Italy ordered to pay Amanda Knox after ECHR found country guilty of breaching her rights when she spent years in prison for a murder of which she was later acquitted

Italy has been ordered to pay €18,400 (£16,000) to US citizen Amanda Knox, who spent years in prison for a murder of which she was later acquitted.

Ms Knox’s long-running legal battle was closely followed by global media during years of retrials and appeals.

She took Italy to court over her initial treatment by Italian police, alleging her rights had been violated.

The European Court of Human Rights said Ms Knox had not had proper access to a lawyer and interpreter.

Ms Knox has been fully acquitted of the murder charge, and her case related to her last outstanding conviction for “malicious accusation” – she had briefly, under questioning, accused another innocent person of the murder.

In a statement, the ECHR said she was interviewed “without legal assistance, at a time when there was a criminal charge against her” without any exceptional circumstances to justify it.

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