The fingerprint found on the outside of the garage door of the Garlasco villa where Chiara Poggi was killed on August 13, 2007, belongs to Marco Poggi.

The six fingerprints found on a cellophane cereal package and a garbage bag belong to the victim. Finally , the fingerprints found on the front door of the house belong to a Carabinieri officer who responded to the crime scene.

These are the results of the analyses carried out by Giovanni Di Censo, the new expert appointed by the investigating judge as part of the preliminary investigation into Andrea Sempio.

On September 26, Di Censo was commissioned by investigating judge Daniela Garlaschelli to conduct further tests on both the acetate sheets and the garbage debris found at the Poggi home the day after Chiara's murder. The samples from the thirty acetate sheets, which contained approximately fifty fingerprints, were destroyed a few months ago after being subjected to DNA analysis. Since those tests concluded that the extracted material was insufficient to identify genetic traces, fingerprints were taken.

The judge's expert deemed only two traces useful, both found outside, one on the house's front door and the other on the garage door. The first belongs to a Carabinieri officer who responded to the crime scene immediately after the crime, while the second belongs to Marco Poggi, Chiara's brother. As for the fingerprints on the garbage, Di Censo believes they are all Chiara's: four on the clear cereal container and two—less defined—on the blue garbage bag.

Therefore, even from this expert investigation , no elements emerged to support the hypothesis cultivated by the Pavia Prosecutor's Office , that is, that the culprit of Chiara's murder could be Andrea Sempio in collusion with other people.

(Unioneonline)

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