Research on the murder of Fausto and Iaio, the two boys killed on March 18, 1978 near the Leoncavallo Social Center, in Milan, have been reopened. This was decided by Judge Maria Idria Gurgo de Castelmenaedo, hosting the application of Milanese prosecutors Leonardo Lesti and Francesca Crupi. The reopening file had been filed in December 2000 by Judge Clementina Foro, who had evidenced “significant elements” to “position of the subversive right and in particular of those investigated” Massimo Carminati, Claudio Bracci and Mario Corsi. Indications that however at that time they never became evidence. An informative file about the double murder had been opened more than a year ago, after the request sent by Mayor Giuseppe Sala to prosecutor Marcello Viola. On that occasion, the Lesti and Crupi prosecutors asked the Milanese Justice Palace Testing Office to searches to identify what are the bodies of the crime preserved on which new analyzes could eventually be performed. In the place of the murder, then, a blue wool hat was found that, however, was never subjected to verifications and finally did not find among the tests. On the basis of a new report of the Digos, the old investigation was reopened. A dactilographic expertise on the double murder vindication pamphlet is one of the elements in the center of the reopening of the file. As it was learned, possible new clues would have emerged, always in the field of the subversive right, which convinced Judge Maria Idria Gurgo de Castelmenardo to reopen the archived investigation in 2000 at the request of prosecutors Leonardo Lesti and Francesca Crupi. As it was learned, there are numerous documentary checks and testimonies of some people already heard in the past. Fausto Tinelli and Lorenzo “Iaio” Iannucci, both eighteen, were two leftist militants, attendees of the Leoncavallo Social Center in Milan. On March 18, 1978, two days after the kidnapping of Aldo Moro, they were killed in Via Mancinelli, in the Casoretto neighborhood, with eight gun shots made by three professional murderers. The murder, which remained unsolved, is one of the mysteries of the “years of lead.” Fausto (born in Trento in 1959) and Iaio (born in Milan in 1959) were inseparable friends, raised in the Casoretto neighborhood. They were not militants of parties, but they sympathized with the extraparliamentary left, in particular Lotta continues, and participated in the activities of the Leoncavallo, a meeting point for politically active young people. In recent months, they were working on a dossier on heroin traffic in Milan, the “White Book of Heroin”, which analyzed drug trafficking in their neighborhood, often linked to extreme right groups. That night, after one afternoon in the park, they found around 7:30 p.m. at the Piemuntessa Crota, a bar near Leoncavallo. They planned to have dinner at Fausto’s house, where Mother Danila had prepared a risotto, and then returned to the social center for a jazz concert by Roberto Ciotti. At 19:45 they left the bar and headed towards Fausto’s house. In Via Mancinelli, near a kiosk where the headlines about the kidnapping of Moro commented, they were approached by three individuals, one of whom carried a clear waterproof. After a brief exchange of words, the three opened fire with a Beretta 34 caliber 7.65, wrapped in a plastic bag not to leave caps. Iaio died in the spot, reached in the throat; Fausto, reached by seven bullets, died in the ambulance. The murder was immediately claimed by a pamphlet found in Rome, attributed to the “Revolutionary National Army – Franco ANSELMI Combatant Brigade”, a neo -fascist group linked to the Nar (revolutionary armed nuclei). Anselmi, an extreme right militant, had died 12 days before during a robbery. The right -wing political matrix is considered the most likely, but the case was filed in 2000 without guilty, despite “significant indiciarious elements” against figures such as Massimo Carminati, Mario Corsi and Claudio Bracci, linked to the subversive right and the Magliana band. “I am happy that the magistracy has decided to reopen the investigations to clarify and identify the culprits of the murders of Fausto e Iio”: This was said by the president of the Senate Ignazio la Russa when he heard the news of the reopening of the file about the murder of the two young people of the LeonCaval Social Center killed on March 18, 1978. Russa had remembered the two young men – Fausto Tinelli and Lorenzo Iannucci – underlining that the authors of the aggression were not yet known.
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