The 39-year-old motorist, an Italian of Moroccan origin, under investigation for multiple road homicides for crashing at very high speed into a car parked at the toll booth of the Ghisolfa motorway barrier on the A4 Turin-Milan A4 and killing two women (Laura Amato and Claudia Turconi ) tested positive for cannabis and benzodiazepines.

This is what we learn after the tests he was subjected to, after the launch of the investigations coordinated by the Milanese prosecutor Paolo Filippini.

The investigations also aim to investigate whether or not the man has mental problems and in this regard the magistrate has instructed the Polstrada di Novara to listen to the wife of the 39-year-old, resident in the province of Piacenza, and to acquire the medical records of the hospital where he was came in last Thursday after going into a rage.

Precisely from the medical records and the doctors' testimonies, the investigators and investigators aim to ascertain whether the benzodiazepines were administered to him by the health personnel and, moreover, whether he was discharged or voluntarily left the hospital.

The man, who is now hospitalized in psychiatry at San Carlo in Milan and who has never been subjected to Tso, also had his cell phone confiscated to understand if he was on the phone or sending messages in the moments before the fatal accident.

From the images of the cameras, a car would be seen pulling straight ahead at high speed as if the driver had not seen the toll booth. For this reason we want to ascertain whether he was distracted or under the effects of a cocktail of benzodiazepines and drugs.

(Unioneonline/lf)

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