Italy’s top court clears Amanda Knox of murder
Former student and Italian ex-boyfriend both acquitted of killing UK student Meredith Kercher in Perugia in 2007.
Italy’s top court has cleared Amanda Knox of the 2007 murder of British student Meredith Kercher, bringing an end to the eight-year legal drama.
Judges at the Court of Cassation on Friday also cleared Knox’s Italian ex-boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito after ten hours of deliberations in Rome.
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“I have spoken to Amanda and just told her about the verdict of definitive acquittal. Obviously she is very happy,” said Knox’s lawyer Carlo Dalla Vedova.
“At last the error has been put right by the Court of Cassation.”
Sollecito’s lawyer Giulia Bongiorno reacted to the shock verdict by shouting “yes, yes, yes” and leaping into the arms of one of her colleagues.
“You never saw Raffaele pleading, or praying. He has been a rock,” she said.
“He is at home with his father and he is very happy. The verdict has proved him completely right.”
Jailed for four years
Knox and Sollecito were convicted for a second time last year for taking part in the brutal knife slaying of Kercher, with whom Knox, then 20, shared a house in the university town of Perugia.
The pair served four years in prison – two on remand before their initial conviction in 2009 and two more before they were freed on appeal.
That decision was subsequently overturned and a retrial in Florence last year reinstated the guilty verdicts that were finally quashed on Friday.
Knox’s conviction for slander, which relates to a statement in which she tried to incriminate a Congolese bar owner for the murder, was not overturned but the time she served in prison more than covers the sentence for that.
A Seattle-based representative for Amanda Knox said he was “overjoyed” after her acquittal, adding that “the truth has won out.”
“I personally feel overjoyed that the truth has won out, that she is innocent,” said David Marriott, a spokesman for Knox who referred additional questions to her US lawyer, calling the verdict “unexpected.”