Naples - "It was the first time since I've held an institutional role that I haven't attended the inauguration of the judicial year, but I consider the accusations made against the judiciary too serious. I didn't feel like respecting the protocol."
Nicola Gratteri, Naples' chief prosecutor, said this in an interview published today in 'La Stampa'. The head of the Neapolitan prosecutors then added: ''I think we all have to thank the minister Nordius because he managed to do what no one else had managed to do: make the judiciary united and compact.
I no longer had any hope; it hadn't happened since the massacres. Thanks to him, now all magistrates, whether affiliated with currents or not, criminal lawyers, civil lawyers, are united and united like never before.
Irony on Nordio: "He managed to make the judiciary united and compact"
And instead on the separation of careers he underlines: "It serves to weaken the public prosecutor. Often, people cry scandal and call for career separation after a high-profile acquittal. But excuse me: if the judge acquitted, what's the point of career separation?
He would only have it if he convicted and it was discovered that he colluded with the prosecutor, as colleagues. On the contrary, an acquittal, whether excellent or not, is symptomatic of the judge's autonomy from the public prosecutor.
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