PIETRO PACCIANI

(Redirected from Il Mostro)
:''Il Mostro redirects here. For the 1994 Roberto Benigni film, see The Monster (1994 film)''.
'Pietro Pacciani' (January 7, 1925 – February 22, 1998), was a peasant of Mercatale, San Casciano in Val di Pesa, suspected of being the infamous serial killer The Monster of Florence (''mostro di Firenze''). The case was one of the inspirations for the novel ''Hannibal'' by Thomas Harris.

Contents
The case
List of Il Mostro victims
External links

The case


Pacciani was arrested January 17, 1993 on suspicion of having murdered eight young couples between 1968 and 1985. The trial began in Florence on November 1, 1994 and ended with Pacciani facing 14 life sentences: one for each murder, except the 1968 case. However, on February 13, 1996, Pacciani was acquitted after an appeal. On December 12, the Court of Cassation cancelled the acquittal and arranged a new trial.
Three other men — Mario Vanni, Giovanni Faggi and Giancarlo Lotti — were also suspected of being involved with Pacciani during the killing spree in Florence. They were arrested after information came to the light during Pacciani's first trial that the murders were not committed by a single person, but organized by a band of criminals. These people were ironically nicknamed ''“compagni di merendeâ€'' (i.e. roughly “picnic matesâ€) by the Italian press, because of Vanni's claim that they just went for picnics in the Tuscan countryside. Vanni was sentenced to life in prison, while Lotti received 26 years.
Pacciani did not live to stand a retrial; he was found dead in his room in 1998 of a drug overdose. On March 24, 1998, the Appeals Court sentenced Vanni and Lotti and acquitted Faggi.

List of Il Mostro victims



August 21, 1968: Antonio Lo Bianco (29) and Barbara Locci (32), lovers, shot to death with a .22 Baretta in a country lane not far from Lastra a Signa, a small town in the vicinity of Florence. Locci's husband was eventually charged of the murder and spent 16 years in jail, but couples continued to be murdered by the mysterious .22 Beretta.

September 15, 1974: Pasquale Gentilcore (19) and Stefania Pettini (18), teenage sweethearts. Shot to death and stabbed in a country lane near Borgo San Lorenzo, while having sex in Gentilcore's 127 Fiat. Pettini's corpse had been raped with a vine stalk.

June 6, 1981: Giovanni Foggi (30) and Carmela Di Nuccio (21), engaged. Shot to death and stabbed on a Saturday night, nearby to Scandicci, where both lived. Di Nuccio's body was pulled out of the car, and the killer cut off her pubic area with a tipped knife.

October 23, 1981: Stefano Baldi (26) and Susanna Cambi (24), engaged. Shot to death and stabbed in a park in the nearby of Calenzano. Cambi's pubic area was cut off similar to di Nuccio's.

June 19, 1982: Paolo Mainardi (22) and Antonella Migliorini (20), engaged. Shot to death into Mainardi's car, parked on a provincial road in Montespertoli. This time the killer couldn't rape the girl because Mainardi (although he had reported serious injuries) was still alive and desperately tried to drive away. Police and ambulances were called immediately but Mainardi died some hours later in hospital.

September 9, 1983: Wilhelm Horst Meyer (24) and Jens Uwe Rusch (24), German tourists. Shot to death in their Volkswagen Samba Bus, in Galluzzo. Rusch's long blond hair and his small build could have deceived the killer. Police supposed they were homosexual lovers, but this claim has never been asserted.

July 29, 1984: Claudio Stefanacci (21) and Pia Rontini (18), engaged, shot to death and stabbed into Stefanacci's Fiat Panda parked in a woodland area in the nearby of Vicchio di Mugello. The killer cut off the girl's pubic area and left breast.

September 7-8, 1985: Jean Michel Kraveichvili (25) and Nadine Mauriot (36) lovers, both from Audincourt, France, spending a tour in Italy. Shot to death and stabbed while sleeping in their small tent, in a woodland area near San Casciano. Mauriot's corpse was mutilated; the killer sent a patch of her left breast to the judge who was dealing with the case, Silvia della Monica.

External links



BBC Article

Crime Library Article

An Italian Crime Site

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