
20-something I looked at it and I was like, this is so stupid. Of course, this random girl who's like
20 did not orchestrate this ridiculous thing. I mean, it just didn't even make sense,
even when you read the articles that were 99% bullshit about it,
it didn't even make sense.
Like, I had the luxury of being able to close the X on the window
when I looked at your social media or when I looked at, like, these articles,
and you don't have that.
So you truly had my sympathy on this.
And lots of people online, even now, they'll say, like,
oh, I can read body language.
You see, like, when she looked to the left,
that means that she's lying.
We've had a lot of body language experts on the show
that say, these are like the OG body language guys,
and they go, you can't tell
when someone's lying using nonverbal communication
unless I've been interrogating you for six hours
in your baseline changes.
And even then, I'm like 51% at this.
And this is like guys who invented
reading nonverbal communication
in the police interrogation scenario.
And they're like, it's a bad indicator.
You can't do it and you shouldn't try.
And yet some guy on YouTube is like,
she's guilty.
I mean, I'm so impressed that if they're the people
who developed these methods, like,
they're willing to admit that their methods have vast limitations.
Like I find that really impressive.
I applaud their integrity because it's so tempting and so human to attach and insist upon
the importance of something that you've invested your time and energy and reputation in.
You know, that was one of the reasons why the police really doubled down against me and why they
do that time and time again here in the U.S.
in wrongful convictions cases, it's because we've invested not just our time and our energy,
but ourselves, like our identities into the works that we've done. And if we realize that the
outcome of that work is not what our intention was, we have a choice. We either say,
oh, I was wrong, or there are just criminal psychopaths out there in the world who can trick
me, but I got them back and I tricked them back. You know, like, and they're just, and they,
There is an old culture of that.
You know, recently I haven't really like super publicly advertised this.
And in fact, I wasn't.
But my prosecutor sort of kind of did.
I guess it really depends on if you read Italian newspapers or not.
But I've...
Not so much.
I've been in contact with my prosecutor.
And I've been talking to him about what happened,
coming from a place of trying to understand why he felt like he was doing the right thing.
because I've always sort of intuitively understood that the vast majority of people,
including the people who hurt me, think that they're doing the right thing at the time.
And that's one of those difficult truths that I don't think is very often acknowledged in society.
Sort of think that there are bad people and they're good people.
And you can tell who the bad people are because of the outcomes of their whatever they do.
And that's not true.
Like a person's intentions can be different than their outcomes.
And I think that someone can be motivated towards and have like noble goals and still do
incredible harm to other human beings.
And knowing that, I had to really look at who the person of my prosecutor was.
and he's a man who grew up in a very different culture
and a very different time than me.
And I learned that he is a big fan of this detective series
called The Adventures of McRae, like Detective McRae.
It's basically like French Sherlock Holmes.
Okay.
French Sherlock Holmes is very, very similar to Sherlock Holmes
where he's this guy who is super sharp,
and is able to glean vast truths from seemingly inconspicuous,
circumstantial details that he puts together.
So dangerous.
Yeah.
That's the police version of,
oh, she looked to the left.
She's lying.
It's like Columbo,
and he's like,
so you rip the paper off the printer with your left hand
as you walk by the table,
but if you were going,
and then it's like this whole extrapolation
that just falls apart under even like the most minor scrutiny.
But you don't give it that,
because you want to be McCray or whatever.
And so you're like,
it's been a fetishized and celebrated way of thinking.
And it's not necessarily illogical.
What it fails to take into consideration
is how much cognitive bias affects people's ability
to recognize what is meaningful or not.
So, you know, the craziest obviously crazy person
is going to see the number 69 wherever he goes
because you can always find patterns.
Our brains are really, really efficient at finding patterns.
And so really, like, confirmation bias and other cognitive biases can lead people to see what
they want to see.
And because we have this sort of celebration and fetishization of that sort of intuitive
logician, we haven't until very, very recently started to question whether or not that
sort of old school OG detective is an effective means of gleaning truth or not. That fetishization
of logic and reason came from a world where wrongful convictions happened all the time and no one
gave a shit. Right, because they were like cutting off a finger every time you said you didn't do it or
something. Yeah. And it didn't matter. And so like this is a long history of us developing a better
relationship to truth, at least when it comes to truth in a legal sense. I think that as people
are realizing that a lot of how people perceive what is true is often subjective, that's called
into question the very idea of truth, which is also dangerous because yes, how we present
information and what information we recognize is going to influence our ability to determine what is
true, that's totally true, but that doesn't mean that truth doesn't exist, right?
Like, whether we notice that gravity is there doesn't mean that gravity isn't there.
You're listening to the Jordan Harbinger Show with our guest Amanda Knox.
We'll be right back.
And now, back to Amanda Knox on the Jordan Harbinger Show.
Have you read Malcolm Gladwell's book and the latest one where he talks about matching
and things like that?
because I wondered if, you know, your reaction wasn't what people thought a guilty or a not guilty
person would look like, depending on where they fell. And so a lot of people would say,
oh, well, look, she's not doing this. And this is what the way innocent people react.
Gladwell calls it the Friends effect, where we think anyone who's surprised is like,
oh my God, when really surprised people could just be like, what, you know, this very subtle reaction.
And you had these different reactions that didn't match what people expected.
Actually, aren't you in the book?
Now I'm getting a little deja vu here.
Yeah, you're in the book because of this.
I'm no genius.
This is a whole chapter.
Yeah, my bad.
He already came up with this literally exact thing.
I'm an idiot.
Go ahead.
I was just going to say that I'm very aware of his book.
Yeah.
And I don't want to say too much about what I think about it because I interviewed him about it.
Okay.
I have a whole episode of a new podcast that I'm devoured.
developing that's going to be coming out in the fall called Labyrinths, where I dedicate a whole
episode to my interview with Malcolm Gladwell and his analysis of my case. I think the one sort of
tantalizing mention that I can make is that I don't agree. And the reason I don't agree is because I think
that Malcolm Gladwell is making a similar mistake that people have been making time and time again,
which is explaining my wrongful conviction by looking at me, not looking at everyone else
who had power and agency in the situation. Sure, I agree with that. I agree with that. I just thought
that's with the way people reacted when they were looking at you was that principle. But I agree. I
think, again, it's not about you.
Like, you should have been able to walk up and go, I did this, and they would go, nope,
the evidence says there's no way you could have done this.
You should have been able to confess within seconds, and they should have investigated and
known that you were not telling the truth.
But they didn't do anything like that, of course.
No, no.
And unfortunately, I think that's what we like to think our justice system is like.
No matter what crazy person walks into a police station and says, I did all the crimes.
Like they're going to put that person on trial for murder.
But the reality is that investigators and prosecutors and judges are all people.
And people are motivated by incentive structures, like having the job be easier.
And, you know, making a case that is going to convince people instead of going through the trouble of doing the raw, difficult work,
of digging up data and evidence.
Like, police and prosecutors know what is compelling to people.
And a confession, false or true, is very, very compelling.
People want to hear from the guilty person,
I did A, B, and C, because then suddenly that element of reasonable doubt,
like we like to believe that someone would only do that if it were true.
And the element of reasonable doubt goes away.
We all feel better about it.
ourselves and that person goes to prison and we get to forget about them. So yeah, it's so human to make
that mistake. And that isn't to say that there's anything terrible about being humans. It just means
that we need to think about that when we're sitting on a jury or when we're empowered in those
positions where we are deciding the fate of people. We need to take that more into consideration.
and I am just so mad that I'm never, ever, ever going to sit on a jury because who is ever going
to let me on a jury? I've never even been asked. I swear like the computer like pops my name up and they're
like, now. You're probably right. I mean, they probably just go like, is this person, there's got to be
something in there that's like, is this like a notable figure for any reason? Okay, we can't do that. It would just be a
waste of everyone's time because any lawyer is going to come in and have whether they're,
a plaintiff's lawyer or a prosecutor or a defendant counsel,
they're going to either be like, yes,
or they're going to be like, hell no.
Like, there's no point in even putting you in the room
and wasting everyone's time.
Like, there's no chance.
And what's so sad about that and is something that I talk about a lot
with my husband, Chris, is our system is basically counting
and depends upon the people who ultimately decide
being as ignorant as possible.
And having some sort of experience or knowledge about how the criminal justice system works or how human minds work is considered a bias that is bad for the courtroom.
And I feel that what our society needs is more knowledge from jurors in the courtroom.
We need an informed jury that knows, like, ever since coming home,
home, I'm suddenly realizing how incredibly ignorant I was and how we all are about what our rights
are and what it means, what reasonable doubt means. And this is coming also from a place of like
victim's standpoints. Like victims are walking into the courtroom, not knowing what to expect,
not knowing what their rights are. Jury members aren't, don't know how to sit there and appreciate their
experience and how difficult it is to relive your experience over and over again in front of people.
Like these are all ways that ignorance is being manipulated and taken advantage of in our justice system by both sides, by prosecution and the defense. And it's really unfortunate because it leads to wrong outcomes so often. So I don't know. I mean, if it were me and I could get a degree in teaching, I would like, you know, advocate for there being a criminal justice class that you just take in middle school or, you know,
in elementary school, middle school, and high school, because your understanding of it is going to
change over time. I think that would be a brilliant thing that we don't do. You were eventually convicted
and sentenced to 26 years in prison. Spoiler alert. You didn't serve them, obviously, because you were
later acquitted some case that went all the way to the Supreme Court. But can you tell me,
like, you're in prison two years before that, but before sentencing and during the trial,
you had to be thinking, this is a nightmare, but it's going to be over soon, right? I mean, I would
probably have some faith that the evidence couldn't exist because I didn't do it. So it's not
going to stack up. Tell me about the moment, I think, that you got sentenced. I mean, what's going
through your head? Like, just absolute disbelief, I would have to imagine. Yeah. So the way that I
experienced my wrongful conviction was, you know, the two years leading up to it, the worse and
worse things got, like, you know, people saying, who knows what in the courtroom, you know,
horrible things being said about me in the courtroom. The worst and worse it got in the
closer I got to my conviction, the more I felt that I must be freed because clearly, like,
they were making all these extravagant claims about me. The prosecutor was putting literal words
into my mouth saying, like, Amanda said, you die, slut, like, all that, you know, like,
just a million ways that, like, it was so clear that they were leaning on character assassination
and not on evidence. And I was convinced that I was going to be going home. And,
And after my conviction, I realized that the truth didn't matter and that I couldn't count on the truth
to save me.
And that's something that I struggle with to this day because I think that a lot of exoneries are
really spiritual, faithful people.
They tend to be.
And there's this sort of feel like we sort of talk ourselves into believing that the truth
didn't come out yet, but it will come out. It must. And the thing that I, the sort of existential
crisis that I went through was, there's no guarantee. There's no guarantee that the truth is going to go
out. Like, there's no guarantee that people will ever believe me. As long as they are more convinced
by a story than by the truth, there's nothing I can do. And I felt very powerless. I felt I entered into a
place of despair that I have never known and I lived with that for another two years.
And as things were getting better and better and better throughout my appeals process,
I still felt myself plunging deeper and deeper and deeper into despair because even though
the evidence was totally called into question, you know, independent experts were saying
like this is not true, like whatever the prosecution is saying, it's not true. The closer and closer
that we got to the truth, the more afraid I felt that I was going to be destroyed again,
because the truth didn't matter then. Why would it matter now? So when I was acquitted,
I mean, I remember entering that courtroom shaking. I was so scared. And people thought that I had
misunderstood the outcome, like the acquittal.
They thought that I just didn't understand what the judge was saying because I was crying so
hard afterwards.
I know what you're talking about.
I saw that, and you're crying so hard because it's over, and it's clear to anybody who's
looked at the whole case that you're just, it's like massive, you're just letting out.
It's an emotional release, obviously, after all that pressure.
Yeah, and the guards were carrying me out of the courtroom and telling me, no, no, it's
okay.
You won.
And I was like, no, I know. And of course, it didn't end there because a few years later, while I was in, while I was here in the U.S., they decided to try me again for the same crime. And they overturned by acquittal, which is something you can do in Italy, and tried me again and found me guilty again. And we brought that to the Supreme Court in Italy. And it wasn't until almost eight years. It took a time.
about almost eight years for the whole thing to be definitively over for the Supreme Court
to find me definitively acquitted. And that's what happened. That's insane to me. You didn't
have to go, so you were in the U.S. and were they like, hey, come back to prison and were you like,
hell, no, I'm taking this to the Supreme Court. Like, well, how did that work out? So they didn't
immediately, when they convicted us the second time, they didn't immediately call for our arrest.
What they did do was they took away Rafael's passport.
He was still in Italy, so he was no longer allowed to leave the country.
And we were allowed to be free.
Basically, I think that they didn't arrest him immediately
because they knew they couldn't arrest me immediately.
Right, because FYI of people who don't know,
they said he did it with you.
So this guy who's known you for five days is like also in prison for a murder that neither of you
committed and is probably like, this is the last time I meet.
foreign women or whatever, like, this poor guy is going through, right?
This poor, like, nerdy guy.
The thing is, Rafael was never the interested, you know, person to the cops.
And the cops are trying to get him to turn on me the entire time.
They were trying to tell him she's a stupid cow.
Like, you need to tell us the truth that she did it.
He refused because he was like, no, she didn't do it.
And he could have walked out of that.
He could have been an incentivized witness who was basically coerced by the cops.
to testify against me.
And, you know, he had every, like, they were basically bribing him with the greatest
bribe that you can give to anyone, which is their freedom.
And still, he had the wherewithal and the integrity to refuse it.
So, kudos to Raphael.
Wow, that's impressive.
I don't know if I would have held up under that circumstance for a woman I just met.
So well, I'd like to think I'd do it for my wife.
Sorry, Jen, I'm not sure.
No, I mean, I feel like this guy met you like five days prior at an, was it opera or something?
I mean, this is not like.
He was like, we barely knew each other.
And also like, you have to remember five days of us not speaking the same language.
Like she understood a little English and I understood a little Italian and we were just getting to know each other.
And we happened to just be like very youthfully infatuated with each other.
Yeah.
But we very genuinely didn't know each other.
So unbelievable.
To take it in a lighter direction, you know, how's your Italian now?
Because I always think if I were in prison in a foreign country, I don't know why I think
about that hypothetical so much, by the way.
But I think like if I were in prison in a foreign country, I would study the language
and I'd learn so well.
And do you study Italian in prison?
You kind of didn't have much else going on, right?
Yes, I definitely studied Italian in prison, which isn't necessarily.
say that there was like a course that I could take.
You didn't need one.
Yeah.
Yeah, yell at you in Italian until you figure out what they want.
But yeah, I taught myself going back to the female practice of blaming oneself.
I was convinced that the fact that I didn't speak Italian well enough was a huge reason why all
of this happened to me.
And so I really put in a ton of time and energy into trying to understand people and
trying to make myself understood.
And I was suddenly in an environment where to survive, I had to do that.
Because it's not like I was put into, it was not a foreign exchange situation where I was in
a household with really like doting foster parents who were like walking you through how
to speak.
Like, no, like suddenly I was in an environment where no one gave a shit about me.
And a lot of people are struggling with mental illness and personal trauma.
so I am the farthest thing from their mind.
And I am locked in a room with them for 22 hours a day.
So this was my reality.
And the way that I managed that was I immediately took a dictionary at like I asked for a dictionary.
They gave me a dictionary.
And I meticulously worked through whatever books I could get my hands on,
just kind of word for word translating.
trying to read, trying to learn the language, and then on my own, spending hours and hours and
hours a day, practicing how to conjugate different sentences in different ways. So like I was at a point
in my Italian where I was familiar enough with the present and the past tense, but there are all
these complicating factors like, what would I have done? What will be the thing? And so like there
were all these subtleties of language that I was unable to convey that I spent so much time
just like filling pages and pages with, I walked to the store, I would walk to the store,
I would have walked to the store, and just like trying to get it into my brain how it was
the language is working and therefore how to understand what people were saying to me.
Do you like speaking Italian or does it just bring back too many bad memories? Like, oh, that's the
language from when I was locked up unfairly for four years?
It's both.
So I am a language file and I love being bilingual.
I speak Italian happily with friends who speak Italian.
I have Italian friends and I speak and I want to speak it with my children when I eventually
have children.
I have a lot of good memories from speaking Italian and I can speak Italian.
Farley Italiano?
No.
Okay.
I was about to say, we could have a lot.
No, my moment was going to be in German and then you're like, yeah, I can say cheese.
And I was like, yeah, well, fuck this then.
It's not happening.
Actually, I have a really great story about cheese and German, but I'll get back to that.
Yeah, we can circle around in that one.
There are moments where I get triggered in a bad way.
An example of that is when sort of early on when I got back home, I was invited to come to a international film festival thing.
And again, it was like I had to keep it on the down low. I really didn't want to be seen. And I arrived and the movie happened to be not just in Italian, but in Napolitano dialect. And Napolitano dialect was the most common dialect that I heard in prison. And there were certain phrases that I had only ever heard in prison that were being used in prison. That were being used in prison. And there were certain phrases that I had certain phrases that I had only ever heard in prison. And there were being used. And there were
being used in that movie, like a fatchiti, which means like come to the window, but in the case of
prison, it means come to the prison door. And I had a panic attack. I couldn't breathe. I felt
immediately claustrophobic in this movie theater surrounded by people, and I had to leave.
Wow.
I left because I couldn't deal with it. I have moments like those less and less, but every time I do
hear Italian, like if I just happen to be in my world and I hear someone speaking Italian,
immediately I feel like, you know, deer in headlights a little bit. I immediately sort of tense
up and I listen because I'm, I irrationally think that this Italian person has recognized me
and is talking about me. And that sounds paranoid, but that has happened before where like I've
been somewhere and I was visiting a castle and I was on a tour and of course the two Italian
people on the bus recognize me and start talking about me. Oh. I wonder if like Italian people
realize that I do speak Italian and I can understand them. And actually I did a kind of like power
move on them where later like as we are all in a group sort of like having lunch, um, I went up to them
and I was like, chow.
Come my bath.
Yeah, like I hear you.
I understand what you're saying.
All those things you weren't sure if I understood,
I want you to think about what you said
for the rest of this meal and wonder if I understood.
Yeah, that is a power move.
Did you have any positive relationships behind bars
or was it all just kind of like strip searches
and like yelling at you and stuff?
So I did have some positive relationships.
The first one that's very obvious that comes to mind
is the priest was a very, very kind man.
I am not this person.
In fact, I am actively anti-religious,
but my best friend in the prison was the priest.
He was a very, very, very sweet man.
And he really loved music.
And at every opportunity,
he offered me the opportunity to come into his office
and play guitar.
And, you know, these were moments where I was
to be coming down and doing confession. And he would like waste hours of confession time with me
so that I could play guitar because I had no other opportunity to do so. He was just the sweetest guy.
He is. He's still, he's just retired now. He doesn't go to the prison anymore, which is a shame
because I think that he brought his kindness into a place that was really lacking in that.
which isn't to say that I had always terrible experiences with guards.
I had worse experiences with male guards than I did with female guards for obvious reasons.
There is a special, special kind of relationship between a prisoner and a guard because as a prisoner,
you are 100% at the mercy of the guard.
And they have 100% the right to do anything to your body.
Dang.
They can strip search you.
They can cavity search you.
They can hit you if they feel the need to.
Like, this is all stuff that you understand is your relationship with that person who holds the key.
And some guards were nice in a sort of casual way, would say good morning.
All of them were fairly personally distant.
I think I only ever learned the name of two guards.
otherwise they were always called agente and if you asked them their name they were very resistant
to ever telling you their name so there was definitely this sort of like emotional distance between
you and the guard even if they were you know kind and said good morning to you there was this
understanding that at the end of the day they're locking you in they're strip searching you
they're going through your stuff and taking things away from you like this is their job and so
So they themselves have to emotionally distance themselves.
Sure.
Yeah, and it's also a safety thing.
I mean, for guards in any prison, but an Italian prison for sure.
Like, we don't have to go down that road.
But I wonder about the lack of human touch or healthy human touch.
I mean, that's why I brought up strip searches, not to be all like pervy,
but because, like, is the only time you're getting touched is when someone's like,
did you hide something in your butt?
Like, you know, that sounds awful.
And again, I'm not trying to make light of it, but like, it's such a weird situation
where no one is nice to you or no one's touching you
unless it's victimizing.
Yeah, that's huge.
I got to the point where it was a big, big thing
for me to be able to sit across
from my family members and actually hold their hands.
When I was being visited,
it wasn't like the movies where you're behind the glass
and you have the phone.
I was lucky enough where I didn't have that situation.
The visitation was, you know, a small room
where there were tables and we sat at the table
and we could hold hands and we could hug at the beginning
and end of the visitation.
So I was able to get that kind of touch,
but it got to the point where I was flinchy
and I didn't like to be touched.
And I am a very, very physically affectionate person.
I just, I hold things and I touch them.
My cats love it because I'm just super cuddly with them.
And my husband, I'm super, super cuddly.
And that's another one of the reasons why people were like,
oh my God, Amanda, she's like a latched onto her boyfriend
and sitting in his lap in the days following.
the murder and it's like, well, I was seeking comfort and my comfort is like sitting in someone's
lap. Like, that's where I feel safe. So anyway, I got flinchy and I got weird about being touched
and, you know, for that to happen to me is a big thing. And it's one of the reasons why, like, so often,
you know, I can't speak to male prisons because I know that a lot of it is assault and not
consensual. But in female prisons, there's a lot of seeking of that sort of physically affectionate
touch that would otherwise be taboo to that person in the free world. Like, you know, there's that
stereotype of people becoming by in prison. And it's not so much, I mean, from what I saw,
and I actually wrote an article about this a while ago, was it wasn't that like people were
suddenly becoming sexually aroused by the women around them. It was that starvation of human
connection and a feeling of any kind of intimacy. And often that intimacy was simply expressed by
this is the person I hold hands with because I need someone to hold hands with and who is
meaningful to me and that's my person. It's so sad. And also so amazing the way that human beings
adapt to really, really harsh environments and find ways to experience each other's humanity
despite amazing limitations.
This is the Jordan Harbinger show with our guest Amanda Knox.
We'll be right back.
Stay tuned after the show.
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Kevin talks about why starting a billion-dollar company is actually easier now than ever before,
how to pivot your business or your career, and whether or not billionaires get FOMO.
That's coming up right here after the show close.
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And now for the conclusion of our episode with Amanda Knox.
this was obviously the worst part of your life
and you'd never want anyone to go through it.
I wonder if there's anything that you got out of it
where you're like, this was actually a gift
or is it just all darkness?
And don't say I had a lot of time to read.
I feel like that's too cliche.
I did have so much time to read.
I was forced to plumb the depths of myself to survive.
and I had to grasp at any strand, however, frail of strength or hope or endurance or whatever whatever
in order to get through what I went through.
And in the process, I learned to know myself in a way that I did not before.
that is a valuable experience that I am grateful for, but it's, again, not a guaranteed
experience. It's not like everyone who goes to prison successfully plums their depths and
gets to know their limitations and doesn't get utterly, horrifically traumatized for the rest of their
life from having to go through that. I can't say that I am not a broken person because of that.
I think and I'm often told that I come across as a resilient person who can articulate
myself now and can actually have relationships with people.
Like, I'm grateful that I'm able to do that after all of that.
It's not guaranteed.
So I'm grateful that however I was able to do that, I mostly thank my family that I never
actually had to be genuinely alone to feel utterly alone.
alone, I think that would have destroyed me. That would have been a limit for me. And I was not forced
to go past that limit. So I think that I found my limit, but I wasn't forced to go past it, and I'm
grateful. Yeah, no kidding. Day to day, do you think about the prison experience, or is it mostly
kind of compartmentalized until some jerk like me sits you down and ask you a bunch of questions about it?
I think about it a lot. And not just because I spend a lot, like my work now is really focused on true crime. You know, I have my podcast, The Truth About True Crime. I write for an outlet called CrimeStory.com. I look into cases and I interview people who have been formally incarcerated. So this is like on my mind all the time. But also, I always feel like I'm trying to translate those.
formative years of my life that I spent in prison to the free world. And I don't know if that's because
prison left so much of impression upon me or if it's because I happened to have turned into an
adult in that environment. There's that double thing that's happening where I literally went from
being a child to an adult in prison. And was that because of prison or was that because of
age, was it a combination of both, but I'm constantly comparing the free world to prison,
even as my memories and the sort of feeling of proximity to prison diminishes. You know,
I don't have nightmares about guards feeling me up, and I don't like turn the corner and
forget that I'm in my house and I think I'm in a prison block. Like, I don't have those moments,
but I have that lingering feeling of dread
that never goes away.
It's something I struggle with.
You don't get to be anonymous ever.
Most of us never think about this sort of thing
because we're never in a position to be famous, infamous,
whatever we want to label it for something we did do,
for something we did do, whatever.
Most of us are just like,
we just are anonymous people that live our lives.
You don't really know if someone's befriending you
because they're like,
oh, I'm going to saddle up to Amanda Knox.
or like, you noted that you can't make certain jokes because everything you say is under scrutiny.
Like, you had this nickname Foxy Noxie that was like your soccer nickname, but then the press picked it up.
And you said something earlier, like, you can't fetishize that.
And I was like, we're going to see that shit on Reddit later from somebody.
She's like, look, she's using words like this.
Like, everything is under scrutiny.
What is it like knowing that many of the people you meet in your day-to-day life will have
judged you before they even met you?
Like, can you go to Walmart?
Or are people like, holy shit, Amanda?
Look, dude, that girl from Netflix is here.
Get down here.
It's a combination.
So it's not like everywhere I go, I have to wear sunglasses and a hat, right?
A lot of times I am recognized, but people don't know why they recognize me.
And even when, like, you know, it'll happen where I need to call customer service because my Internet's not working.
And they'll be like, oh, you're Amanda Knox.
Did you care about that case about that girl named Amanda Knox?
Is that you?
Oh, God.
And that's like, I try to remember what place that's coming from.
Like, most people are genuinely just curious about other human beings.
And I don't hold that against them.
Right.
It is disconcerting.
And I think one of the reasons why I've sort of leaned in to the fact that I am recognizing
is a sort of even just defense mechanism
where I think like there is no way
to preface this.
A lot of people are like Amanda,
why don't you just fucking disappear already?
Like why do you have to have an Instagram account
and why do you have to go around
talking about wrongful convictions all the time?
Why don't you just disappear?
If you really want to hide,
if you really want to hide, why don't you hide?
And there are two reasons for that.
One, well, there are multiple reasons for that.
I think there's more than two.
One is the fact that I don't like the idea of having to hide from my own life.
This was a thing that happened to me.
It's real.
And part of that is being recognized for that.
Like, not to say that, like, I care about being recognized that I went through a thing.
It's more like, I can't get call customer service without someone being like,
Amanda Knox.
I've heard that name.
Yeah.
Does it get my internet faster if I'm the girl from the Netflix documentary?
If not, let's just continue.
Yeah.
or like I can't get on like I'm afraid to get on the ferry because there's this one like I live on an island and I have to take a ferry to get there and there's this guy on the ferry who works for the ferry who like is always weird with me like he always wants to ask me questions about the case anyway like so it's like a thing and part of it is like okay well if this is my world then this is my world and I'm not going to like pretend that that's not my world and in fact I'm going to acknowledge.
that this is, you know, being recognizable for a thing can be a good thing and can be a bad thing.
And if I only take the bad and don't take the good, which is having a platform where I can talk
about these issues that I've thought deeply about and experienced firsthand, then I'm not making
the best of a bad situation. So on the one hand, I'm trying to make the best of a bad situation.
and on the other hand like fuck y'all like why are you being mean to me and and i think it's also just a
process of like continuing to process my own experience like it is it is and i know that if i
know that if i stare directly at something that scares me in the face i have a better chance
of facing up to it i can't be constantly running from what scares me and so
So I've tried to embrace the various goods and bads that come with being me.
I've tried to understand why people give me a hard time about my own wedding and, like, get mad at me.
I saw that.
I saw that.
That shit pissed me off.
I never say stuff like this, but that just made me angry for you.
I didn't know you then, obviously, at all.
I just, like I said, before the show, I went to go congratulate you like, hey, you went
through this rough thing.
And what I saw on Twitter just made me hate humans.
I was like, this people are just, this is just horrible.
I know, you have to really try hard not to hate human beings after experiencing Twitter.
That's true, universal truth, yeah.
Yeah, we're not our best selves on the internet.
And I think that as we spend and wrap our identities more and more around who we are on the internet,
that is going to lead a lot of people to be very damaged.
I think a lot of people who are lashing out are actually people who are damaged.
Totally.
They hurt themselves and are like projecting their hurt onto other people.
So I try to remember that when people are attacking me and I'm more or less successful
when it comes to my own emotional stability.
And I'm also trying to like acknowledge that the world is changing and human beings are relating
to each other in new ways.
and I can't just write off a whole new way that we're relating to each other as just bad.
Like everything is literally not good or bad. It's just how you use it. And all of us are baby
internet social media users right now. And so we're all acting like babies. And as we become
more familiar with the medium and understand its limits and its strengths, my hope is that
will be more sophisticated and thoughtful and not seek to constantly use everything as a club
to hit other people with. I find that people are really short-sighted about harm and the way
that they harm people. And I don't know why that's been sort of my takeaway from everything.
It's just like the myriad of ways that harm can happen and trying to mitigate that and
trying to promote a different kind of human interaction while also sort of maintaining my own
emotional distance and sanity. But that's why I like the work that I do now. I don't know.
You, I mean, you're a podcaster. I love podcasting because it gives me time to like spend
meaningful time with another human being. And then to take that, I mean, I don't know about you,
but I do a lot of taking and sitting with the material,
trying to understand what the person was intending to say.
Because I think, I don't know if you'll find this in a lot of interviews,
I found that people take time to realize what it is they mean.
And so a lot of times, like a five-minute response,
the really thing that they want to say is the thing at the very end
where they finally check out what they want to say.
And so I do a lot of thinking about like how people are communicating,
what does it mean, and how do I translate that so that their voice is being authentically
represented, and their intentions are being authentically represented?
I was surprised to hear that you had podcast, because I thought, like, talk about someone
who's definitely sick of journalism.
It's going to be Amanda Knox.
Like, the worst guy in the Netflix documentary about a brutal situation is this guy, Nick
Pisa or whatever, who's just like this totally unlikable guy.
and everyone kind of agrees.
I thought, oh my gosh, I got to Google this guy.
And the top comments are like,
this is the worst person on Netflix right now.
And it's not Amanda, it's this journalist
who's just like such a punchable guy.
And I thought, this is a woman who's so sick of journalism.
She's probably never going to read a newspaper again,
let alone write for one.
Yeah, I kind of felt bad for Nick Kiza
because he sort of came to represent all of the bad behavior of people.
And he certainly was one of them,
but he sort of came to represent all.
of them and therefore had all of the ire directed at him.
Yeah. And I felt like some of that deserved to be spread to other people who hadn't been
involved in the documentary. Right. So again, like when I think about how social media or any
other thing is not good or bad, it's just a tool. I am very, very, you know, upset and
impatient with bad journalism. But having gone through it, my
I can easily recognize what is good journalism and what is bad journalism. And I can understand
having been the person who's been interrogated and interviewed and talked about and treated like a
thing. And I recognize how journalists do that, either maliciously or just out of ignorance for not
having ever been in that position. And I try to do a kind of journalism that is
both responsible and compassionate and truth-driven.
That isn't in the business of black and white thinking
and fetishizing or vilifying human beings that are involved.
Do you get a little heart pain when you get a Google alert for your name or something?
Like I wonder that and like, are you ever,
there's got to be this thing in the back of your mind where like,
if someone's choking on a pork chop or something,
you're just like, I can't be around this.
I can't be near you if you're going to go ahead and croak.
like I'm out. I can't be a near it.
Yeah, it's a running joke in the household that no one's allowed to die around me.
Not even close to near me.
But more like dread whenever I, like I do have a Google alert for myself because I do
journalism and trying to put a lot of my stuff out there.
And I'm trying to see like if people are having access to the things that I put out into
the world.
But every time I get that once a week Google email, I get dread.
I feel dread.
because I just learned to expect the worst.
And I very rarely am pleasantly surprised.
Right, sure.
I was like, what's the opposite of disappointed?
Think fast.
Yeah.
Do you ever wonder if people know who you are
when you meet them at first,
but then they don't want to let on?
Like, they don't want to say anything
because they think it's weird.
Do you ever try to read them?
Like, does this person know who I am?
Or are you over that?
So I don't get out that much.
by design, well, especially right now.
Yeah, well, especially right now.
And, you know, I feel bad for all the people who are extreme extroverts who are living in, like, tiny little apartments by themselves.
Because I'm very comfortably at home with my partner and I have a craft room.
And, like, I'm doing way better than most people surviving quarantine.
I can still do my work here, you know.
I often get the impression that someone,
is maybe weirdly, like, and I say weirdly, not as a judgment of them, but just because I
continue to find it odd or like weird for me, when people are really excited to meet me,
like it's super touching and it's especially touching when young women approach me and say,
I really saw myself in what you went through. And thank you for speaking about things that
I like intuitively experienced and understood but couldn't articulate.
Like that's really meaningful to me when someone says like,
thank you for articulating this truth that I hadn't yet articulated to myself,
but is like totally real.
That is super, super validating to me.
And it's something that I'm always trying to do.
I'm also always surprised when people are like,
oh my God, you want to talk to me?
And I'm like, well, sure, you know, you're a person.
And I'm like, I'm a person.
I'm just a person, you know.
I don't often get people being like negative weird to my face because I think people avoid me
if they are negative weird to my face. And it's more like when it's bad, it's when people are
very, very feel entitled to my time and to who I am. Like, again, the person who would stop me
while I'm trying to get on a ferry. Yeah. That's frustrating. But I think,
mostly my experiences have been surprisingly positive because most of the people who reach out to me
are people who are saying like thank you this thing that you either the thing that you've been through
or better yet like the thing that you did like because the thing that like is so weird about my
situation is most people know me for something I didn't do yeah bizarre and I know that
It is very, very, very unlikely that any accomplishment that I ever do in this life will out-compete the spotlight thing that I didn't do.
Yeah, you got to invent cold fusion or something.
Yeah, well, working on it.
But it doesn't stop me from doing like the work that I do.
And I have a small but like dedicated audience of people who are interested in what I have to say about things.
and I try to earn that by doing all the homework that I possibly can and to think as hard as I can
about the situations that are in front of me because I understand that even if only 10 people
listen to my podcast, like those 10 people are going to come away with an idea about another
human being. And that is real. That's a real responsibility. And I try to like do my best,
to, you know, there's too many people in the world for us to really genuinely imagine as human beings.
And so, like, maintain in our mind, like, this is a human being just like me.
And so, like, with my podcast, I want to spend, like, an hour with someone saying,
here's a human being.
And even if that person after the podcast, like, forgets that that, you know, subject person is a human being,
at least for an hour, they spent some time being like, that person's a human being.
And that's good.
So, well, I applaud the way that you have handled yourself in the face of this.
I'm so sorry for what's happened to you.
Of course, you've heard that all the time.
I do think, you know, your life has definitely taken a turn when you resort to starting a podcast, though.
I got to rib you on that one.
It's the best.
I love it because I get to be safe at home with my cats.
One of them is over here, licking his butt.
Nice.
Those of you watching on YouTube, get a nice view of that.
And I just get to spend time thinking about.
people's lives and trying to do for them what other people didn't do for me. Whether you're
guilty or innocent, like there's a human being behind every story and that human being can almost
always be completely understood, even just as like a person is making mistakes and is coming from a
place of hurt or coming from a place of fear or who knows, you know? So yeah, I spend all my day
of working on stuff like that.
And it's really hard because it takes me constantly back
to places that hurt me, but it feels meaningful.
You think you'd be sick of true crime by now,
but you do have a different perspective.
I mean, you certainly have deep experience
seeing a criminal investigation up way too close for comfort,
I would imagine.
That's unique.
I was not a true crime person before all of this.
I was not, I wasn't reading detective novels.
Like, I was not me.
It was just so ironic for me, of all people, to be plunged into this and become this sort of like true crime figure.
But what it is what it is and making the best of a bad situation, I'm just trying to take what I've learned from how my case was treated and apply a better lens to other people's cases.
I wonder, this is the final question, just in case, because I know we get a little over.
Sorry for that.
Have you reached out at all to Meredith's family?
Like, I assume you've tried.
I don't know if they would, are they receptive to you being not guilty, or is it like,
are they not ready for that?
So the honest answer is I don't know how receptive or not they are.
I have not attempted to reach out to them for a very, very long time.
I'm also sort of coming around to the position that it's not up to me to establish contact
with them.
because I didn't do anything to them.
And, you know, if one day they want to talk to me about what happened, I'm happy to do so.
But I don't feel that that is something that is something I have to do.
I would like to.
I would really, really like to because we all went through something incredibly traumatic
and we all lost someone that we cared about.
and like what happened to Meredith fundamentally changed their lives and my life.
So we have that in common and we share that.
But like so much has happened and their lawyers were particularly ruthless towards me.
And that caused incredible harm.
And I'm at a place where I would like to talk to them, but I'm not going out of my way to make it happen.
Amanda Knox, thank you so much. You're really open about this, and I just, it's really impressive. I don't know if I'd be the same in your shoes, but I'd like to think I would be like, now I'm going to be a criminal justice advocate, but I don't know, I might just disappear, you know? I ask myself every day, like, should I keep doing this? Is this too hard and is it hurting me or is whatever I'm going through worth it because I can help someone else along the line? And maybe I'm also helping myself by,
working through stuff that is just too hard.
And maybe this is my therapy for myself.
I don't know.
But thanks for having me.
And if you don't mind, can I just pitch?
Like, please follow me on.
Yeah, that's where we're going.
That's where we're going.
Do it.
I'm on Instagram at a mom-and-ox.
You can find my recent journalism work at crime story.com.
And actually, the Truth About True Crime podcast is turning into a Facebook show,
a Facebook watch show.
Oh, wow.
There are going to be new episodes coming out every Tuesday starting July 21st.
So if you follow me or Sundance TV on Facebook, you can get updates on that.
And that's what's going on.
Perfect.
Thank you so much.
I talked a little bit with Amanda offline slash after and even before the show.
It really is insightful.
You know, those of us that thought she was guilty, those of us that thought she wasn't,
really if she's guilty, it means that she's the ultimate figure to fear.
On the other hand, if she's not guilty, if she's innocent, it means everyone's vulnerable.
This could happen to anyone, and that is everybody's nightmare.
Because we all want to know who the bad people are as long as it's not us.
And life's not fair.
You just never think you're going to be the witch who's burned at the stake.
Some things I really didn't understand about the story.
For example, in prison, they gave her a blood test and they told her she had HIV.
It turned out to just be a huge lie.
I mean, they just really emotionally psychologically tortured her while she was.
was in prison, along with four freaking trials. And this is just an absolute indictment. Not that we needed
more, but an indictment of outrage culture. A lot of people had their worst side aimed right at Amanda.
They were bullying her in the tabloids, bullying her on TV. They're bullying her even now on social
media and in articles, especially the tabloids, what do you expect? But it's just unbelievable.
Really hard not to lose faith in humanity if you're in a position like she is. I mean, imagine thinking
This is what strangers can do.
This is how strangers can make you feel.
Maybe I don't want to get to know anybody anymore.
And she really is passionate about wrongful conviction.
It's easy to forget about the collateral damage we do sometimes
when we get whipped up into a frenzy as citizens as a society
were outraged at situations like Amanda Knox,
but also there are a lot of people behind bars that didn't do anything.
They're innocent, and they're still there.
She actually had some guilt around getting so much.
much attention for her case, much more so than others in similar situations. Some of that might be because
of her ethnicity or her gender. We don't know. She speculates, not me. I really hope you all got something
from this conversation. Thank you to Amanda. Her podcasts will be linked in the show notes. Links to the
documentary on Netflix will also be in the show notes. Please use our website. If you buy anything like
books, it does help support the show. Worksheets for the episode in the show notes, transcripts in the
show notes, there's a video of this interview on our YouTube channel, or there will be, at
Jordan Harbinger.com slash YouTube. Hit me on LinkedIn or Twitter and Instagram at Jordan Harbinger.
I'm teaching you how to connect with great people and manage relationships using systems and tiny
habits over at our six-minute networking course, which is free over at Jordan Harbinger.com
slash course. Make sure you dig that well before you get thirsty. Most of the guests on the show
subscribe to the course, so come join us. You'll be in smart company. This show is created an
with Podcast 1 and my amazing team, including Jen Harbinger,
Jace Sanderson, Robert Fogart, Ian Baird, Millio Campbell, and Gabriel Mizrahi.
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I think I did it in a way that most people don't.
I just wanted to work on my own.
I wanted the chance to build something from scratch, quote, unquote, my way.
I didn't know it was going to be a startup.
It was just me.
I was fudsoning around with ideas.
I just need space, a table, and my old laptop, and a few ideas.
It took more than a few to get to Instagram.
But that was the way I did it back then.
We think there's a reason why startups started by, like, 20-year-olds.
you can go hard to 4 a.m. every single day or maybe even longer.
You don't get sick. Like, you don't really have kids.
And that's part of the beautiful thing about entrepreneurship is that you can make a lot happen with a few people, highly leveraged.
And if you stay healthy, everything goes well.
We talked a lot about having, like, one tap magic.
All Instagram was was, was like that hour and a half in Photoshop in 0.5 seconds at the beginning, going down to what, five milliseconds towards the end.
rarely does your plan A work out, so you have to be able to be quick to move to where the fire starts.
You can't wheel lightning is what I'm saying.
YouTube was a dating site.
It's crazy.
That's wild to think about it.
But you can go back and you can actually see in the way back machine like what it looked like way back in the day.
And it's striking, actually.
I hope in startups, there will be this moment where retro is cool again.
We're like, people are like, we don't have an app.
We're just on the web.
For more from Kevin Sistram, including how to get honest feedback from others and when you should and should not listen to it, check out episode 335 right here on the Jordan Harbinger show.
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