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Man convicted of killing Meredith Kercher freed in Italy

Rudy Guede pictured as he arrived at Rome's Fiumicino Airport in 2007 after being extradited from Germany
Rudy Guede pictured as he arrived at Rome's Fiumicino Airport in 2007 after being extradited from Germany

The only person convicted of killing British student Meredith Kercher in Italy is free, granted early release 14 years after the murder, his lawyer said.

Ivorian Rudy Guede was convicted in 2008 for the murder the previous year that also saw Ms Kercher's American flatmate, Amanda Knox, jailed but then acquitted alongside her Italian boyfriend at the time, Raffaele Sollecito.

"Rudy Guede was released at the end of his sentence," his lawyer Fabrizio Ballarini said in a statement to AFP.

He said a magistrate in Viterbo, a city north of Rome where Guede had been in prison, had granted the inmate early release and the order had been signed by Milan prosecutor's office.

Ms Kercher's body was found in November 2007 in the cottage she shared with Ms Knox in the town of Perugia, central Italy.

Guede, who was linked to the murder scene by DNA evidence, was arrested in Germany a few weeks later and, following a fast-track trial in Italy, was sentenced in October 2008 to 30 years for murder and sexual assault.

His sentence was later reduced to 16 years on appeal, and he tried unsuccessfully to have it reviewed following the acquittals of Ms Knox and Mr Sollecito.

Meredith Kercher was murdered in 2007

Ms Knox, a 20-year-old student from Seattle at the time of the murder, served four years of a 26-year sentence before she was acquitted twice, first in 2011 then again in 2015 after a retrial.

Mr Sollecito, who was 23 at the time of the killing and had only been dating Ms Knox for a week, was also acquitted both in 2011 and in 2015.

Raffaele Sollecito

Ms Knox became the focus of frenzied media attention in Britain and the United States over the trial, in which prosecutors painted the murder as a drug-fuelled sex game gone awry.

Amanda Knox pictured at a Criminal Justice Festival at the Law University of Modena in 2019

Guede had already been transferred to the care of social services before his formal release, his lawyer said.
Italian news agency ANSA said this arrangement began last December.

Professor Claudio Mariani, who teaches at the Centre for the Study of Criminology in Viterbo, told ANSA that Guede had volunteered at the charity Caritas and worked in the centre's library.