Milan, 15 May (LaPresse) – Andrea Sempio's DNA is in the hands of the investigating magistrate who convicted the misdirection in the Garlasco murder investigation: the case involving the black bicycle that was never seized for seven years until 2014. This episode led to the conviction of the local Carabinieri commander, Marshal Francesco Marchetto, who has been interviewed several times in recent months about the “mysteries” surrounding the murder of Chiara Poggi. It is one of the many twists and turns in a story that has lasted almost 18 years, involving not only suspects and suspects but also investigators, public prosecutors and magistrates. This is the case of the judge from Pavia, Daniela Garlaschelli. From Friday morning, she will be in charge of the preliminary hearing for the maxi genetic consultation on the DNA of Sempio, Alberto Stasi and other men, to be compared with the “biological samples and evidence” never analysed on the nails of the victim, who was killed on 13 August 2007. She is the same judge who, on 23 September 2016, sentenced carabiniere Marchetto to two and a half years' imprisonment for perjury and ordered him to pay compensation to the Poggi family for lying in the first trial of Alberto Stasi in 2009, in which Poggi's ex-boyfriend was acquitted by judge Stefano Vitelli. With his statements, Marchetto allegedly influenced “the decision, diverting the course from the objective of authentic and genuine procedural truth” and, with his “conduct” before and after that testimony, cast “shadows” on his “work”.

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