Milan, Nov. 12 (LaPresse) – The DNA found under Chiara Poggi’s nails is incomplete, mixed, and not attributable to a single individual. This is what LaPresse has learned regarding the genetic results from the evidentiary examination assigned to police forensic expert Denise Albani by Pavia preliminary judge Daniela Garlaschelli, in the investigation by prosecutors Napoleone-Civardi-De Stefano-Rizza involving Andrea Sempio as a suspect for the Garlasco murder and the killing of Chiara Poggi. Through re-examination of the electropherogram profiles, which consultants of both Alberto Stasi’s defense and the Pavia Prosecutor’s Office, Carlo Previderè and Pierangela Grignani, consider “perfectly overlapping” with a sample taken from the Voghera clerk in 2016 from a coffee cup, a spoon, and a water bottle seized by the SKP detective agency during the defense investigation, Albani described the profile as a haplotype, partial, mixed, and not consolidated. This means it traces back to a male paternal line (Y-haplotype), but cannot identify or exclude any single individual; the sequence is incomplete (partial); at least one other male DNA is present but not usable for attribution (mixed); and finally, the three extractions performed in Genoa in 2014 by the expert of the Court of Appeal that convicted Alberto Stasi (Prof. Francesco De Stefano, now irreproducible because the nails no longer exist), were inconsistent and provided unreliable results. The expert has not currently added any assessment regarding the likelihood that Andrea Sempio’s haplotypic profile might also be among the data. Such evaluations will be the subject of the final report to be delivered to the judge and parties at the end of the assignment and before the next hearing on December 18.