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American murder suspect says Italian police beat him in custody

An American student on trial in Italy for the murder of a Rome policeman says he was kicked, punched and spat on in custody, a leaked official transcript showed.

American murder suspect says Italian police beat him in custody
Mario Cerciello Rega, the Italian policeman who was killed during a drug bust last summer. Photo: Eliano Imperato/AFP

Finnegan Lee Elder and fellow US student Gabriel Natale-Hjorth stand accused of killing Mario Cerciello Rega, who was in plain clothes when he was slain in a night drug bust on July 26th last year in an attack that sparked national outrage.

READ ALSO: 'A terrible affair which cannot go unpunished': Italy mourns murdered police officer

“They beat me pretty bad … in the [police] station,” Elder was secretly recorded as saying during a private conversation in prison with his father and American lawyer.

“They threw me to the ground, kicked me, punched me, stood on me, spit on me,” he said according to a transcript of the conversation requested by the court and seen by AFP late on Wednesday.

The two Americans, who were teens at the time, face life sentences if found guilty of knowingly killing a police officer.

The claim of police brutality follows the leaking of photographs of Hjorth blindfolded and handcuffed at the Rome barracks where he and Elder had been taken for questioning.

“The awful truth of what Finnegan was subjected to and endured as a terrified 19-year-old is now being revealed to the world,” Elder's father Ethan told AFP. “Our hearts break every minute of every hour of every day.”


Ethan Elder, father of one of the two American suspects. Photo: Filippo Monteforte/AFP

Asked during the conversation at the Regina Coeli prison on August 2nd last year where the police station was, Elder said: “I have no idea – they kept my head down a long time”.

Had he been blindfolded like Hjorth? “No, no, I – I don't really remember too well. … I was, they had me waiting so long, it's kind of a blur,” he said. He said he had got two bruises on his right arm and one on his leg “in the police station”.

“They said they would give me 40 years if I didn't give them my phone password,” he said.

READ ALSO: 

Elder, 20, has admitted to stabbing Cerciello with an 8-inch combat knife. But he insists Cerciello and his partner Andrea Varriale attacked them and he thought he was fighting for his life against drug dealers.

Varriale says when he and Cerciello stopped the youngsters, they were set upon. Cerciello was left with multiple wounds.


Tributes to murdered officer Mario Rega Cerciello outside a police station in Rome last July. Photo: Vincenzo Pinto/AFP

Natale-Hjorth initially told investigators he had not been involved, but his fingerprints were found on a ceiling panel in the hotel room where the students had hidden the knife.

Under Italian law, anyone who participates even indirectly in a murder can face homicide charges.

The defence says lies told by Varriale in the immediate aftermath of the stabbing — such as whether or not the policemen were armed, as they should have been while on duty — seriously undermine his credibility as a witness.

Last month Elder's lawyers said they had discovered a statement taken during the police investigation, which revealed a key figure in the case was a police informant, had been illegally withheld by the prosecution.

Member comments

  1. “The awful truth of what Finnegan was subjected to and endured as a terrified 19-year-old is now being revealed to the world,” Elder’s father said! How about the awful truth is that this disgusting person devoid of any humanity killed an innocent man in cold blood!! He got a few bruises, so sorry. How much restraint did these cops have to demonstrate, knowing this pig killed one of theirs. He is lucky they did not hang him! No sympathy at all for this lying murderer.

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ROME

Rome’s public transport fares set to rise this summer

The cost of Rome’s bus, metro and tram tickets was expected to increase this summer under a new pricing plan, according to Italian media reports.

Rome’s public transport fares set to rise this summer

The cost of a ticket will go from €1.50 to €2 as of July 1st when new pricing is set to come in for Rome’s public transport system, according to local newspaper RomaToday.

The published plan for the new ticket prices was drafted by Lazio regional coach company Cotral, a partner in the capital’s Metrebus service along with Trenitalia and Rome transport provider ATAC.

While the 100-minute ticket will see a 50-cent increase to €2, the price of daily tickets will go up from €7 to €9.30. 

The two-day ticket would jump from €12.50 to €16.70 and the 72-hour ticket goes from €18 to €24.

Weekly tickets rise by €8 to €32. Monthly passes remain unchanged at the usual €35 fee.

The cost of a yearly pass meanwhile drops by €10 to €240.

Talk of raising Rome’s public transport prices has been ongoing for years; the last time bus and metro tickets were increased was in 2012, from €1 to €1.50.

The latest announcement came exactly one year after ATAC announced Rome transport fees would not be raised as planned following an intervention by Lazio regional authorities.

But the price increase was expected to go ahead this year, with Rome currently preparing its public transport network for increased visitor numbers ahead of the Vatican’s 2025 Jubilee.

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