The Guardian (USA)

Mystery of actor’s missing cat leads to claims of defamation in Italian town

- Angela Giuffrida in Rome

An Italian actor is being investigat­ed by prosecutor­s for defamation, stalking and incitement to criminal activity after allegedly implicatin­g his neighbours in the disappeara­nce of his cat, amid a widespread search for the feline which has caused “turbulence” among the people of a small hilltop town.

The curious case of the missing cat began in September, when Nino Frassica, who lives in the Umbrian town of Spoleto when filming Don Matteo, a Rai TV series, announced the disappeara­nce of Hiro in a post on Instagram.

The actor offered a €5,000 (£4,300) reward for the safe return of the white male cat, leading people from across Italy to descend on the town. Some came accompanie­d with search dogs and drones.

The bounty was doubled in October after the search failed to yield any results, shortly before Frassica’s family and the film crew returned to Rome.

But with Hiro’s disappeara­nce casting a shadow over the town, solidarity soon gave way to animosity, especially after two local families claimed they were accused by Frassica, his wife and her daughter of being involved in the cat’s disappeara­nce.

Residents were also unsettled when huge posters with a photo of Hiro were mounted across Spoleto by an animal rights activist, alongside the message: “As long as a human life is worth less than a smartphone, an animal will never be considered special. Solidarity with the Frassica family.”

The investigat­ion by local prosecutor­s was triggered after Frassica cited the address of one of the complainan­ts in a video shared on social media, claiming that Hiro was being kept there.

Fabrizio Gentili, the lawyer representi­ng the complainan­ts, claimed the initial accusation­s against his clients came from Frassica’s wife and daughter, who are being investigat­ed for the same charges. He said the women went to the complainan­ts’ homes on suspicion the cat was inside, and got the police involved.

He claimed the campaign against his clients was then ramped up on social media after the Frassica family returned to Rome. “The video, especially, generated thousands of threatenin­g messages,” he said.

A lawyer for the Frassica family said: “An investigat­ion is under way, the family is not making any declaratio­ns.”

Frassica is due to return to Spoleto later this month to resume filming of Don Matteo.

“The situation has caused some turbulence in the town and my clients are feeling nervous – the main thing is that his wife and her daughter don’t return with him,” said Gentili.

Frassica, who has been filming Don Matteo in Spoleto for several years, is due to be given the keys of the town during a ceremony in February – a symbolic gesture bestowed to trusted friends of a place. “This is now causing controvers­y too; some politician­s are asking for the honour to be revoked,” said Gentili.

 ?? ?? Nino Frassica with his cat Hiro. Photograph: Instagram
Nino Frassica with his cat Hiro. Photograph: Instagram

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