Inps clarifications in relation to the Massa Carrara case

The INPS has so far been close to the Biagi family and will continue to be so

In relation to the news appeared in the newspaper La Nazione and relaunched by some news agencies, it is specified that the case has been followed for some time.

The request made by INPS, which aims to recover the sums paid to another victim of Marco Lojola, is legitimate and bound, as recognized by the same family lawyer. The coroner's office recognized an invalidating benefit and considered that there was a causal link between the injuries sustained by the insured and the injury caused by Lojola, ex-husband of the victim's partner, for which INPS is required, pursuant to legislation in force, to recover the sums.

Moreover, given the peculiarity of the story under the human profile, in the 2017 the Massa Carrara Headquarters, before sending a letter aimed at interrupting the prescription, took care to contact the recipients of the letter, with the commitment not to activate for the moment no legal action for forced recovery. The Massa offices have also supported the family for every Inps service due.

In October 2019 the Offices had to send a second warning to interrupt the prescription, without however putting in place any judicial action for the forced recovery of the credit.

So far we have tried to operate with the utmost tact and, as mentioned, the letter has been announced aimed at interrupting the statute of limitations pending the identification of a solution which, in compliance with the law, takes into account the particular situation of the two minor heirs.

In the coming days, the leadership and the local advocacy will resume contact with the family lawyer to identify a solution that would balance the legality and the family situation.

The INPS does not consider instead to comment on the accusations made by a relative of the minors, in the human understanding of a particular state of mind.

The fact:

After the femicide and suicide, INPS today is asking for compensation of 124 thousand euros from the daughters of the dead couple. On 28 July 2013, in Marina di Massa, 40-year-old Marco Loiola shot his ex-wife Cristina Biagi, killing her. Before, however, he had wounded another man with six bullets, who survived and is now 54 years old. For her sickness allowance and disability allowance, INPS asked for compensation from the two daughters, still minors, Loiola and Biagi. The lawyer Francesca Galloni, trusted lawyer of the Biagi family, explains the story, as La Nazione di Massa explains, which publishes the story today. "The INPS request - explains the lawyer - is legitimate even if humanly it remains difficult to understand". And if it is not fulfilled, INPS will pass to compulsory recovery. For the two girls, the risk is to lose their parents' home, which in any case does not cover the request made by INPS.

Inps clarifications in relation to the Massa Carrara case

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