Here's a quick summary of the Constitutional Court of Italy:TomG, here are some comments on the second section of your post. The comments can't be all-inclusive because we don't know what the Italian government's future actions in the case will be. But we can be fairly confident that Italy will respond to the DEJ/CoM in some document - an action plan laying out some future actions or an action report claiming that the case has now been finally settled and the CoM should issue a resolution declaring the case closed.
There are two nonexclusive paths forward: 1. Review of the Italian government's action to resolve the original ECHR judgment Knox v. Italy and 2. Initiation of a new application by Knox and her lawyers in response to the CSC final judgment re-convicting her of calunnia but supposedly on evidence not used in the original conviction.
For the first path, I believe that any claim by Italy using the re-conviction as justification for closing the case will be rejected by the DEJ/CoM as not meeting the conclusion and spirit of the original final ECHR judgment Knox v. Italy. Italy maintaining that position could lead to it being brought before the ECHR in an infringement of Convention Article 46 case.
The DEJ/CoM, presented with an AP or AR, will tell the Italian government to think of some new way forward, and perhaps offer help. One possibility is that the Italian government could initiate a case with the Constitutional Court of Italy to declare CPP Article 628 bis unconstitutional, because it does not contain a requirement that the ordinary Italian courts treat the final judgments of the ECHR to be treated by those courts as binding in both conclusion and spirit as required by the Convention and ECHR case law. The Constitutional Court would then, pending an act of the Italian parliament, provide the required change on a "temporary" basis. Something of that nature happened in 2011 when the Constitutional Court ruled that CPP Article 630, the law specifying the grounds for revision, was declared unconstitutional because it lacked a provision for revision in the case of an ECHR judgment of an unfair trial (Constitutional Court judgment 113/2011). Revision then became the mechanism for Italy's correction of unfair trials (that were "final") until the parliament passed the law that became CPP Article 628 bis.
The other path, which can proceed in parallel with the first path, is for Knox and her lawyers to file a new application with the ECHR alleging a violation of Convention Article 6.1, unfair trial (along with other relevant Convention articles, such as perhaps 6.2, presumption of innocence). Since the re-conviction is a "new" trial using "new" evidence in a "new" reasoning by the Italian courts, it would be eligible for consideration by the ECHR. The ECHR can very certainly in the new ECHR case declare that the "new" reasoning by the Italian courts is a distortion of its findings in the first Knox v. Italy, and therefore a violation of Convention Article 46. That's a close approximation to stating that it's wrong.
Constitutional Court of Italy - Wikipedia
See:
The legal summary for the decision # 113 of 2011:
In this case the Court considered a reference from the Bologna Court of Appeal concerning the constitutionality of the provision of the Code of Civil [sic; should read: Criminal] Procedure which did not provide for criminal proceedings to be reopened if the original judgment had been ruled unfair by a final judgment of the European Court of Human Rights. The Court ruled that the situation was unconstitutional, and that the relevant provision had to be read as granting the right to request that a criminal trial be reopened under those circumstances.
https://www.cortecostituzionale.it/actionJudgment.do
The purpose of CPP Article 628 bis was to replace the above Constitutional Court temporary fix with a permanent law in the Codice di Procedura Penale.Also, it's important to know that the Italian Constitution, Article 10, states that "The Italian legal system conforms to the generally recognised principles of international law." This means, according to the Constitutional Court, that Italy must obey the treaties it has signed, including the CoE treaty, so that the "binding force" of ECHR judgments must be obeyed as Italian law. The question then is the legal mechanism to do that. The Constitutional Court in its decision #113 of 2011 identified the revision procedure (CPP Articles 629 - 647) as that mechanism to be used until the Italian parliament passed a specific law to accomplish this goal. The specific law passed in 2022 was incorporated as CPP Article 628 bis.*
Note that the Italian Constitutional Court differs from, for example, the US Supreme Court, in that individuals may not appeal or "reference" to it. Only a judge from one of the various Italian courts, the national Italian government, or a regional Italian government can seek a decision of the Constitutional Court on a constitutional question, and the Constitutional Court has no other function (except to try the President of the Republic if he or she is accused of a crime).
* https://www.altalex.com/documents/n...ecuzione-decisioni-corte-europea-diritti-uomo
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That's three you owe me now, Vixen.