The main difference is really the individuals and the social dynamics. There are any number of cases where teenagers have formed a pack and killed one of their peers. The circumstances are all over the map, but the common denominator is that the kids in question have problems.
Here's a
drawing that was found in Kelly Ellard's locker at school:
http://www.friendsofamanda.org/kelly_ellard_cartoon.gif
Interesting find, CW
And what, pray tell, do you make of Knox's penchant for authoring and posting
short stories about rape/ stalking/ violence against young women?
Or the infamous 'German machine gun pose', the self-described "inner Nazi", and the taunting of a Jewish coworker?
Drawings in a locker. Stories on a MySpace page. I see no significant difference: Both Ellard and Knox appear to have been troubled young women. A number of psychologists have been quoted in news articles espousing the view that Knox is suffering from antisocial PD/ sociopathy. As yet, I can see no reason to doubt them.
Have you read what Knox wrote - DURING HER TRIAL - under the name "Marie Pace" for submission to some sort of 'prison writing contest'?! (I could not believe my eyes! Her lawyers must have come very close to stroking out!)
There seems to be more than a passing 'preoccupation' with writing stories about sexual violence against young women (and not from the victim's POV), replete with a drug/ intoxication 'motif'. Against this 'backdrop' we also have a police-issued citation/ conviction in court for a rock-throwing incident/ "Residential Disturbance", and the abuse of street drugs and alcohol to the point of memory loss.
Knox was far from "problem free" prior to the Nov 1/07 murder.
Admit it.
I think it's very, very interesting that, in your claim about having met Knox at some point in time after the murder (I'll take you at your word), you almost seem to gush about how 'sweet' and 'charming' you found Knox to be.
It reminds me of a professor I had in undergrad, for a course in "Abnormal Psychology": he told us that, based on his 20 some odd years of practice, he knew he likely had a sociopath for a patient when he found himself taking an
immediate liking to him/her.
Apparently, sociopaths can be quite (superficially) "charming" when meeting someone for the first time because they literally do not care what anyone thinks about them - a trait which makes them very relaxed when 'breaking the ice'.
According to my old prof, it's the sociopath's relaxed/ 'at ease' demeanor that puts us at ease when meeting them and, as a result, we often have positive feelings about the sociopath we've just met. Simply put, there is no 'ice' to break with a sociopath.
The rest of us ('non-sociopaths'), however, are apt to be at least a little nervous (if not frozen in a block of ice) when meeting someone for the first time: we worry about making a good impression, saying the right things, looking our best, etc.. We CARE, deeply, what others think about us. As a result, we come across as a little tense/ uneasy/ stiff and, in turn, that will make others feel uneasy/ a little less-than-positive about us, initially. It takes time to melt the ice.
PS On the subject of antisocial PD and Knox, I couldn't help but take note of the fact that Knox said she 'never felt embarrassed' and apparently thought nothing of spontaneously bursting into song in a restaurant without regard for the feelings/ sensibilities of others.
Knox's friends and family see the same behavior the psychologists are noting, but they write it off to "eccentricity"/ "immaturity"/ "child-like innocence"/ "Amanda just being Amanda."
I'm leaning more toward the psychologists.