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Roundup: Failed developer shoots dead 3, injuries 2 at Milan courthouse

Xinhua, April 10, 2015 Adjust font size:

A defendant opened fire during a hearing at the courthouse in Italy's Milan on Thursday, killing three people, including a bankruptcy judge, and injuring two.

Claudio Giardiello, who was facing a fraudulent bankruptcy lawsuit in the crack-up of his real estate company, fired a total of 13 gunshots on the third and second floor of the courthouse.

He first shot dead his former lawyer, 37-year-old Lorenzo Alberto Claris Appiani, as well as a co-defendant, Giorgio Erba, in the courtroom where they were attending a hearing.

Then he went down to the second floor where he killed bankruptcy judge Fernando Ciampi in his office.

Another co-defendant in the case and relative of Erba, Davide Limongelli, was injured in the shooting along with a lawyer who was hit in the leg. The former was reported to be in serious conditions.

Giardiello was arrested by police some 30 km away from the courthouse while trying to reach on his motorbike another possible victim, a former business partner, authorities told a press conference.

"He was ready to kill other people," Interior Minister Angelino Alfano said.

"I wanted to take revenge on those who ruined me," Giardiello, 57, was quoted as telling police who questioned him after the arrest. The man is reportedly separated from his wife with whom he has a daughter and a son.

"I was in the building for work and I was going upstairs when I suddenly saw a number of people panicking, so I started running away too," an eyewitness, Dimitri Bezsmertnyy, told Xinhua.

"At the beginning I did not realize what was happening, then I saw hundreds of people assembled in front of the courthouse and I learnt about the shooting," he said.

But how was it possible for an armed man to enter the courthouse? Giuseppe Guastella, a columnist of Milan-based Corriere della Sera newspaper, told Xinhua there are seven passages in the courthouse, of which three are equipped with metal detectors, while judges and lawyers are allowed to enter just showing their pass.

According to early investigations, Giardiello was able to enter the courthouse showing a fake pass thus avoiding checks.

"The control system cannot afford to have holes and flaws like the ones at the Milan courthouse. We must ascertain who, how and why did wrong. Something did not work," Prime Minister Matteo Renzi said.

An investigation has was opened to find out more about what Justice Minister Andrea Orlando defined as "an amalgam of serious mistakes" that occurred in the heart of the city that will host the next world exposition from May 1 to Oct. 31. Endit