Home » News » because in prison he is monitored on sight – Il Tempo

because in prison he is monitored on sight – Il Tempo

He is monitored on sight, the prison police officers are responsible day and night to ensure that he does not carry out self-harming acts. A precaution determined, it is explained, by two reasons: by the desire to take his own life expressed by him before the death of Giulia Cecchettin and when he told the German agents that he had thought about ending it but that he didn’t have the courage, and by the outcry media coverage of the story. «In prisons the alarm is at its highest after the beating of Alberto Scagni in Sanremo prison, convicted of killing his sister. Those detained for crimes such as the one Turetta allegedly committed are monitored on sight because they are possible targets of violence by other inmates”, explains the Agi.

Today the lawyer Giovanni Caruso, who assists him, did not visit him after yesterday’s interview. Tomorrow he will go to collect the file from the Prosecutor’s Office in Venice to study the documents in view of Tuesday when he will have to choose the best option for Turetta in this phase of the proceedings: respond to the investigating judge, make use of the right not to respond, make spontaneous statements.

He doesn't eat: alarming details about Turetta.  What did he bring to the cell

A children’s book and a missing shoe. The investigation into the death of Giulia Cecchettin also aims to clarify some elements relating to the context in which the girl’s body was found, in the escarpment near Lake Barcis. One shoe was hidden in the foliage, the other, according to what was reported to AGI, the Pordenone carabinieri have not yet managed to find. Giulia was barefoot, barefoot, wearing the clothes in which she had left her house in Vigonovo. Next to her, in addition to the roll of bags to cover her body, there was the children’s book ‘Even monsters brush their teeth’ by Jessica Martinelli. The biomedical engineering student had a great passion for comics and among her dreams was to be an illustrator, so much so that she decided to perfect her talent in drawing at the Reggio Emilia Graphics School. Perhaps the girl had purchased the book, intended for children over the age of three, to take inspiration from her, or her volume had been given to her by Filippo Turetta. And it was books that Filippo Turetta asked the prison workers for, today at his first approach to the rules of a prison, about which, say those who have had the opportunity to see him, he was “curious”.

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