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Italy’s top court upholds Amanda Knox’s conviction for falsely accusing man of murder

italy’s-top-court-upholds-amanda-knox’s-conviction-for-falsely-accusing-man-of-murder
Italy’s top court upholds Amanda Knox’s conviction for falsely accusing man of murder

Italy’s highest court on Thursday confirmed a slander conviction against US defendant Amanda Knox for accusing an innocent man in her British housemate’s 2007 murder, a sensational case that polarized trial watchers on both sides of the Atlantic.

Knox had appealed the conviction based on a European Court of Human Rights ruling that said her rights had been violated by the police’s failure to provide a lawyer and adequate translator during a long night of questioning just days after Meredith Kercher’s murder.

Judge Monica Boni read the verdict aloud in a courtroom that was empty except for a few reporters and guards. The lawyers for both Knox and the man she wrongly accused, Patrick Lumumba, had gone home.

Amanda Knox's slander conviction was upheld by Italy's top court.

Amanda Knox’s slander conviction was upheld by Italy’s top court. AP Photo/Antonio Calanni, File

Patrick Lumumba, the man Knox falsely accused of murdering Meredith Kercher, leaving court in Rome on Jan. 23, 2025.

Patrick Lumumba, the man Knox falsely accused of murdering Meredith Kercher, leaving court in Rome on Jan. 23, 2025. REUTERS/Guglielmo Mangiapane

Reached by telephone, Lumumba said he was satisified with the verdict. “Amanda was wrong. This sentence has to accompany her for the rest of her life,” he said.

The ruling should bring an end to a sensational 17-year legal saga that saw Knox and her Italian ex-boyfriend convicted and acquitted in flip-flop verdicts in 21-year-old Meredith Kercher’s brutal murder, before being exonerated by the highest Cassation Court in 2015.

The slander conviction against Knox had survived multiple appeals, and Knox was reconvicted on the charge in June after a European court ruling that Italy had violated her human rights cleared the way for a new trial.

Speaking recently on her “Labyrinths” podcast, Knox said: “I hate the fact that I have to live consequences for a crime I did not commit.”

Knox's lawyers Luca Luparia Donati and Carlos Dalla Vedova leaving court in Rome on Jan. 23, 2025.

Knox’s lawyers Luca Luparia Donati and Carlos Dalla Vedova leaving court in Rome on Jan. 23, 2025. REUTERS/Guglielmo Mangiapane

Her defense team says she accused Lumumba, who employed her at a bar in the central Italian university town of Perugia, during a long night of questioning and under pressure from police, who they said fed her false information.

The European Court of Human Rights found that the police deprived her of a lawyer and provided a translator who acted more as a mediator.

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Knox does not risk any more time she jail. She has already served nearly four years during the investigation, initial murder trial and first appeal. Knox said the aim is to clear her name of all criminal wrongdoing.

Knox returned to the United States in 2011, after being freed by an appeals court in Perugia, and has established herself as a global campaigner for the wrongly convicted.

Knox was exonerated in 2015.

Knox was exonerated in 2015. AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File

She has a podcast with her husband and has a new memoir coming out titled, “Free: My Search for Meaning.”

Knox was a 20-year-old student in the central Italian university town of Perugia when Kercher was found stabbed to death on Nov. 2, 2007, in her bedroom in the apartment they shared with two Italian women.

The case made global headlines as suspicion quickly fell on Knox and her boyfriend of just days, Rafaelle Sollecito.

After eight years of trial, including two appeals to Italy’s highest court, they were fully exonerated in the murder in 2015.

Another man, Rudy Hermann Guede, from the Ivory Coast, was convicted of murder after his DNA was found at the crime scene. He was freed in 2021, after serving most of his 16-year sentence.

The European court ordered Italy to pay Knox damages for the police failures, noting she was particularly vulnerable as a foreign student not fluent in Italian.

Italy’s high court ordered the new slander trial based on that ruling. It threw out two signed statements drafted by police falsely accusing Lumumba in the murder, and directed the appellate court that the only evidence it could consider was a hand-written letter she later wrote in English attempting to walk back the accusation.

However, the appellate court in its reasoning said that the four-page memo supported a slander finding.

On the basis of Knox’s statements, Lumumba was brought in for questioning, despite having an ironclad alibi. His business suffered, and he eventually moved to Poland with his Polish wife.

Arriving at court, he underlined that Knox “has never apologized to me.”

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