Diocletus
Illuminator
- Joined
- May 19, 2011
- Messages
- 3,969
Regardless of any appeal that might be pending with the ECHR (and frankly I think they will toss it out as being beneath consideration - but I could be wrong) her plain duty is to have paid Lumumba until such time as the court award is made null and void (i.e. likely never). As I've said, failure to do so just makes any weasel-worded apology from Knox absolutely meaningless.
I have no idea why anyone thinks that she should be paying money to Lumumba at this point. She has a live appeal pending to the ECHR that may eviscerate the basis for the Lumumba judgment. She has no "duty" to voluntarily satisfy the judgment under those circumstances.
Lumumba is not without rights: if he really thinks that she should be paying now, he can take his judgment to where Knox has her assets and attempt to enforce it. Why hasn't he done that? I'll tell you why: he knows that the judgment would be unenforceable in a different country because it is based on a coerced statement.
It's certainly possible that the ECtHR appeal could be tossed. That said, there are plenty of cases that the ECHR has decided amount to a HR violation on facts that are not as compelling as the facts in this case.
FWIW, I think that the ECHR will hear this case and will find that there was an HR violation, but that the final determination of that will not come for about 4 years. I wonder what happens in the meantime, and what happens afterwards. I mean, it's clear that the convictions would have to be annulled in order to cure the HR violation, but would Italy bother to retry the case?