Disappeared on 30 December from his accommodation in Cusano Milanino (Milan), the charred corpse found on 21 January in Cerro Maggiore in an abandoned factory. Today the turning point, with his son Lorenzo who was arrested for the murder.

Stormy quarrels, a difficult coexistence and finally the latest discussion that resulted in the violence that led to the death of the 65-year-old Carmine D'Errico.

Lorenzo, who lived with the victim for a whole month, including in "Who has seen it", has launched numerous desperate appeals to his father to return home. Yet according to the investigators he was the author of the murder: in his story they found several inconsistencies that prompted them to investigate.

This morning the Carabinieri of the Ris of Parma, together with the colleagues of the Investigative Unit of Milan and those of the Sesto San Giovanni company, entered the house seized by the Monza magistrates in search of traces, especially blood, to decree whether the 65-year-old was killed and whether the crime took place inside his home.

They found numerous traces of blood inside the house and also signs of dragging, D'Errico was then killed in the house and then his body taken by car to Cerro Maggiore.

Even before the arrest Lorenzo had admitted the difficult relationship with his father, which pushed him to spend his days locked in his room. On the evening of the disappearance, he said, he had not even noticed that the man had gone out "to go get a pizza", in pajamas and slippers. In fact, the man had not gone out, not alone and not alive.

Another element that aroused suspicion was the discovery of the victim's car, several days after his disappearance, just over three hundred meters from home, when it initially seemed to have disappeared into thin air. In addition, in the garage of the villa, the carabinieri seized a gun, not regularly held by either the father or the son, complete with bullets.

The definitive turning point came with the identification of that charred corpse found by chance by three young people who entered the disused structure to make a music video. It belongs to Carmine D'Errico, at which point the handcuffs were released for his son Lorenzo.

(Unioneonline / L)

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