The Reporter (Vacaville)

Retrial in Italy ordered for Americans in killing of officer

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Italy's highest court has ordered a retrial for two American citizens convicted in the slaying of an Italian police officer during a sting operation gone wrong.

The Court of Cassation late Wednesday threw out the guilty verdicts against Finnegan Lee Elder, now 23, and Gabriel NataleHjor­th, 22, both convicted in the stabbing death of the caribinier­e during a plaincloth­es operation in July 2019 while the Americans, teens at the time, were on vacation in Rome.

The court will issue its reasons for the verdict in the coming weeks, and instruct an appeals court on the precise issues to examine in a new trial.

Elder's lawyer, Roberto

Capra, expressed satisfacti­on at the decision, saying a new trial would open the possibilit­y of recalculat­ing the sentence.

“It confirms a topic we raised from the first day: That Elder was not aware of having in front of him a law enforcemen­t agent. The dynamics of the events exclude this fact,” Capra told reporters. He expressed hope that a retrial would give room to lower the penalty.

The two men, friends from Northern California, were sentenced to life in prison, Italy's toughest penalty, in the initial trial. An appeals court upheld the verdict, but lowered the sentence to 24 years for Elder and 22 for Natale-Hjorth.

Carabinier­e Vice Brigadier Mario Cerciello Rega, 35, was stabbed 11 times while he and a partner were on a plaincloth­es operation to recover a backpack that the two Americans took during a failed drug deal. Elder claimed he pulled out a knife in selfdefens­e to break free as he and the officer struggled on the ground, and the officer tried to strangle him.

Cerciello Rega's partner testified that they had indeed declared themselves as officers, but the defense has cast doubt on his version.

Natale-Hjorth testified that he grappled with Cerciello Rega's partner and was unaware of the stabbing when he ran back to a hotel.

His lawyer, Fabio Alonzi, said the high court's decision indicates a weakness in the prosecutio­n's argument that Natale-Hjorth was an accomplice in the murder.

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