amanda knox is now back home here in seattle after spending nearly four years in an italian prison. she was released after appealing her murder conviction. but she remains haunted by the nightmare that began to unfold when she was just a young student. amanda knox was going into her junior year of college. her mother etta recalls amanda the fresh-faced 20-year-old intent on adventure. she was going to study an broutd, going into college somewhere. she didn t know where yet. amanda would decide on perugia,ity la. her sister deanna remembers when she moved into this house which she shared with three other girls, two italians and bun one british constituent named meredith kercher. why was she so set on that apartment. i think it s because of the people really. it was close to the college and her roommates are the sweetest people in the world. but after only six weeks in italy, on the night of november 1st, 2007, amanda s overseas adventure would take a bizarre turn
the tabloids. now in a dramatic turn of events, amanda knox is free after being convicted of murder abroad. amanda knox is now back home here in seattle after spending nearly four years in an italian prison. she was released after appealing her murder conviction. but she remains haunted by the nightmare that began to unfold when she was just a young student. amanda knox was going into her junior year of college. her mother etta recalls amanda the fresh-faced 20-year-old intent on adventure. she was going to study abroad, going into college somewhere. she didn t know where yet. amanda would decide on perugia, italy. her sister deanna remembers when she moved into this house which she shared with three other girls, two italians and one britting student named meredith kercher. why was she so set on that apartment? i think it s because of the people really. it was close to the college and her roommates are the sweetest people in the world. but after only six weeks i
be taken out of a lab, put in an envelope, dropped in a mailbox, and people would die. robert stevens the first to die. natural cause or my husband s death certificate said homicide. originally from england, the 70s, stevens and his wife moved to florida. he worked for america media incorporated, a tabloid publisher. no one could say they didn t like him. it s full of life, he loved everybody. in early october, 2001, stevens has what seems like the flu. two days later, slurred speech and a trip to the hospital. it s anthrax. now i get shivers. and then she said, the cdc the fbi, and the president has been informed. i was in shock. robert stevens dies the next day. anthrax had shut down his vital organs. he was just the perfect person to me. and i miss him. my heart is still not in one piece yet. labwork reveals the anthrax that killed stevens called the a strain. it was a lab strain. it was not out there in the wild. david wilman, a pulgtser prize-winni
from the cnn center in atlanta, georgia, this is your cnn sunday morning for october 9. 6:00 a.m. in atlanta. i m t.j. holmes. as always, we want to say a special good morning to our service men and women watching us right now, the american forces network. thank you for being here, and thank you for what you do. let s talk about the president first and the jobs bill. this is going to be an important week. in just a couple of days, the president s jobs bill will get an important test. the senate is expected to vote on his $447 billion package. the congressional budget office says the plan s tax on millionaires would raise an estimated $453 billion. still, republican leaders, they don t like that tax. the president this weekend, we heard from him. he s pushing ahead anyway. some see this as class warfare. i see it as a simple choice. we can either keep taxes exactly as they are for millionaires and approximatelynair and billionaires, or we can ask them to pay at least the