Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Trial begins for jailed American pals in policeman’s slaying

- By Frances D’Emilio

ROME >> Two former schoolmate­s from California sat impassivel­y in a crowded courtroom Wednesday for the start of their trial for the murder of a plaincloth­es Italian policeman while they were vacationin­g in Rome last summer.

In pre-trial court documents, prosecutor­s alleged that Finnegan Lee Elder, now 20, thrust an 18-centimeter (7-inch) knife repeatedly into Carabinier­e Vice Brigadier Mario Cerciello, while his friend, Gabriel Natale-Hjorth, now 19, scuffled with the officer’s partner.

The jailed defendants have contended they didn’t realize the officers were plaincloth­es police but mistook them for criminals following a thwarted cocaine sale hours earlier in a Rome nightlife district.

Just a row behind them, also listening intently but similarly showing little emotion, was the widow of Cerciello, who was killed on a street near the young Americans’ hotel only days after he returned to duty after his honeymoon.

The killer “thrust numerous blows into his vital organs and fled, heedless to Cerciello dying,” said Prosecutor Marina Sabina Calabretta.

Elder, according to pretrial documents, admitted to the stabbing but said he acted in self-defense when he feared the burly Cerciello was strangling him. The defense on Wednesday sought to raise doubts about whether the defendants were mistreated or intimidate­d when first brought from their hotel for questionin­g at a station house.

Natale-Hjorth has also told authoritie­s he acted in self-defense, alleging that he and his friend were assaulted by the police officers, so he scuffled with Cerciello’s partner, Andrea Varriale. The partner suffered kicks and scratches, according to prosecutor­s.

Under Italian law, accomplice­s to an alleged murderer can also be charged with the murder itself. Italy’s stiffest criminal punishment is life imprisonme­nt.

At the trial, Ethan and Leah Elder sat tensely in a back row, leaning forward to see their son. But their view was largely blocked by armed penitentia­ry police officers who stood behind the defendants at all times.

When the defendants were led out of the courtroom during a recess, one of the defense lawyers asked if the parents, who live in San Francisco, could greet their son. Ethan Elder took a few steps, touched his son lightly on the arm, and pulling his wife’s head close to his, stroked her hair in a gesture of affection their child could glimpse. He held up his hand in greeting, first to Natale-Hjorth, then to their son.

“With the truth will come justice,” Ethan Elder said to reporters.

A lawyer for the Elders, Craig Peters, expressed the family’s gratitude that “this process is finally moving forward, and we hope that this trial can stay focused on the facts of what happened that night.”

Peters said the Elders were looking forward “to Finn coming home.”

The fatal encounter between the American tourists and the two officers on a nearly deserted Rome street had its genesis a handful of kilometers (couple of miles) away, in the nightlife district of Trastevere.

Both defendants have told Italian investigat­ors they were swindled while trying to buy cocaine in Trastevere. Police and prosecutor­s have said they paid for the drug but didn’t receive it because other Carabinier­i officers on patrol in the area approached, and people scattered. The Americans, angry they received no cocaine, then snatched a knapsack, with a cellphone inside, belonging to the dealer’s go-between, the prosecutio­n contends.

Cerciello and Varriale were asked by supervisor­s to investigat­e the go-between’s complaint to police about the bag. Prosecutor­s have said that the intermedia­ry called his own cell phone, and NataleHjor­th proposed giving the man back his knapsack but on condition he return the Americans’ money and give them a gram of cocaine.

One apparent line of defense has been that the Americans believed that drug dealers had showed up for the pre-dawn rendezvous, not the go-between.

According to judicial documents, Natale-Hjorth claimed he didn’t know his friend had the knife. Prosecutor­s contend that after the stabbing, Natale-Hjorth hid the knife behind a panel in the ceiling of their hotel room.

When the Americans were taken to the station house for questionin­g, Natale-Hjorth was photograph­ed blindfolde­d with a scarf as he sat handcuffed with his head bowed. Carabinier­i officers allegedly circulated the photograph on phone chats, with the image winding up in Italian newspapers the next day.

Defense lawyers on Wednesday asked Judge Marina Finiti to let the blindfold incident be part of trial evidence. Prosecutor­s objected, saying that matter was being handed in a separate criminal case against the Carabinier­i involved in the blindfoldi­ng incident.

 ?? DOMENICO STINELLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gabriel Natale Hjorth attends the opening of the trial for the killing of Italian policeman Mario Cerciello Rega in
Rome on Wednesday. American teenagers Finnegan Lee Elder and Gabriel Christian Natale-Hjorth are being tried for killing the officer.
DOMENICO STINELLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Gabriel Natale Hjorth attends the opening of the trial for the killing of Italian policeman Mario Cerciello Rega in Rome on Wednesday. American teenagers Finnegan Lee Elder and Gabriel Christian Natale-Hjorth are being tried for killing the officer.

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