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Amanda Knox paid $30,000 from Italian government for human rights abuses over murder investigation

The Italian government will pay Amanda Knox over “human rights abuses” after she was wrongfully convicted of murder, but the amount wasn’t quite the millions she was asking for.

Amanda Knox Thankful for Overturned Murder Charge

Amanda Knox has been awarded a $A30,000 pay out after winning a European Human Rights Court case against the Italian government.

Knox, 31, had been originally convicted of the brutal sex murder of British student Meredith Kercher, 20, found semi naked with her throat slashed.

At the court, she said Italian police had infringed her rights by failing to provide her with a lawyer, an interpreter and not following proper procedure, reports The Sun.

She also insisted she had been slapped by police during questioning but judges ruled there was no proof of that.

Amanda Knox, left, with her mother in 2015. Picture: AP
Amanda Knox, left, with her mother in 2015. Picture: AP

They wrote: “There was insufficient evidence to conclude that Ms Knox had actually sustained the inhuman or degrading treatment of which she had complained.”

Within minutes of the decision, Knox, who now lives in Seattle, issued a statement again insisting she was hit.

She said: “I was interrogated for 53 hours over five days, without a lawyer, in a language I understood maybe as well as a 10 year old.

Amanda Knox Documentary trailer

“When I told police I had no idea who had killed Meredith I was slapped in the back of the head and told to ‘Remember.’”

Knox was arrested in 2007 after she told police she “vaguely remembered” another man murdering Meredith in the house they shared in Perugia, Italy.

Amanda Knox said she was physically assaulted by Italian police. Picture: Netflix
Amanda Knox said she was physically assaulted by Italian police. Picture: Netflix

HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATION

Police used this as evidence to arrest bar owner Patrick Lumumba in connection with the murder but he was later released without charge.

The ECHR said in its ruling Italian authorities had “violated” her human rights and had “irreparably undermined the fairness of the proceedings as a whole”.

They were also critical of the interpreter she was initially given who was in fact a local police officer.

Knox was initially convicted of murder along with her then boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito in 2007 and served four years before being cleared and released.

Under the complex Italian legal system she and Sollecito were eventually definitively acquitted of murder in 2015.

Amanda Knox says roommate Meredith Kercher was “like a big sister”. Picture: Supplied
Amanda Knox says roommate Meredith Kercher was “like a big sister”. Picture: Supplied

The conviction for maliciously accusing Lumumba still stands and was what she was arguing against in the ECHR.

Last night the Kercher family, from Surrey in the UK, declined to comment but a source said: “For them its always been a matter of justice for Meredith.”

MISCARRIAGE OF JUSTICE

“It appears the charge of malicious accusation still stands but all the family wants to do is get on with their lives, while never forgetting Meredith.”

Their lawyer Francesco Maresca said: “Yet again it has been confirmed there was no physical abuse of Amanda Knox.

“The Kercher family feels dissatisfaction with the Strasbourg court’s rulings along with the outcome of the judicial process in Italy.”

Amanda Knox now lives in Seattle. Picture: Netflix
Amanda Knox now lives in Seattle. Picture: Netflix

Knox’s Italian lawyer Carlo Dalla Vedova said: “This was the biggest miscarriage of Italian justice in the last 50 years.

“A massive damage was done to this girl.

“It is impossible to compensate Amanda for four years in prison for a mistake. There will be no amount.

“We are not looking for compensation of damages. We are doing this on principal.”

This story was originally published in The Sun and is reprinted with permission.

Originally published as Amanda Knox paid $30,000 from Italian government for human rights abuses over murder investigation

Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/world/amanda-knox-paid-30000-from-italian-government-for-human-rights-abuses-over-murder-investigation/news-story/7d16e94ae7c562241f17c2e542bc9166