
Fri Jan 23, 9:33 AM ET
FLORENCE (Reuters) - Almost 20 years after
the last murder blamed on the "Monster of Florence," investigators have
reopened the case because they suspect a Satanic cult ordered the killings
and kept body parts as prizes.
"The refrigerator of horror," was Friday's headline in Il Messaggero
newspaper, referring to new witness reports of female genitalia and body
parts in the fridge of a plush Tuscan villa.
The villa was rented by a doctor, thought to have drowned in a Tuscan lake
in 1985. But when authorities recently discovered he was a suspected
Satanist and had actually been murdered, they reopened their files, a
judicial source told Reuters.
Investigators now suspect the doctor was part of a clan that ordered the
"Monster" to kill eight couples.
The victims were shot during romantic trysts in the picturesque Tuscan
countryside between 1968 and 1985 and many suffered gruesome sexual
mutilations.
A farm labourer of below-average intelligence was initially convicted in
1994 for the murders, in a sensational mystery which caught the attention of
the author of "Silence of the Lambs."
The labourer, Pietro Pacciani, was acquitted in an appeals court in 1996 but
was ordered to stand retrial. He died in 1998 at the age of 73 before the
retrial could get underway, but two men were convicted of aiding him in the
1990s.
Prosecutors now think there were two tiers to the killings, and this week
began a new probe into Tuscan higher society.
"The eight double homicides were carried out according to a criminal plan on
two levels," the source said, citing the search warrant issued by
prosecutors.
"The execution was entrusted to (Pacciani and his friends) but a group of
people who celebrated rituals and black magic put the arms in their hands,"
the warrant said.
Authorities have now formally placed a 60-year-old pharmacist under
investigation, with police seizing pornographic videos and books from his
home.
A respected Florentine dermatologist, a businessman and a lawyer are also
now being questioned, the source said.
The reopening of a case that shocked and mesmerized Italy for decades has
shattered the peace of Chianti's rolling hills.
Thomas Harris, the American author of best-selling serial killer novel
"Silence of the Lambs" with its cannibalistic character Hannibal Lecter, was
fascinated by the case and attended the initial trial to "work and gather
data."
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