Florence, June 12 (LaPresse) – During the excavations that began yesterday, also using excavators, in the land surrounding the house in Monsummano (Pistoia) where the 32-year-old Romanian Vasile Frumuzache lived until the day of his arrest — the alleged killer of two compatriots, Denisa Maria Paun Adas, 30, who is believed to have been killed between May 15 and 16 in a room of a residence in Prato, and Ana Maria Andrei, 27, who disappeared on August 1 last year — and in the land at Montecatini Terme (Pistoia) where the remains of the two women’s bodies were found, bone fragments were reportedly discovered, probably a vertebra. The new evidence will be analyzed by the Carabinieri scientific investigations unit in Florence to determine, first of all, whether they belong to a human being.

The magistrates of the Prato prosecutor’s office, who are coordinating the investigation, do not rule out the possibility that the 32-year-old may have committed other murders. However, during the interrogations, including the preliminary hearing before the judge, Vasile Frumuzache confessed to the murders of the two compatriots but denied killing other women. He also stated that he decapitated Denisa in the same residence room where he had killed her and tried to set fire to her head, which was enclosed in a bag, and to her clothes near his home. The Carabinieri reportedly found traces of a fire a few hundred meters from Frumuzache’s house. These clues could partly confirm what the alleged killer described but do not entirely dispel doubts related to the method of the last crime and do not exclude the possibility that the 32-year-old may have had accomplices.

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