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Giuseppe Grasso (58) was supposed to spend twelve days in Thurgau cantonal prison. The Italian had attacked his neighbor Peter F. * (72) as part of a year-long dispute over a sandstone wall in his home and flatly refused to pay the fine due for it (VIEW reported).
But: In the end, the restorer from Weinfelden TG lasted only three hours behind bars! “I didn’t know the cells were so dirty. It was disastrous. The mattress was against the wall, there were stains everywhere, and the toilet was calcified, ”complains Grasso.
Grasso, a non-smoker, quickly reached his limits
And for him the worst: “There was a terrible smell of smoke everywhere. I couldn’t imagine spending twelve days in this flawed cell! “
At the suggestion of the prison staff, Grasso decides to pay the unpopular fine after all. His girlfriend finally brings in 2450 francs in cash so that the arrest can be interrupted.
What will become of the procedural costs of 4185 francs, which the owner and owner still owe, now he wants to clarify with the prosecutor.
Even the first arrest was doomed to failure
VIEW accompanied Giuseppe Grasso on Monday to go to prison. The Italian had parked his Maserati in front of the prison and had arrived with a laptop and a smartphone. Already when I moved in shock: “For Corona I would have had to spend ten of the twelve days in quarantine. Such solitary confinement and therefore 23 hours a day in the smoking cell. “
He had in mind to use the prison time to work the legal case surrounding his Mauerzoff with neighbor Peter F. After a court loss, Grasso hit him on the head, damaged his car and cut the pipes himself. Water.
A hotel room was expected, I have a cell phone
Then he was almost happy to pay the fine. The short-term prison sums it up: “I saw beautiful Swiss prisons on television. But that was definitely not a hotel, it was a really terrible place! “
Released again, Grasso can now fully focus on the neighborhood dispute. He blames Peter F. for the devastating water damage at his home in Weinfelden.
The Italian has been litigating it for years. The dispute around the sandstone wall involved has so far cost him around 700,000 francs. After several procedures, the case is now back in the district court. “I fight until I win!” Promises Grasso.