New twist in the case of Manuela Murgia , the sixteen-year-old found dead on February 5, 1995 in the Tuvixeddu canyon: the case is reopened . Last August, the Prosecutor's Office rejected the request to open new investigations. But the girl's family never believed in the suicide theory, continuing their battle. And now there are concrete elements for the turning point: the coroner Roberto Demontis, appointed by Manuela's relatives, has filed a report that led to the reopening of the investigation.

According to the doctor, the sixteen-year-old's body would have wounds and lesions that are not compatible with a fall from several dozen meters. The hypothesis put forward is that she was hit by a car and subsequently thrown into the canyon. And that this could be a realistic path, in these days there could be an inspection by the Police with the experts of the Scientific Department right in Tuvixeddu.

And Manuela's case will be discussed tomorrow evening on Rai2's show, "Detectives, unsolved and solved cases" at 9:20 p.m. The chief of the Cagliari Flying Squad, Emanuele Fattori (who recently became head of the Catania Flying Squad), who followed the case, and the Videolina journalist, Luca Neri, who covered the story for TV, will be speaking.

Further details and insights in the article by Francesco Pinna and Matteo Vercelli on newsstands today and on the L'Unione digital app.

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