Egypt's Court of Cassation on Wednesday overturned death sentences on 136 Islamists and supporters of deposed president Mohamed Morsi, including Muslim Brotherhood Supreme Guide Mohamed Badie, a judicial source has said.
The defendants were accused of storming a police station in the Upper Egyptian city of Minya, killing a police officer and eight other people soon after the dispersal of pro-Morsi sit-ins in August 2013.
Only 36 of a total of 136 defendants have successfully appealed the sentences, and a retrial has been ordered as a result.
According to Egyptian law, a verdict is reversed if one defendant in a case wins an appeal, defence lawyer Mohamed Toson told Ahram Online.
Only those who appealed were present when the court issued the verdict in June 2014. The rest were tried in absentia, including Badie.
In March, Minya court sentenced 529 Morsi supporters to death on charges of murdering a police officer. The court later upheld sentences for 37 of them and sentenced the rest to life in jail.