Difference between revisions of "Felice Casson"
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|WP=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Felice_Casson | |WP=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Felice_Casson | ||
|constitutes=judge, politician | |constitutes=judge, politician | ||
+ | |nationality=Italian | ||
|exposed=Operation Gladio | |exposed=Operation Gladio | ||
}} | }} | ||
He was interviewed for [[Allan Francovich]]'s [[Operation Gladio (film)|film]] on [[Operation Gladio]]. | He was interviewed for [[Allan Francovich]]'s [[Operation Gladio (film)|film]] on [[Operation Gladio]]. | ||
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+ | ==Exposure of Operation Gladio== | ||
+ | In 1984 judge [[Felice Casson]] reopened the case of a [[car bomb in Peteano]] in 1972 and uncovered a series of anomalies in the original investigation. He showed that although it had been attributed to the communist [[Red Brigades]], in was in fact the work of a right wing organization called [[Ordine Nuovo]], a member of which [[Vincenzo Vinciguerra]] was arrested and charged and confessed to planting the bomb. | ||
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+ | Casson's investigation also revealed that the Peteano bombing was only one of a long series of bombings begun at Christmas 1969, the most well-known of which, on the [[Piazza Fontane]] in Milan, killed 16 and injured 80. The bombing campaign culminated on 2 August 1980 with a massive [[Bologna massacre|bomb in the waiting room of Bologna railway station]] which killed 85 and injured 200. | ||
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{{SMWDocs}} | {{SMWDocs}} | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Reflist}} | {{Reflist}} | ||
{{Stub}} | {{Stub}} |
Revision as of 03:03, 3 December 2015
Felice Casson (judge, politician) | |
---|---|
Nationality | Italian |
Exposed | Operation Gladio |
He was interviewed for Allan Francovich's film on Operation Gladio.
Exposure of Operation Gladio
In 1984 judge Felice Casson reopened the case of a car bomb in Peteano in 1972 and uncovered a series of anomalies in the original investigation. He showed that although it had been attributed to the communist Red Brigades, in was in fact the work of a right wing organization called Ordine Nuovo, a member of which Vincenzo Vinciguerra was arrested and charged and confessed to planting the bomb.
Casson's investigation also revealed that the Peteano bombing was only one of a long series of bombings begun at Christmas 1969, the most well-known of which, on the Piazza Fontane in Milan, killed 16 and injured 80. The bombing campaign culminated on 2 August 1980 with a massive bomb in the waiting room of Bologna railway station which killed 85 and injured 200.