Federica Torzullo's disappearance: "Blood found everywhere."
Traces of blood were found in the home, on the car, and on the work clothes of her husband, who is already under investigation for murder. The 41-year-old woman has not been heard from since January 8th.Per restare aggiornato entra nel nostro canale Whatsapp
The femicide hypothesis is increasingly likely in the case of Federica Torzullo, the 41-year-old woman who has been missing since January 8th in Anguillara Sabazia, in the province of Rome. Traces of blood were found throughout her home, on her husband's work clothes, inside his car , in a quarry, and on a machine belonging to the business owned by the man, who is already under investigation for voluntary manslaughter. The investigations were conducted by the Carabinieri of Anguillara Sabazia and the Carabinieri investigative unit of Ostia, supported by the RIS (Italian Special Investigative Unit) of Rome, and found "traces of blood everywhere," according to a statement signed by Civitavecchia Prosecutor Alberto Liguori, who is coordinating the investigation.
This week, with the results coming soon, further "unique technical DNA tests" will be conducted to further clarify the circumstances of the case. A review of the video surveillance system, which also monitors the family home, shows that Federica has not left the house since 7:30 PM on January 8th, and while awaiting the results of the ongoing technical tests, her cell phone records no activity outside the home. Her husband, however, left the house the following day around 7:30 AM to go to work. Nothing is missing from the house except his purse and cell phone . The investigation is focusing on the husband, who lived with the woman and their 10-year-old son in the home. There are serious clues against him, but investigators are attempting to cross-check his statements to "completely reconstruct the incident, identify the motive," and identify any other individuals who may be responsible.
For this reason, the Civitavecchia prosecutor has also launched an appeal: "A call to those responsible for this serious incident to contact" the Carabinieri and the prosecutor's office "and cooperate to put an end, first and foremost, to the torment of relatives and friends who are holding on to the hope of finding Federica, and also to benefit from future, more lenient penalties provided by law." The Civitavecchia prosecutor's office "takes this opportunity to urge anyone with useful information on the matter to provide it to the Carabinieri in Anguillara Sabazia and Ostia." After searches of the bed of nearby Lake Bracciano, investigations at her husband's earthmoving company, and surveys at a landfill in Anguillara, the situation now awaits clarification with DNA tests, which may provide answers to a disappearance that still appears to be unexplained.
(Unioneonline)
