Camilla Marianera Faces Six and a Half Years in Jail for Judicial Corruption

Camilla Marianera Faces Six and a Half Years in Jail for Judicial Corruption
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Wednesday 3 April 2024, 16:20 - Last updated: 16:41
Six and a half years in prison: that is what the prosecution has requested to condemn Camilla Marianera. The Rome Prosecutor's Office has formulated the request for conviction for the trainee lawyer accused of corruption in judicial acts for having obtained bribes in exchange for information covered by investigative secrecy. Camilla Marianera, requested sentence to six and a half years. Deputy Prosecutor Paolo Ielo at the end of the indictment also urged the sending of documents for perjury in relation to the deposition in court of the owner of a dental practice in Rome who, according to the prosecution, had provided a false alibi. The prosecution has also asked for the mitigation of the precautionary measure in prison with house arrest. On March 15, her partner, Jacopo De Vivo, was sentenced in an abbreviated trial for the same charge to 5 years in prison. According to the indictment by the prosecutors, from 2021 to December 2022, the two 'provided economic benefits to a public official, currently unknown, belonging to the judicial offices of Rome and assigned to the wiretapping office, so that he would carry out acts contrary to the duties of his office, consisting of revealing the existence of criminal proceedings covered by secrecy, the existence of telephone, environmental, and telematic wiretappings, acts remunerated on average in the amount of 300 euros per request'. In the indictment today in court, Deputy Prosecutor Paolo Ielo highlighted how in 'this trial a false alibi was constructed while Marianera was in jail, a fact that shows that there is a criminal solidarity network around the defendant'. Ielo also highlighted the point related to the 'red sticker', a feature used only in the wiretapping room of the Rome Prosecutor's Office and known only to people inside that office, which indicated the end of wiretappings or surveillance services. 'This red sticker is the fingerprint - Ielo emphasized in court - that allows us to say that it was reported to her by a public official who was in the wiretapping room'.
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