It would be a full-blown ambush that took the life of a thirty-eight-year-old Roman. His name was Daniele Di Giacomo, the man hit by some bullets while he was getting back into his car in Tor Bella Monaca, on the outskirts of Rome. He was in the company of his girlfriend, a 26-year-old girl now hospitalized at the Tor Vergata Polyclinic where she underwent surgery. A bullet had lodged in her knee, after having pierced the body of her boyfriend. The ambush in which, according to investigators, between four and six shots were fired took place around 5.30pm in Via Paolo Ferdinando Quaglia under the eyes of dozens of people who saw the execution while looking out the window. The victim died after a desperate attempt to resuscitate him by the 118 health workers. He was known to the police and the Carabinieri for his judicial past, but in recent times he had put his head in order and had become an entrepreneur in the automotive field. For a short time he had been dating the girl who was with him in the car. And according to the investigators of the flying squad of the Rome Police Headquarters, the motive should be sought precisely
in the sentimental sphere, but a transversal revenge in the criminal sphere cannot be ruled out either, because right in front of the place where Di Giacomo was killed, one of the largest drug dealing squares in
Rome is active. The night between Sunday and Monday was the scene of the beating of forty-eight-year-old Claudio Milletti, who was found dying in the middle of the street with his head smashed into a pool of blood.

Last edited by Hollander; 09/14/23 04:28 PM.

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