The Mercury News

2 Bay Area teens jailed in Italy in policeman’s killing

Suspects were high school classmates in Mill Valley

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ROME » Two American teenagers who were classmates at a California high school spent a second night in a Rome jail Saturday after they were interrogat­ed for hours about their alleged roles in the murder of an Italian policeman.

Investigat­ors contended in written statements Saturday that the pair had confessed to their roles in the grisly slaying. Vice Brigadier Mario Cerciello Rega, a member of the storied Carabinier­i paramilita­ry corps, was stabbed eight times, allegedly by one of the teens, leaving him bleeding on a street close to the teens’ upscale hotel near Rome’s Tiber River.

Italian authoritie­s identified the two as Gabriel Christian Natale-hjorth, 18, and Finnegan Lee Elder, 19, and said both were born in San Francisco.

Police said they were vacationin­g in the Italian capital without family members.

In the detention order, Elder is described as repeatedly stabbing the 35-yearold officer, who had just returned to duty a few days earlier from his honeymoon.

Investigat­ors said Cerciello Rega, along with another Carabinier­i officer, were both in plaincloth­es when they confronted the Americans about 3 a.m. Friday in the wake of a drug deal gone wrong.

Natale-hjorth was described in the document as having repeatedly punched Cerciello Rega’s partner.

Under Italian law, persons participat­ing in a killing, but who didn’t actually carry out the slaying itself, risk being charged with murder.

Both suspects are also being investigat­ed for attempted extortion.

Cerciello Rega, beloved for his charity work with the homeless and the ailing, was praised as a hero for trying to help keep Rome’s streets safe.

Photos of the officer, wearing his uniform for his wedding and showing off his wedding band as he sat next to his beaming bride, dominated the front pages of many Italian newspapers Saturday.

Parents with their children left bouquets of flowers at the bloodstain­ed site.

Authoritie­s vowed that justice would be done.

“Hoping that the killer of our poor Carabinier­e never gets out of prison, I remind do-gooders that in the United States, whoever kills risks the death penalty,” tweeted Interior Minister Matteo Salvini, who is also in charge of state police, another national Italian police corps. “I’m not saying we’re get to that, but yes to a life in prison (in labor, obviously).”

Like all European Union countries, Italy doesn’t have the death penalty.

Elder’s lawyer, Francesco Codini, said his client had exercised his right not to respond to questions during a detention hearing Saturday.

Codini declined to say anything more out of “respect for the family” of the slain officer.

Natale-hjorth’s lawyer didn’t speak to reporters waiting outside the jail after the hearing.

The young men were high school classmates in Mill Valley, a wealthy suburb 10 miles north of San Francisco en route to the famed redwood trees in Muir Woods National Park. No one answered the door at a house listed for a relative of Elder. At a house listed for a relative of Natale-hjorth’s, a young man who answered the door yelled “No!” when an Associated Press reporter asked to speak to her.

An Italian investigat­or said the pair had snatched the bag of a drug dealer in Rome after the man apparently gave them a different substance instead of the cocaine they were seeking. The person spoke on condition of anonymity since the probe is ongoing.

In a statement, the Carabinier­i contended that the Americans demanded cash and cocaine to return the knapsack. They said the bag, with a phone inside, was snatched from an Italian man. The Americans, police said, “threatened to not give it back to him without payment of 100 euros and a gram of cocaine.”

The bag’s owner reported the theft, and the plaincloth­es officers were sent to the site of the drug exchange to allegedly turn over the bag for ransom, the statement said.

The Americans, “even though the officers identified themselves as being Carabinier­i, didn’t hesitate to engage in a struggle, culminatin­g in the mortal wounding” of the policeman, the statement said.

Italian police officers carry guns but it was unclear why they weren’t used.

The Carabinier­i said surveillan­ce cameras and witnesses helped them identify and find the Americans. While searching their hotel room, police said, investigat­ors found a long knife hidden inside the room’s dropped ceiling. Also found were clothes worn during the attack, police said.

 ?? ANDREW MEDICHINI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A man wipes his eyes after leaving flowers at the spot where policeman Mario Cerciello Rega was stabbed to death.
ANDREW MEDICHINI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A man wipes his eyes after leaving flowers at the spot where policeman Mario Cerciello Rega was stabbed to death.
 ??  ?? Cerciello Rega
Cerciello Rega

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