ROME – An Italian prosecutor on Saturday requested life in prison for two young American men charged with slaying an Italian police officer in central Rome.
Prosecutor Maria Sabina Calabretta asked the court to find the two defendants — Finnegan Lee Elder, 21, and Gabriel Natale-Hjorth, 20 — guilty and to impose Italy’s maximum sentence for the death of Vice Brigadier Mario Cerciello Rega. Calabretta called the July 26, 2019, stabbing of the officer “disproportionate and deadly.”
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The defense is scheduled to make its closing arguments beginning March 18, before the court decides the verdict and sentence.
A lawyer for Elder said he was not surprised the prosecutor requested life sentences.
“Unfortunately, we didn’t expect anything different, given the anomalies we have seen in the course of this investigation directed at portraying facts in a different way from the way they evolved,'' defense lawyer Renato Borzone said.
The two Americans were on vacation in Rome when they were confronted by a pair of plainclothes Carabinieri officers at what the vacationers believed was going to be a meeting with the go-between in a cocaine deal that had gone bad.
Elder has claimed self-defense, testifying this month that he stabbed the victim because he feared he was being strangled by a thug.
Cerciello Rega, 35, and his partner had been assigned to respond to what prosecutors allege was a small-scale extortion attempt by the Americans, after the friends had paid for cocaine that they did not receive. In reprisal, the Americans snatched the go-between’s knapsack with his phone inside and set up a rendezvous to exchange it for the 80 euros ($96) they had lost in the bad drug deal.
Cerciello Rega’s partner, Andrea Varriale, testified that he tried to stop blood pouring out like a “fountain” from his partner. The slain officer, who was unarmed, was stabbed 11 times.
Varriale has also testified that he heard his partner cry out “Carabinieri!” as Elder and Cerciello Rega struggled in the street.
But Elder told the court he heard no such cry of identification.