The autopsy ordered by the public prosecutor Antonio Pansa will be carried out in the first days of January, probably on the 2nd. Already the first report could finally document that that of Aurora Livoli, the nineteen-year-old found dead in a courtyard between via Paolo Paruta and via Padova in Milan, was a feminicide, as suspected from the beginning by the detectives and prosecutors. The bruises compatible with strangulation on the neck and the bruises on the face, the condition of the body, roughly dressed, and the video returned by one of the surveillance cameras, which shows the girl arriving with a man and, about an hour later, the man leaving alone, all seem to point in the same direction: murder.
The first turning point: identifying Aurora Livoli
Now, after the first turning point that came on Tuesday afternoon, when the victim’s adoptive parents recognized their daughter in the frame published by the police to try to identify her, the second turning point, the one to get to the alleged murderer, seems closer.
For the Carabinieri of the Investigative Unit, led by Colonel Antonio Coppola and Lieutenant Colonel Fabio Rufino, and for the soldiers of the Porta Monforte Company, there is extra help that may come from the girl’s phone records, which disappeared together with documents and money from the crime scene. Now that the name of the victim is known, even if she has never been registered in Milan, the detectives also have an identity and a face to start from.
Who is the man wanted for the murder
Likewise, the video that made it possible to find the victim’s identity, taken in the middle of the night by a private camera positioned in Via Paruta, also shows the man who was with her. The two walked along the sidewalk, in single file: the girl in front and him behind. There doesn’t seem to be any particular friction between the two. The photo of the man – thin, with short, curly hair, taller than Aurora Livoli – is already in the investigative ‘notebooks’ of those who started looking for him in the city. The ‘hounds’ of via Moscova would have already heard someone in the last few hours.
What did Aurora Livoli do in Milan?
Another point that will help the investigation concerns the most accurate reconstruction possible of the victim’s movements. Aurora Livoli, born in Rome and adopted at six years old by a family from Monte San Biagio, left home on November 4th. It wasn’t the first time he did it and, during these ‘getaways’, he heard his family on the phone.
Her father, Ferdinando Livoli, a dental technician, and her mother, Erminia Casale, an architect, had heard from her for the last time on the morning of November 26th. She had reassured them about her condition, but had also confirmed that she did not want to return home, she who had just graduated from Itis Pacinotti in Fondi, specializing in chemistry. After the 26th she had not been heard from again, so much so that her parents had turned to the police, worried. Understanding his movements and his companies will help us trace the name of that last, fateful appointment.




