The Rome Prosecutor's Office's consultancy confirms: the boss Gioè committed suicide

Nino Gioè, the mafia boss of the Altofonte family who was among the protagonists of the organizational and executive phase of the Capaci massacre, who died hanged in his cell in the Rebibbia prison on the night between 28 and 29 July 1993, committed suicide.

This is what emerges from a consultancy ordered by the Rome Public Prosecutor's Office that confirms the reconstruction of a previous expert report. The newspaper La Sicilia writes this, quoting part of the document. The new consultancy highlights that "the macroscopic characteristics of the groove allow us to exclude an asphyxial dynamic attributable to different methods of compression of the neck (such as strangulation) while the finding of evident signs of vitality allow us to exclude that Gioè's body could have been suspended after death".

A suicide that was considered anomalous that of Gioè, a key figure in the relationship between the mafia and deviant secret services. His death has always been shrouded in mystery even if, right from the start, an expert report indicated that it had been a suicide. Reconstruction confirmed by the new consultancy ordered by the Rome Prosecutor's Office.


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