The Cagliari RIS conducted a new inspection of Conca Entosa, the family property of Emanuele Ragnedda, the 41-year-old businessman from Arzachena who confessed to the murder of Cinzia Pinna, 33, from Castelsardo.

This morning, shortly after 10:00 a.m., the Carabinieri, in the presence of the murderer's lawyer, Luca Montella, entered the property between Palau and Arzachena to carry out further tests, this time ballistic tests, on the farmhouse where the woman was killed with three gunshots to the face on the night between September 11th and 12th.

Investigators want to reconstruct the entire dynamics of the murder and compare it with Ragnedda's statements.

Meanwhile, Ragnedda's review hearing has been set for Wednesday, October 15th in the Sassari Courthouse, following the request for release from prison filed by his lawyer, who challenged the precautionary detention order.

The Tempio Pausania Prosecutor's Office continues its investigation to shed light on some of the businessman's unclear details, both regarding the circumstances of the crime and what happened in the hours and days that followed. There are many uncertainties surrounding the confession, which took place at the Palau police station on the afternoon of September 24, twelve days after the murder.

In particular, the issues that the investors and prosecutor Noemi Mancini are seeking to resolve concern the involvement of other people in cleaning the farmhouse in the days following the crime. Currently, two people remain under investigation for aiding and abetting: Luca Franciosi, a 26-year-old from Lombardy, who has not yet been interviewed by the prosecutor's office (but will be interviewed in the coming days: he has always maintained an alibi that contradicts Ragnedda's claims of involvement), and Rosa Maria Elvo, a fifty-year-old from San Pantaleo. The woman may have already been interviewed privately by investigators and has reportedly confirmed her initial statement, namely that Ragnedda told her he had killed a dog inside the farmhouse. This would explain the presence of blood on the sofa and the need to purchase a new one.

The Prosecutor's Office also has a witness who reported seeing two people inside the estate cleaning up the crime scene. "Nothing new for the defense," commented lawyer Luca Montella this morning shortly before entering the estate to witness the new findings.

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