San Marino. She had told her husband and the Gendarmerie that she had been attacked by a black man who, after demanding money, had physically assaulted her. In response, her husband organized a punitive raid on the migrant shelter in Valdragone, San Marino, which was blocked by law enforcement. Now, however, the woman, a 46-year-old originally from Naples and resident on San Marino, has been indicted for feigning a crime, while her husband has been charged with insults aggravated by racial hatred. The husband and wife, as well as an acquaintance of the couple who is also on trial but has since died, are alleged to have been sympathetic to a social media group called "No Migrants" in San Marino. The woman's trial began yesterday, while the husband's trial has not yet been scheduled. At the opening of the hearing, the tax prosecutor, Roberto Cesarini, the public prosecutor in the San Marino case, requested the release of the 46-year-old woman's cell phone records because he suspects that before the woman even called for help, her husband was already at the migrant shelter. Furthermore, there are CCTV cameras at the scene of the simulated attack, indicating that no one approached the woman on the evening in question. The first-instance judge, Roberto Battaglino, reserved his decision on the prosecutor's request for an expert examination of the phone records, and the hearing was adjourned.
Naples - A mother living in the Spanish Quarter will appear before the Naples Court next September to answer for alleged failure to comply with her minor son's compulsory education. According to the prosecution's case, the woman was identified as responsible for fulfilling the child's compulsory education and allegedly failed to ensure regular attendance at school.
The case that rocked Rome's halls of power officially heads to court. Maria Rosaria Boccia, the Pompeii entrepreneur at the center of the scandal that led to the resignation of former Culture Minister Gennaro Sangiuliano, has been committed for trial. The Rome preliminary hearing judge ruled this at the conclusion of the preliminary hearing, scheduling the trial…
Naples – Forty years after the murder of Giancarlo Siani, the judicial record once again focuses on the fates of his perpetrators. The Naples Court of Appeal today issued its ruling in the second-instance trial, which arose from the Supreme Court's annulment and referral. The trial focused not on the crime itself, but on the flows of money that…
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