Pamela homicide: found Dna unknown person

What happened in the apartment in via Spalato 124 in Macerata last January 30 when Pamela Mastropietro, the 18-year-old Roman who had left the Pars therapeutic community in Corridonia the day before, was killed and torn to pieces? The discovery of the DNA of a person not involved in the investigation, ascertained by the investigations of the Ris of the carabinieri of Rome filed with the Macerata Prosecutor's Office, raises the doubt that the circle of investigations involving four Nigerians - three are in prison, a fourth and 'under investigation on the loose, accused of willful homicide, insult, destruction and corpse concealment - has not been closed. There are three genetic profiles found on the young woman's body: one is by Innocent Oseghale, 29, the Nigerian who lived in the apartment in via Spalato, who accompanied the young woman to buy a dose of heroin and who then went home. with her; a second belongs to a taxi driver - not investigated - who on January 29, the day before the crime, had talked with the girl; the third is of a person not identified at the moment. Oseghale left footprints in the house and on one of the two trolleys in which the torn body of Pamela was transported to Pollenza; he would also have left a footprint on his blood in the attic apartment. There is no trace, however, of the other two arrested - Desmond Lucky, 22, and Lucky Awelima, 29 - and of the fourth 38-year-old suspect: all of them were involved in particular on the basis of contacts and cell phones. Lucky was also brought up by Oseghale as heroin pusher to the young girl. Now, in particular on the responses of the RIS investigations, the defenders of Lucky and Awelima are preparing to do battle: the suspects have always claimed to be unrelated to the facts. Other details filter on the causes of the girl's death and on her condition before death. According to the toxicological tests performed by prof. Rino Froldi, allegedly took heroin - in all probability not intravenously - in the months preceding his death: the conclusion would derive from the traces of morphine found in various parts of the body but also from the analysis of the hair. The medical examiners, however, exclude death from overdose, by virtue of the level of concentration of the drug; they attribute the cause of death to the two lacerations at the height of the liver found on the corpse, inflicted with a knife with a blade of over 10 cm. Even on this reconstruction the defenses do not agree and are ready to challenge the accusation, offering alternative scenarios.

Pamela homicide: found Dna unknown person

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