A dramatic turn of events on the sidelines of the trial for the murder of Nada Cella, the young secretary of accountant Marco Soracco killed in her office way back in 1996 in Chiavari (Genoa), a mystery that has never been solved. At the trial underway in Genoa against Annalucia Cecere, accused of the crime, her brother Maurizio was heard yesterday, who, speaking outside the courtroom with journalists, said: "My sister may have killed. If she is contradicted, she becomes incredibly mean. If Nada answered her rudely that day, maybe she started hitting her."

Words that go to marry the thesis of the prosecution, according to which the murderer killed Nada Cella in a fit of jealousy. In court, however, the man said other things confirming that his sister is an irritable woman. Maurizio explained that, after learning that the investigation had been reopened and his sister was involved, he began to ask her questions. "She told me that she had not killed her. She did not want to speak on the phone, she told me that she could be tapped and called me on phones that were not hers. She has always been an irritable woman, who would get angry if you contradicted her. If she made a mistake, she must pay."

Before him, the judges heard the testimony of an ex-boyfriend, Adelmo Roda. " She was possessive and jealous," he explained in court. "When she got angry, it was impossible to make her see reason. She was explosive with words. My mother said I had to leave her because she had a son. I continued to see her when we broke up, we would meet at the Dolce Vita to dance. I went with my group, she with hers. I also saw her with Soracco. When the investigation was reopened, she looked for me: she continued to ask me questions about our relationship, she continued to say that it had ended after Nada's murder, but in reality it had ended before."

One of the pieces of evidence that was lost was a button from a jacket that the defendant, according to the prosecution, had lost at the scene of the murder. Buttons similar to the one found in the victim's blood were also at Cecere's house but were later lost. "As for the buttons, I knew that she had taken them from my jacket because she liked them. But I had taken that jacket back when our relationship ended, so before the murder," said the ex-boyfriend. Also on the buttons, a collector and former producer, Stefano Cannara, was interviewed, who confirmed that the button found under the secretary's body was compatible with those found at Cecere's house a few days after the crime. But that they were also very common.

(Online Union)

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