ROME (AP) — An Italian mother whose anguish over her missing daughter gripped the nation for weeks was told on live TV that the teenager had been slain, allegedly by the girl's uncle, whose house was hosting the show.
Concetta Serrano, looking like she was in shock, murmured "my brother-in-law is innocent," and "I can't believe it" as she sat in the dining room of the uncle's house.
The TV anchor of a popular show about missing person cases on RAI state TV told her late Wednesday night the breaking news that "one of the persons" being interrogated by police in Taranto, southern Italy, had allegedly confessed to killing Sarah Scazzi, 15, and that the body had been found.
While much of the nation watched, calls were made to the cell phone of the uncle, Michele Misseri, who, along with his wife, Serrano's sister, had been interrogated for hours and was still being questioned.
Misseri didn't answer. At one point someone telephoned the mother, who went pale. She then asked the TV show's reporter at the uncle's house if the news was true, La Repubblica daily quoted the anchor, Federica Sciarelli, as saying.
"At that point we told her, 'Ma'am, perhaps it is better if you go home,'" Sciarelli recounted.
"OK, let's go," the mother said, her face drawn as she left the room.
Concetta Serrano, looking like she was in shock, murmured "my brother-in-law is innocent," and "I can't believe it" as she sat in the dining room of the uncle's house.
The TV anchor of a popular show about missing person cases on RAI state TV told her late Wednesday night the breaking news that "one of the persons" being interrogated by police in Taranto, southern Italy, had allegedly confessed to killing Sarah Scazzi, 15, and that the body had been found.
While much of the nation watched, calls were made to the cell phone of the uncle, Michele Misseri, who, along with his wife, Serrano's sister, had been interrogated for hours and was still being questioned.
Misseri didn't answer. At one point someone telephoned the mother, who went pale. She then asked the TV show's reporter at the uncle's house if the news was true, La Repubblica daily quoted the anchor, Federica Sciarelli, as saying.
"At that point we told her, 'Ma'am, perhaps it is better if you go home,'" Sciarelli recounted.
"OK, let's go," the mother said, her face drawn as she left the room.
Je viens de voir ça au zapping et je dois dire que ça fait mal.
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