Alife – It took the Carabinieri of the Piedimonte Matese Company a short time to bring essential digital teaching tools back into the classroom, having been stolen from the Alife Industrial Technical Institute.
This morning, in fact, the students were able to reunite with the 114 computers stolen on the night of November 24, when unknown assailants broke into the school after forcing a side door, emptying the entire computer lab.
A huge blow: over one hundred thousand euros in value, damage capable of paralyzing lessons and putting the entire school community in difficulty.
The investigation: the trail leads to Naples, in the Don Guanella district.
The Carabinieri's response was swift. The Carabinieri from the Alife station, already engaged in daily surveillance at local institutions, immediately began investigations and inspections.
The trail led to Naples, to Via Oliviero Zuccarini, in the Don Guanella district, where the military located an apartment converted into a storage area for the stolen goods.
Inside the home, occupied by a couple—a 32-year-old and a 28-year-old—all the stolen computers were found. The couple have been charged with receiving stolen goods, while investigations continue to identify the perpetrators.
The return of the PCs took place in the main hall of the "G. Caso" Higher Education Institute in Piedimonte Matese, in the presence of the mayors of Alife, Fernando De Felice, and Piedimonte Matese, Vittorio Civitillo, along with the director of the ITI, Bernarda De Girolamo, who is also deputy mayor of Piedimonte Matese.
During the short ceremony, local authorities expressed gratitude to theCarabinieri for the timeliness and professionalism of the operation, defined as "a gesture that protects not only a material heritage, but the future of students and the entire educational network of the area."





Comments (1)
It's a nice event to bring computers back to school, but I wonder how they could have been stolen so easily. It would be important to have more security to protect school supplies and students.