Little Fatima fell too far, three and a half meters away from the railings of the gallery in the center of the courtyard.

Therefore, the hypothesis has not "slipped from the hands" of Azhar Mossine, the 32-year-old Moroccan in prison for manslaughter who spoke of a tragic accident while playing "fly fly" with the child.

The Prosecutor complains that the man may have committed fraud, because with his behavior Mossine would have accepted the risk of endangering the little girl. But the first technical investigations related to the autopsy reopen the trail of voluntary murder.

From the first technical checks, the child did not fall vertically, but performed a parable before landing in the courtyard. If the launch had occurred perpendicular to the ground and then Fatima had slipped from his hands, the little girl would first have hit the canopy of the balcony and - before ending up on the ground - would have also hit the 40 centimeters of shelter that protrude from the gallery below.

All elements that must be ascertained by a kinetic consultation that the Prosecutor could entrust to an engineer to calculate the parabola of the little body.

The coroner also analyzed a video recorded by a surveillance camera: but the electronic eye points down and only the last moments of the tragedy are seen, so it is a film of little importance for the investigators.

More important, however, is the version of Lucia Chinelli, mother of the little girl and companion of Mohssine Azhar. First he said he had not witnessed the scene, then, listened again, he said quite the opposite: “I was upstairs with them too. Mohssine and I had argued, he was angry. First he threw it on the ground, then threw it on purpose underneath ”.

Both versions contrast with that of the arrested: “I was playing with her, I threw her in the air and caught her, then she slipped from my hands. I loved her, that little girl was a daughter to me and I would never have hurt her ”.

(Unioneonline / L)

© Riproduzione riservata