6 Jun 2024

Amanda Knox reconvicted in slander case

6:05 am on 6 June 2024
US Amanda Knox (C) arrives with her husband Christopher Robinson (L) at the courthouse in Florence, on June 5, 2024 before a hearing in a slander case, related to her jailing and later acquittal for the murder of her British roommate in 2007. The American was only 20 when she and her Italian then-boyfriend were arrested for the brutal killing of 21-year-old fellow student Meredith Kercher at the girls' shared home in Perugia. The murder began a long legal saga where Knox was found guilty, acquitted, found guilty again and finally cleared of all charges in 2015. (Photo by Tiziana FABI / AFP)

Amanda Knox, centre, leaves a courthouse in Florence with her her husband, Christopher Robinson, on 5 June, 2024. Photo: AFP

A court in Florence has reconvicted Amanda Knox for slander, years after she was acquitted of murdering her British roommate Meredith Kercher in 2007.

Knox will not go to prison as she has already served four years for the murder, for which she was originally convicted.

At the time she was also convicted of slander for blaming the murder on local bar owner Patrick Lumumba during police interrogation, but that conviction was quashed last year and a retrial ordered.

Read more:

Amanda Knox is back in court: What you need to know

Knox's lawyers have said they expect to appeal against the latest verdict.

They added that Knox was disappointed as she was hoping to finally clear her name after years of legal battles.

Patrick Lumumba, a bar owner who was originally jailed for the murder of Meredith Kercher, leaves the Italy's Supreme Court in Rome on March 25, 2015. The court will examine the verdict that found Raffaele Sollecito and his former lover American Amanda Knox guilty of killing British student Meredith Kercher in the Italian university town of Perugia in 2007, in a case that has captivated the world with its sub-texts of drugs, alleged sexual debauchery and police bungling.      AFP PHOTO / FILIPPO MONTEFORTE (Photo by FILIPPO MONTEFORTE / AFP)

Patrick Lumumba, pictured outside Italy's Supreme Court in Rome on 25 March, 2015. Photo: AFP

She told the court on Wednesday that police had coerced her into implicating Lumumba.

"The police threatened me with 30 years in prison, an officer slapped me three times saying 'Remember, remember'," Knox, 36, said.

"I'm very sorry that I wasn't strong enough to withstand the pressure from the police," she added, speaking in Italian.

(FILES) Reproduction made on November 6, 2007 of an undated picture showing British exchange student Meredith Kercher who was murdered in Perugia.  An Italian court on June 5, 2024 reconvicted Amanda Knox of slander for accusing an innocent man of killing her British roommate in 2007, a murder she herself was jailed for before being acquitted. The American wept in court in Florence as she was sentenced to three years already served for having accused, during police questioning, a Congolese bar owner of murdering 21-year-old Meredith Kercher. (Photo by Handout / ITALIAN POLICE / AFP)

Meredith Kercher Photo: AFP / Italian police

"I never wanted to slander Patrick. He was my friend, he took care of me and consoled me for the loss of my friend (Meredith). I'm sorry I wasn't able to resist the pressure and that he suffered."

Lumumba was arrested in connection with the 2007 murder and spent two weeks behind bars, but was released without charge after a customer gave him an alibi.

Despite this, his lawyers said the case has affected his reputation, and that he "became known everywhere as the monster of Perugia".

His lawyer told reporters outside the courthouse before the hearing: "He lost his job, had his bar seized for months, and had to return to Poland, because his wife was Polish."

Lumumba was not in court.

The hearing was held behind closed doors, and audio and video recording was prohibited.

Language exchange students who shared a house

Knox was famously tried, convicted and later acquitted for the murder of 21-year-old student Kercher, originally from south London.

Knox and Kercher were both language exchange students sharing a house in the university town of Perugia in 2007.

Kercher, 21, was found dead in their house. Her throat had been cut and she had been sexually assaulted.

The trial was the subject of global media interest because prosecutors argued that Kercher was the victim of a drug-fuelled sex game gone wrong.

Knox, her then-boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito, and a third person called Rudy Guede were convicted of murder and sexual violence in December 2009 and jailed. Knox was convicted of slandering Lumumba in 2011.

But the same year, a jury freed Knox and Sollecito on appeal after doubts emerged over forensic evidence used against them, and Knox returned to the US after spending four years in prison.

The duo's guilty verdicts were reinstated in 2014 then ultimately overturned in 2015.

Knox is now married with two young children, and is a campaigner for criminal justice reform. She returned to Italy five years ago to address a conference on wrongful conviction, where she spoke of the pain of being tried by the media.

The trial was also the subject of a Netflix documentary in 2016, and Knox also published a memoir about her time in prison.

Sollecito has kept a low-profile since his release. In 2017, he told the BBC that the case had left him in debt.

Guede - a Perugian resident originally from the Ivory Coast - was linked to the scene by DNA evidence and is the only person whose conviction for Kercher's murder was upheld. He was released early in 2021.

This story was first published by the BBC.

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