"He has to pay. I'm the first one to make him pay. " For Cinzia Pinna's family, "I have no words. I'm crying first for them and then for my son." And again: "Certain things are unforgivable, they can't be forgiven."

The statements of Nicolina Giagheddu, mother of Emanuele Ragnedda, the forty-one-year-old who confessed to the murder of the thirty-three-year-old from Castelsardo, are very harsh.

The woman, her voice broken when she spoke about the victim and confident when referring to her son, spoke in front of the Conca Entosa estate, where on the night between September 11th and 12th the businessman fired several shots at Cinzia Pinna, then hid her body near a tree in the fenced-in grounds.

Video di Andrea Busia 

"An autistic child who came here once asked me if this was heaven. I replied, 'Do you think it's heaven?' He replied, 'Yes.' Well, he turned it into hell. So he deserves hell," the woman continued. " Conca Entosa is a piece of my heart." That land that had been left to her by his father and that she had passed on to her son to start his winemaking business: "I believed in his project and entrusted it to him. I didn't feel guilty about that. I've always told my son 'free will,' but that doesn't mean you can take a life, kill a girl, a soul."

This grief-stricken woman asks "forgiveness from Cinzia Pinna's family. I can only ask them for forgiveness."

To understand what happened in the hours and days following the crime , prosecutor Noemi Mancini and chief prosecutor Gregorio Capasso began work this afternoon on the property in the countryside between Arzachena and Palau, along with a panel of experts: coroner Salvatore Lorenzoni, forensic entomologist Valentina Bugelli, and forensic toxicologist Silvio Chericoni. Consultants representing the parties are also participating in the inspection.

It remains to be determined whether Cinzia Pinna's body was moved. Attention is also focused on some of the furnishings inside the farmhouse.

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