Sabrina Minardi helped reopen the investigation into the disappearance
Sabrina Minardi, 65, one of the main witnesses on the disappearance of Emanuela Orlasi, in the Vatican in 1983, died in Bologna, in Northern Italy, last Friday (7) of natural causes. The news was given on Saturday (8) by the journalist Raffaella Noariale, with whom he published a book on the disappeared adolescent.
“Sabrina had gone after the hairdresser, she was blonde and beautiful because she wanted a bigger affection. She died during sleep,” Noarial wrote on Facebook, whose publication was shared by Pietro Orlandi, Emanuela’s brother, who also signs the preface to joint work.
Minardi, who was a lover of Enrico De Pedis, head of the Sicilian mafia killed in 1990, was the first person to reconstruct the events after the hijacking of Emanuela, then 15 June 1983, leading the court to reopen the case in 2008 after the investigations had been closed in 1997.
However, after over 40 years of disappearance of the young woman, the case is still a mystery.
Orlandi is the daughter of an employee of Santa Sé, a Vatican citizen and lived inside the walls of the smallest country in the world, but disappeared while returning home after a music lesson in Rome.
The case is the longest in Italy and several hypotheses have been taken into consideration in recent decades, from crime common to revenge against his father or the Vatican. None of the hypotheses, however, was confirmed by the Court. .
Source: Terra

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