A 30-year-old tourist from Padua died in Naples after being hit on the head with a heavy object. Investigators are looking into the theory that children, while playing, threw a figurine from a balcony and hit a person passing below.
The girl was taken to hospital where she died, the Italian news agency reported. Ansa.
#Cronaca L'arcivescovo Battaglia ricorda Chiara Jaconis: “Una morte assurda. Vicini alla famiglia” https://t.co/3ajhgfLqfM pic.twitter.com/extkQsp9DQ
— Napoli Today (@NapoliToday) September 19, 2024
At the same time, the prosecutor's office detained the parents of two children suspected of having thrown a figurine from the balcony of their home, which hit Chiara Iaconis in the head.
Napoli, altri oggetti erano caduti dall'alto prima di quello che ha ucciso Chiara Jaconis: due indagati https://t.co/FhAnfgpbEO
— Secolo d'Italia (@SecolodItalia1) September 19, 2024
In Naples, other objects fell from above before the one that killed Chiara Iaconis fell
Police are examining CCTV footage of an incident in which one of the children allegedly threw the figurine off a balcony, investigative sources said.
The prevailing theory is that the statue that struck the girl on the head was dropped by an underage boy who cannot be charged because of his age. His parents, however, have told investigators, who are charging them with manslaughter and neglect, that they have never seen the object, that the statue was never in their home, and that their son had nothing to do with it.
Chiara Iaconiswho had come to Italy to celebrate her birthday, was taken to hospital with severe head injuries, where doctors pronounced her dead. The unfortunate girl, originally from Padua, worked as a manager at Prada and, according to her LinkedIn profile, managed 15 stores of the famous brand in France, Monaco and Belgium.
Hundreds of people took part in a torchlight procession organised in Naples on the evening of 19 September in memory of Chiara Iaconis, a young woman from Padua who died after being hit on the head last Sunday while walking in the Quartieri Spagnoli. Residents of the area repeatedly shouted “forgive us” to the family of a resident of Padua.
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