Garlasco, Andrea Sempio's mother does not respond to the police and is taken ill
Summoned to shed light on the son's alibi and the case of the kept receiptAndrea Sempio (Ansa)
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Andrea Sempio's mother, summoned yesterday by the Carabinieri of Milan as part of the new investigation by the Pavia Public Prosecutor's Office in which her son is being investigated for the third time for the murder of Chiara Poggi , preferred not to answer questions and also felt unwell.
Daniela Ferrari , 65 years old, accompanied by the lawyer Angela Taccia, who is defending her son together with her colleague Massimo Lovati, showed up at 10 o'clock sharp at the Milan offices of the Provincial Command of the force to be heard for the third time since the day of Chiara's murder, which occurred in Garlasco on 13 August 2007.
Offices that she left about half an hour later, as she listened to the advice of the two lawyers: at the first question she "availed herself" and at the second she felt ill . So much so that when she left the barracks, visibly "shaken" and making her way through a row of cameras and microphones, she slipped into a taxi without saying a word.
"I didn't like this summons. If the prosecutors want to hear the lady, they should summon her to the Pavia Prosecutor's Office," Lovati said, expressing his disappointment with the way the investigation is being conducted. He was the one who advised Sempio's mother to "refrain" from answering.
She should have explained again what time, on the day of the crime, she left home and what errands she ran and what time she returned. She should have reconstructed her son's movements again, after almost 18 years, and also told the story of the parking receipt in Vigevano that the young man, at his parents' suggestion, decided to keep .
And then, among other things, she was asked to provide clarifications regarding an off-camera comment made public by the Le Iene broadcast on how Andrea had become aware of some documents from the 2017 investigation that ended with the case being shelved.
Meanwhile, for Stasi yesterday was the first day of semi-liberty , a benefit granted by the Surveillance Court in recent weeks and which is in a certain sense the antechamber of probation to social services and therefore freedom. Like every morning, the 41-year-old left the prison of Bollate to go to the office, he was then able to dedicate himself to some private activities.
(Online Union)