Mystery on the death of Davide Calvia, a climate of poisons
Summary trials and heavy accusations against the surviving cousin: complaints are not excluded. While waiting for Giovannino Pinna to be heard by the investigatorsPer restare aggiornato entra nel nostro canale Whatsapp
It is a climate poisoned by accusations and trials on social media that has arisen after the discovery of the death of Davide Calvia, the thirty-eight year old from Sassari found dead on the beach of Platamona ten days after the shipwreck, off the coast of Stintino, of the small boat on which he had gone out with his cousin Giovannino Pinna, who instead had survived: 24 hours after the accident he was among the rocks in Marritza.
The survivor is being investigated for culpable shipwreck: an indictment, the one formulated by the Sassari prosecutor's office, which does not see him directly accused of the death of Calvia, with whom he had gone out on a diving trip that ended in tragedy. But the silence he has kept so far on what happened that dramatic evening of April 12 is fueling harsh positions by the victim's closest family members. And it is not excluded that his lawyer, Luca Barrocu, may file complaints. Also to try to stem the drift of rumors and assumptions.
Some photos of Pinna have even been published on Facebook, in a group created with the intention of having the truth about the end of Calvia, the one requested by her sister Nadia: he is portrayed at the bar with other people. A fact that for his detractors would not be compatible with the state of malaise and shock that would prevent him from speaking with the investigators, who have been waiting to hear from him since he was discharged from the Santissima Annunziata hospital, where he was hospitalized in critical condition immediately after find on the beach. Pinna could be heard in the coming days.
And perhaps his words could give an answer to the question of questions, in this story: what caused the death of Davide Calvia?
On the body, recognized only thanks to the tattoos after the long stay at sea, injuries were found, such as a wound to. The prosecutor, based on the autopsy, does not exclude that those injuries may have been caused by the collision with the rocks. But not even that it was something else that caused them. Those who investigate are moving with lead feet, to shed light on a delicate matter that is fueling more and more tensions as the days go by. And the times of ordinary justice - which follows precise paths - are slower than summary justice. The answers will come, the investigation goes on.
Henry Fresu