“A little yeah, I can’t deny it, yeah now it’s something that happens periodically, you fall back into it and everything, so yeah, I understand that there’s a certain anger, I hope in good faith but…”. This was revealed by Andrea Sempio when interviewed by Bruno Vespa on 5 Minutes on Rai 1.
Sempio is the only murder suspect involved in the new investigation into the murder of Chiara Poggi which occurred in Garlasco (Pavia) on 13 August 2007.
“Right now I don’t have a life – he added in response to a question about how his life has changed as a suspect in the Garlasco case – Currently I am back living in the room I once lived in and at the age of almost 40 I am confined there, I can’t do anything, it’s like being under house arrest.”
“I believe that has now been clarified through years of trials and several sentences, so I refer to what is written in that sentence: until now the perpetrator was Alberto Stasi and I have no reason to think otherwise,” said Andrea Sempio when interviewed by Bruno Vespa on 5 Minuti on Rai 1.
The note at the center of allegations of corruption at the end of one of the previous trials in Pavia “was nothing more and nothing less than a note taken by my father. I think it was just a note about how much it cost to collect the filing documents, for that ‘20.30 euros’. Also because – something that was not reported in the media – in my house they also found a note where my father had written down all the actual expenses, expressed in thousands of euros. So what was spent At that time my father printed out everything.” Andrea Sempio said this today in an interview with Bruno Vespa on 5 Minutes on Rai 1. Exactly how much he doesn’t remember – he said in response to a confession about the cash used to pay his lawyers -, but “more or less around 50 thousand euros and a list of how many times we gave money to lawyers was there, and was found during the last search. (…) My father has a note where the lawyers’ fees and consultants’ fees are, so it’s all there.” All the money for the lawyer, according to Andrea Sempio’s report, in these records “was under Lovati’s generic name.” A note which, it was reiterated, “is in the hands of investigators”.
Garlasco and the ‘Pavia system’, the Brescia prosecutor appealed to the Supreme Court
The Brescia Prosecutor’s Office is ready to appeal to the Supreme Court against the annulment of the Judicial Review of the Decision to Confiscate IT Equipment, including former Pavia prosecutor Mario Venditti, in two interrelated investigations, namely one for corruption in judicial documents in the Garlasco case and the other for corruption and embezzlement in the so-called “Pavia system”. As has been revealed in recent days, following the Judicial Review order (a total of three hearings and an annulment of each), prosecutor Brescian will immediately appeal to the Supreme Court. The confiscation decision in connection with the alleged “Pavia system” was annulled, not only due to the lack of keywords to search for Venditti’s position, but also due to the absence of leads in the investigation against retired judge and prosecutor Pietro Paolo Mazza. However, the Garlasco case was caused by a failure to pinpoint keywords and a search period that was too long. Meanwhile, currently the devices including the PC, telephone and flash drives taken from him on September 26 can be returned to Venditti, with the search in an investigation that also involves Giuseppe Sempio, Andrea’s father, being investigated.
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