Lawyers for Amanda Knox, the American woman cleared of murder
in October by an Italian court, have asked an appeals court
there to overturn her slander conviction as well, a spokesman
said.
Knox family spokesman David Marriott said it was not
immediately clear when the appeals court, based in Perugia,
would consider that appeal or issue a ruling.
He said the appeal was filed with the court on Monday by
Italian attorneys for Knox.
The slander conviction stems from statements Knox made under
police questioning in 2007 that falsely implicated bar owner
Patrick Lumumba in the murder of her British housemate,
Meredith Kercher.
Knox, 24, later told the court she was pressured by police
during a lengthy interrogation to accuse Lumumba.
Lumumba, who was arrested in Kercher's murder and jailed for
two weeks, was ultimately cleared of involvement in the
sensational crime and sued Knox for slander.
An Italian court in October overturned Knox's 2009 conviction
for murdering Kercher, 21, a brutal crime prosecutors charged
was committed during a drug-fuelled sexual assault.
Also cleared was Knox's boyfriend, Rafaele Sollecito, leaving
Ivorian drifter Rudy Guede as the only person convicted in a
killing investigators believe was carried out by more than
one person.
Kercher's half-naked body was found, with more than 40 stab
wounds and a deep gash in her throat, in the apartment she
shared with Knox in Perugia.
Knox, a former University of Washington student, was freed
from prison following the ruling and returned home to
Seattle, where she has largely avoided the public eye.
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