Fingerprints and fingerprints are being hunted down to try to shed light on the death of Chiara Jaconis . The thirty-year-old from Padua was killed last Sunday in the Spanish Quarter of Naples by a statuette that fell from one of the many balconies overlooking the street.

The most widely accepted hypothesis at the moment is that the tragedy was caused by a child, who dropped the object while he was on the terrace of his house. And this has led to the notices of investigation against the two parents, for whom the Naples Prosecutor's Office hypothesizes the crimes of manslaughter and failure to supervise. A necessary act, given that this step allows the suspects to appoint their lawyers during the autopsy on the body. But the couple, in front of the prosecutors, denied having ever seen the figurine in question, excluding that the son could have ever had anything to do with it. The "no" of the two is followed by the decision to proceed "by details", which will now become one of the keys to solving the case.

Chiara, after the tragedy, died in hospital two days after the accident. The family has set the funeral of the young woman for next Tuesday, at the Basilica of Santa Giustina in Prato della Valle . In the same place the funeral of Giulia Cecchettin was celebrated.

(Unioneonline/vf)

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