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US student charged with murder of Italian policeman apologises in court

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A US student on trial for killing an Italian policeman during a failed drug bust last year tearfully apologised on Wednesday, saying he would never forgive himself.

Finnegan Lee Elder, 20, read a statement in front of the Rome court in which he said the evening of July 26, 2019 was "the worst night of my life", according to Italian news agencies at the hearing, which is closed to most media due to coronavirus restrictions.

Elder and friend Gabriel Natale-Hjorth face possible life sentences for murder.

Prosecutors say policeman Mario Cerciello Rega was killed in an unprovoked nighttime attack after he and his partner, both in plain clothes, approached the two American friends on vacation in Italy, who had earlier tried to buy drugs.

Elder has admitted to stabbing policeman Mario Cerciello Rega several times with an eight-inch combat knife, but both he and Hjorth say they were jumped from behind by men they thought were drug dealers.

"I am truly sorry and deeply saddened for the loss of Mr. Cerciello, for him, for his family and friends," Elder, in tears, told the court.

"That night was the worst night of my life and not only because I'm writing this in prison, far away from everyone and everything I love.

"That night was the worst night of my life because I took a man's life, I took a husband away from his wife, I broke a bond between brothers and I took a son away from his mother.

"I'll never be able to forgive myself for this."

- Sympathy and shock -

Cerciello's death was front-page news last year due to an outpouring of public sympathy for the policeman, who had just returned to work after his honeymoon. But there was also widespread shock over leaked photos of Natale-Hjorth blindfolded and handcuffed inside a police station.

Although Gabriel Natale-Hjorth did not stab Cerciello  under Italian law he faces the same charge of...
Although Gabriel Natale-Hjorth did not stab Cerciello, under Italian law he faces the same charge of 'voluntary homicide' with a special circumstance of killing a police officer
REMO CASILLI, POOL/AFP

Natale-Hjorth fought with Cerciello's partner during the attack. Even though he did not stab Cerciello, under Italian law he faces the same charge of "voluntary homicide" with a special circumstance of killing a police officer.

Elder and Natale-Hjorth, both from San Francisco, were 19 and 18 at the time of the killing.

A confusing web of events led to the 32-second altercation, beginning with the young Americans looking for cocaine earlier in the evening.

After an intermediary introduced them to a drug dealer who sold them aspirin instead, the teens stole the bag of the intermediary in retaliation, later demanding money and drugs to return it.

The dealer was actually an informant, who reported the bag's theft to police.

Cerciello and his partner Andrea Varriale left their designated patrol area and showed up at the designated exchange point near the teenagers' hotel before the attack.

- 'In pain' -

Defence attorneys have tried to show that police committed multiple errors the night of the incident -- alleging lies by Varriale, a falsified police report and the withholding from the defence of evidence that the drug dealer was a police informant.

They hope these missteps will give credence to the young men's claim that the officers did not show their badges before the attack.

Defence lawyers have tried to show that the police committed multiple errors
Defence lawyers have tried to show that the police committed multiple errors
REMO CASILLI, POOL/AFP

In July, Varriale testified that the two officers approached the young men from the front and showed their badges, although Cerciello's badge was never subsequently found.

Varriale admitted to lying when he said following the attack that both officers had been armed, as they should have been while on duty, and that he conspired with a superior officer to lie about it.

In his statement in court, Elder said: "Many mistakes were made that night and mine was the biggest of them all...

"I wish I could go back in time to change things and avoid this terrible tragedy but I can't," he added.

"All I can say is that I'm filled with remorse and it pains me to think of the suffering I've caused."

A US student on trial for killing an Italian policeman during a failed drug bust last year tearfully apologised on Wednesday, saying he would never forgive himself.

Finnegan Lee Elder, 20, read a statement in front of the Rome court in which he said the evening of July 26, 2019 was “the worst night of my life”, according to Italian news agencies at the hearing, which is closed to most media due to coronavirus restrictions.

Elder and friend Gabriel Natale-Hjorth face possible life sentences for murder.

Prosecutors say policeman Mario Cerciello Rega was killed in an unprovoked nighttime attack after he and his partner, both in plain clothes, approached the two American friends on vacation in Italy, who had earlier tried to buy drugs.

Elder has admitted to stabbing policeman Mario Cerciello Rega several times with an eight-inch combat knife, but both he and Hjorth say they were jumped from behind by men they thought were drug dealers.

“I am truly sorry and deeply saddened for the loss of Mr. Cerciello, for him, for his family and friends,” Elder, in tears, told the court.

“That night was the worst night of my life and not only because I’m writing this in prison, far away from everyone and everything I love.

“That night was the worst night of my life because I took a man’s life, I took a husband away from his wife, I broke a bond between brothers and I took a son away from his mother.

“I’ll never be able to forgive myself for this.”

– Sympathy and shock –

Cerciello’s death was front-page news last year due to an outpouring of public sympathy for the policeman, who had just returned to work after his honeymoon. But there was also widespread shock over leaked photos of Natale-Hjorth blindfolded and handcuffed inside a police station.

Although Gabriel Natale-Hjorth did not stab Cerciello  under Italian law he faces the same charge of...

Although Gabriel Natale-Hjorth did not stab Cerciello, under Italian law he faces the same charge of 'voluntary homicide' with a special circumstance of killing a police officer
REMO CASILLI, POOL/AFP

Natale-Hjorth fought with Cerciello’s partner during the attack. Even though he did not stab Cerciello, under Italian law he faces the same charge of “voluntary homicide” with a special circumstance of killing a police officer.

Elder and Natale-Hjorth, both from San Francisco, were 19 and 18 at the time of the killing.

A confusing web of events led to the 32-second altercation, beginning with the young Americans looking for cocaine earlier in the evening.

After an intermediary introduced them to a drug dealer who sold them aspirin instead, the teens stole the bag of the intermediary in retaliation, later demanding money and drugs to return it.

The dealer was actually an informant, who reported the bag’s theft to police.

Cerciello and his partner Andrea Varriale left their designated patrol area and showed up at the designated exchange point near the teenagers’ hotel before the attack.

– ‘In pain’ –

Defence attorneys have tried to show that police committed multiple errors the night of the incident — alleging lies by Varriale, a falsified police report and the withholding from the defence of evidence that the drug dealer was a police informant.

They hope these missteps will give credence to the young men’s claim that the officers did not show their badges before the attack.

Defence lawyers have tried to show that the police committed multiple errors

Defence lawyers have tried to show that the police committed multiple errors
REMO CASILLI, POOL/AFP

In July, Varriale testified that the two officers approached the young men from the front and showed their badges, although Cerciello’s badge was never subsequently found.

Varriale admitted to lying when he said following the attack that both officers had been armed, as they should have been while on duty, and that he conspired with a superior officer to lie about it.

In his statement in court, Elder said: “Many mistakes were made that night and mine was the biggest of them all…

“I wish I could go back in time to change things and avoid this terrible tragedy but I can’t,” he added.

“All I can say is that I’m filled with remorse and it pains me to think of the suffering I’ve caused.”

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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