Naples. After years of legal battles and dramatic turns of events, the 2013 fire that destroyed part of the City of Science remains a mystery. The fourth section of the Naples Court of Appeal has definitively acquitted Paolo Cammarota, the former security guard who had always been identified as the prime suspect.
A verdict that closes a long and tormented chapter, but leaves a wound still bleeding: who started the fire that devastated a symbol of culture and scientific research in Naples?
Cammarota, represented by Vincenza Giamundo, was acquitted of the fire and subsequent collapse charges "because he did not commit the crime." "A fair sentence," the lawyer commented, emphasizing how his client was used as a scapegoat.
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The case went through three levels of judgment, with always different outcomes. Convicted in the first instance, acquitted on appeal and then convicted again, Cammarota was finally definitively acquitted.
Despite long investigations and multiple trials, the mystery surrounding the fire of City of Science The case remains unsolved. The lack of a culprit leaves a sense of incompleteness and raises questions about the true circumstances of the fire. The sentencing reasons, which will be filed within 90 days, could provide new insights into this story that has shaken the city of Naples.






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