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Among the elements that lead us to think that the doctor was alone at the time of death is the disappearance of the mobile phone, the only object that was not found. It was thought that the murderer had taken him but in reality the cell phone had been turned off an hour before and perhaps it was Stefano Ansaldi who got rid of it.
Initially it was assumed that a robbery ended badly, then a murder for personal or economic reasons, but since Tuesday the most followed hypothesis was that of the extreme gesture, after the investigations of the Carabinieri of the Investigative Unit, coordinated by the deputy Laura Pedio and in charge of the prosecutor Adriano Scudieri, numerous texts were also heard, among colleagues, friends and family.
Images are also being analyzed from the cameras furthest from Via Macchi, where the body was found, under the scaffolding of a building under renovation. And we also want to exclude a potential attacker from then entering a street number without being caught. The final results of the autopsy, carried out on Tuesday, will clarify the modalities of the throat cut, which from a first analysis did not seem like a head-on blow.
No fingerprint on the murder weapon. No fingerprints were found on the knife and Ansaldi himself was wearing latex gloves. The kitchen knife does not appear to have been recently purchased, but it could be a knife already used at home, even if the doctor’s family could not have said exactly whether it was taken from the house.
Ansaldi had traveled from Naples to Milan that Saturday with a one-way ticket (he arrived around 3 p.m. and died around 6 p.m.) and we are trying to understand if he still had an appointment in the Lombard capital, a probable hypotheses for researchers. He had no work ties, nor, apparently, acquaintances in the city. Ansaldi’s entries or writings have not yet been found. Bloodstain analysis is also being done to better reconstruct the dynamics of death.
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