Amanda Knox and her fiancé are now shooting down claims that they are crowdfunding their intergalactic-themed wedding, according to a report.

Knox, the cleared former murder suspect once dubbed “Foxy Knoxy,” and her fiancé, Christopher Robinson, have created a website linked to a publicly accessible wedding registry.

“I did not put it out there expecting to get a dime from anyone,” the Seattle native told ABC News.

On Sunday, she discussed her upcoming nuptials on social media and included a link to their “wedding story” site, which featured a button connecting viewers to the registry.

“Our wedding registry was never meant to be a crowdfunding source. It was meant for our family and friends and any well-wishers that I have” to see and participate in, the 32-year-old told ABC.

“I have a lot of haters in this world but I have a lot of family friends and supporters as well. I wanted to share with them this fun, creative idea.”

Knox was studying abroad in Perugia, Italy, when she was accused of helping then-beau Raffaele Sollecito kill her roommate, Meredith Kercher, in a supposed sex game gone wrong in 2007.

The pair were convicted, acquitted on appeal, then convicted and acquitted again.

Last month, she returned to Italy for the first time since her prison release in 2011 to speak at an event for the Italy Innocence Project.

The couple said on their crowdfunding page that they had “scant time to plan” for their trip overseas and “no financial backing” — so they hoped to raise $10,000 for their space-themed wedding.

The registry does not solicit traditional items for newlyweds such as place settings or blenders.

“Let’s face it, we don’t need any more stuff. What we do need is help putting on the best party ever for our family and friends!” the couple writes on the site.

“We’re big nerds when it all comes down to it,” Knox said in explaining the out-of-this-world theme, adding that “we’re taking a very nontraditional route to our wedding.”

She said she posted on social media about the Feb. 29, 2020, wedding out of her excitement.

“I didn’t have my normal restraint in deciding whether or not to share something with the world,” she told ABC. “I suppose I should have anticipated the hateful response and the utterly misrepresented response that the media had.”